

When doing mobile debugging on Android it is also useful to check the “stay awake” option that you’ll find in the same place as the “USB debugging” option, so the device stays on while plugged into USB, but this isn’t mandatory.īefore moving on, connect your phone to your computer via the USB cable.

This is a security mechanism accept the dialog. On Android 4.2.2 and higher, you’ll see a dialog asking whether to accept an RSA key. Returning to the previous screen shows previously-hidden developer options. On Android 4.2 and newer, go to Settings > About phone and tap Build number seven times to get a message that says “congratulations! you are now a developer”.On Android 4.0 and newer, it’s in Settings > Developer options.On Android 2.3, the option is under Settings > Applications > Development.Check the “USB debugging” checkbox in Developer Options. Next, you need to enable USB debugging on your device. Note that you can’t remotely debug Opera Mini from desktop, as the rendering is done on our Mini servers and only displayed on the device. Preparing your deviceĮnsure that you have a USB cable available to connect your Android device to your computer (the USB power cable should be fine) and Opera for Android installed on it (see the Opera for Android user guide for installation help, if needed.) Keep the phone disconnected from your computer just for now.

Use Opera 15+, Google Chrome, Chromium, or the Yandex browser. You’ll need a Chromium-based desktop browser.
#OPERA TV DEVELOPER INSTALL#
Windows users may need to install Device drivers. If you choose something else, use that in the example steps below. The first thing you’ll need is the Android SDK - download it and then put the kettle on it’s a 400MB file.Įxtract the files to a memorable location, such as /Users/ your-user-name/adt or c:android/adt. You’ll be remotely debugging your phone from your desktop, so let’s get the desktop ready.
#OPERA TV DEVELOPER HOW TO#
Here’s how to connect Opera for Android to Chromium-based desktop browsers for remote debugging. Now that Opera for Android is out, you’ll sometimes need to debug it, as there are differences in Standards support between Opera and Chrome for Android and Chrome on Android 4+ (, etc,). This article is outdated, please refer to: Introduction
