Reputation: 673
I'm having an error with Eclipse and Android's SDK. apparently, it comes from the fact that my certificate expired. So I googled the error and I found that I have to remove the ~/.android/debug.keystore file. The thing is I can't find this file. It's not in my SDK.
Can someone help me with this ?
Edit: I work on Mac.
Upvotes: 52
Views: 70801
Reputation: 17922
On Linux / OSX use your favorite terminal and type rm ~/.android/debug.keystore
to remove the debug keystore.
You can create a new keystore after that by following these steps.
Upvotes: 25
Reputation: 32905
Open Eclipse Preferences, then navigate to Android > Build. There you'll see a field that tells the location of your debug keystore.
Upvotes: 121
Reputation: 981
Expiry of the Debug Certificate
The self-signed certificate used to sign your application in debug mode (the default on Eclipse/ADT and Ant builds) will have an expiration date of 365 days from its creation date.
When the certificate expires, you will get a build error. On Ant builds, the error looks like this:
debug: [echo] Packaging bin/samples-debug.apk, and signing it with a debug key... [exec] Debug Certificate expired on 8/4/08 3:43 PM In Eclipse/ADT, you will see a similar error in the Android console.
To fix this problem, simply delete the debug.keystore file. The default storage location for AVDs is in ~/.android/ on OS X and Linux, in C:\Documents and Settings\.android\ on Windows XP, and in C:\Users\.android\ on Windows Vista and Windows 7.
Source: Android Publishing Guide: http://developer.android.com/guide/publishing/app-signing.html
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 64399
I believe it is in the .android/avd/
directory in OSX, but it could also be just in /.android/
as you suggest.
Remember that ~
means your home directory, so you do not need to look for it in your SDK!
(disclaimer) It's been a while since I've battled with this, and I didn't do it on a mac.
Upvotes: 3