Preparing an Android App for Release
During the typical development cycle, you’ll test an app using flutter run
at the
command line, the Run and Debug toolbar buttons in IntelliJ, or both. By default,
Flutter builds a debug version of your app.
When you’re ready to prepare a release version for Android, for example to publish to the Google Play Store, follow the steps on this page.
- Review the App Manifest
- Review the build configuration
- Adding a Launcher icon
- Signing the app
- Building a release APK
- Installing a release APK on a device
- Publishing an APK to the Google Play Store
Review the App Manifest
Review the default App Manifest file AndroidManifest.xml
located
in <app dir>/android/app/src/main/
and verify the values are correct,
especially:
-
application
: Edit theapplication
tag to reflect the final name of the app. -
uses-permission
: Remove theandroid.permission.INTERNET
permission if your application code does not need Internet access. The standard template includes this tag to enable communication between Flutter tools and a running app.
Review the build configuration
Review the default [Gradle build file][gradlebuild] file build.gradle
located in <app dir>/android/app/
and verify the values are correct, especially:
-
defaultConfig
:-
applicationId
: Specify the final, unique (Application Id)appid -
versionCode
&versionName
: Specify the interall app version number, and the version number display string. Consult the version information guidance in the versions documenation for details. -
minSdkVersion
&targetSdkVersion
: Specify the minimum API level, and the API level on which the app is designed to run. Consult the API level section in the versions documetation for details.
-
Adding a Launcher icon
When a new Flutter app is created, it has a default Launcher icon. To customize this icon:
-
Review the Android Launcher Icons guidelines for icon design.
-
In the
<app dir>/android/app/src/main/res/
directory, place your icon files in folders named using Configuration Qualifiers. The defaultmipmap-
folders demonstrate the correct naming convention. -
In
AndroidManifest.xml
, update theapplication
tag’sandroid:icon
attribute to reference icons from the previous step (e.g.<application android:icon="@mipmap/ic_launcher" ...
). -
To verify the icon has been replaced, run your app using
flutter run
and inspect the app icon in the Launcher.
Signing the app
Create a keystore
If you have an existing keystore, skip to the next step. If not, create one
by running the following at the command line:
keytool -genkey -v -keystore ~/key.jks -keyalg RSA -keysize 2048 -validity 10000 -alias key
Note: Keep this file private; do not check it into public source control.
Note: keytool
may not be in your path. It is part of the Java JDK, which is installed as
part of Android Studio. For the concrete path, run flutter doctor
and see the path printed
after ‘Java binary at:’, and then use that fully qualified path replacing java
with keytool
.
Reference the keystore from the app
Create a file named <app dir>/android/key.properties
that contains a
reference to your keystore:
storePassword=<password from previous step>
keyPassword=<password from previous step>
keyAlias=key
storeFile=<location of the key store file, e.g. /Users/<user name>/key.jks>
Note: Keep this file private; do not check it into public source control.
Configure signing in gradle
Configure signing for your app by editing the <app dir>/android/app/build.gradle
file.
- Replace:
android {
with the keystore information from your properties file:
def keystorePropertiesFile = rootProject.file("key.properties") def keystoreProperties = new Properties() keystoreProperties.load(new FileInputStream(keystorePropertiesFile)) android {
- Replace:
buildTypes { release { // TODO: Add your own signing config for the release build. // Signing with the debug keys for now, so `flutter run --release` works. signingConfig signingConfigs.debug } }
with:
signingConfigs { release { keyAlias keystoreProperties['keyAlias'] keyPassword keystoreProperties['keyPassword'] storeFile file(keystoreProperties['storeFile']) storePassword keystoreProperties['storePassword'] } } buildTypes { release { signingConfig signingConfigs.release } }
Release builds of your app will now automatically be signed.
Building a release APK
This section describes how to build a release APK. If you completed the signing steps in the previous section, the release APK will be signed.
Using the command line:
cd <app dir>
(replace<app dir>
with your application’s directory).- Run
flutter build apk
(flutter build
defaults to--release
).
The release APK for your app is created at <app dir>/build/app/outputs/apk/app-release.apk
.
Installing a release APK on a device
Follow these steps to install the APK built in the previous step on a connected Android device.
Using the command line:
- Connect your Android device to your computer with a USB cable.
cd <app dir>
where<app dir>
is your application directory.- Run
flutter install
.
Publishing an APK to the Google Play Store
For detailed instructions on publishing the release version of an app to the Google Play Store, see the Google Play publishing documentation.