This means that for the first time if you have an AMD Processor, have Hyper-V on, or wanted to do Docker work you can run Android emulators pretty fast. The mobile developer tools team (aka Xamarin team) worked with the Hyper-V team to extend Hyper-V for the first time to be able to run Google's official Android x86 emulator images natively on Hyper-V instead of on Intel's HAXM.
Arm emulator android slow update#
In the Windows 2018 April Update (build 1803) something magical happened. The Solution: Windows Hypervisor Platform If you are like me and develop every day on a Windows machine then you know that HAXM is great, but only if you have the ideal setup:Įven installing HAXM is very tricky and requires reboots and toggles sometimes in the BIOS, which is never fun. This actually works amazing on macOS as every device essentially has an Intel chip and doesn't have conflicts with a core virtualization engine (hypervisor). Intel nearly saved the day with HAXM that runs Android x86 emulator images on Intel VT. Google has done a lot of work in the last few years to improve the Android emulators with Quick Boot, more customization and hardware support, but being able to run them fast has still been a pain point. From there a bunch of companies attempted to fix the problem by using custom built solutions on top of Virtual Box or Hyper-V. From the very start we had just ARM emulators that were a complete joke to work with as they moved at a snail's pace. I have been a mobile developer for 7 years now and since the day I started one of my largest complaints has been the Android emulator.