
On Red Hat based Linux systems, download the. Packages are provided by Oracle in RPM format (for installation on Red Hat Linux based systems such as Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora and CentOS) and as a tar archive for other Linux distributions such as Ubuntu. After re-running the HAXM installer the emulator started performing well and all the warning messages went away.Firstly, if the chosen development system is running the 64-bit version of Ubuntu then it is essential that the 32-bit library support package be installed: sudo apt-get install ia32-libsĪs with Windows based JDK installation, it is possible to install the JDK on Linux by downloading the appropriate package from the Oracle web site, the URL for which is as follows: The emulator did run but I got lots of warning messages and the emulator ran painfully slow. I hadn't re-run the full installer right away after installing the INF before trying to run an emulator. When prompted that the driver cannot be verified, select the option to install anyway (what a crazy fool you are). Right click on intelhaxm.inf and select Installħ. In Windows Explorer go to where you extracted the ha圆4.msi file (. Create a directory where you want to extract the has64.msi to. cd to the temp directory created by the last time you ran the HAXM installer where you will find ha圆4.msi (Example: cd C:\Users\bhage\AppData\Local\Temp\intel\HAXM\6.0.3\_16-47-43)ģ. Open a command prompt as administrator.Ģ. But from that point on your Android emulator should work. After you install the ha圆4.msi file you still need to run the installer again to set memory size and whatever else it does.

When you do this Windows will warn that it can't confirm the authenticity of the driver and ask if you want to proceed. Extract that and you can manually install the inf file. When you run the installer, it creates some temp files.

Not sure I like how I got it to work but it works.
