How to debugging Android Device with WIFI connection - Android Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

You wanna debug your Android device, but have not usb cable on hand.
Don't worry, you can still connect your device through WIFI if your PC and Android device are on the same LAN.
Following the steps:
1. Ensure the debuging port of Android Devices. You may use command "adb shell setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5553" to set the port to be 5553. The default port is 5555.
2. Find out the IP address of Android Device. For examble, 192.168.1.107
3. On your PC, use the command "adb connect 192.168.1.107:5553"
4. After connected, you may see the devices' list by using command "adb devices"

Related

[REQUEST] Wireless ADB

The Barnes & Noble Nook uses adb over wifi. How can I setup my N1 to do the same? Ideally I would like to specify on the N1 to only allow connections over wifi, and if possible have some sort of password type security. Can this be done?
why not use ssh?
the dropbear-client is included in most custom roms.
edit: i mean dropbear-server of course
mikecyber said:
The Barnes & Noble Nook uses adb over wifi. How can I setup my N1 to do the same? Ideally I would like to specify on the N1 to only allow connections over wifi, and if possible have some sort of password type security. Can this be done?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1 on this, but I would like it to be included within the ROM with a UI setting or maybe even an applicaion
Getting adbd to listen to tcpip in the phone is quite easy.
Example below:
Code:
[I]# detach adbd from usb and tell it to listen to port tcp 2222
[/I][email protected]$ adb tcpip 2222
restarting in TCP mode port: 2222
[I]# tell your local adb command to use ip:port to connect through instead of usb (192.168.0.151 is my N1 on Wifi)
[/I][email protected]$ adb connect 192.168.0.151:2222
connected to 192.168.0.151:2222
[I]# connect over ip
[/I][email protected]$ adb shell
# uname -a
Linux localhost 2.6.29.6-cyanogenmod #3 PREEMPT Wed Jan 27 07:21:12 EST 2010 armv7l GNU/Linux
# exit
[I]# tell adbd to go back to listen on usb
[/I][email protected]$ adb usb
restarting in USB mode
packetlss said:
Getting adbd to listen to tcpip in the phone is quite easy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you, your method works well.
With my nook all I need to do is "adb connect 192.168.1.x:5555" I don't have to put adb into tcpip mode or enter "uname -a" in shell.
I would love to see "Wireless Debugging" in Settings -> Applications -> Development, or really anywhere in Settings. I haven't voided my N1's warranty, so an app to add this functionality would be great.
mikecyber said:
Thank you, your method works well.
With my nook all I need to do is "adb connect 192.168.1.x:5555" I don't have to put adb into tcpip mode or enter "uname -a" in shell.
I would love to see "Wireless Debugging" in Settings -> Applications -> Development, or really anywhere in Settings. I haven't voided my N1's warranty, so an app to add this functionality would be great.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's because the nook adbd is configured to listen to tcp by default, on most other platforms it just listens to USB by default.
The 'uname -a' was just to show that I actually was connected to the phone. Nothing to do with the actual adb stuff at all, I was just lazy and copied from my terminal
MoDaCo Custom ROMs generally run dropbear by default with a password that is randomly generated on first startup.
I don't mind making an addon update zip for Cyanogen's ROM with this functionality if you want it?
P
bump
Found this really useful as my USB driver causes BSODs. thanks packetlss
1. connect device via usb
2. adb tcpip 2222
3. connect over wifi. adb connect 192.168.3.5:2222
4. adb commands as normal
can the OP remove [request] as this is now a [tip] or [howto]
britoso said:
bump
Found this really useful as my USB driver causes BSODs. thanks packetlss
1. connect device via usb
2. adb tcpip 2222
3. connect over wifi. adb connect 192.168.3.5:2222
4. adb commands as normal
can the OP remove [request] as this is now a [tip] or [howto]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does the USB have to be hooked up each time, or is it a 1 time then WIFI is good after that?
Nice howto!!
britoso said:
bump
Found this really useful as my USB driver causes BSODs. thanks packetlss
1. connect device via usb
2. adb tcpip 2222
3. connect over wifi. adb connect 192.168.3.5:2222
4. adb commands as normal
can the OP remove [request] as this is now a [tip] or [howto]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Gotta say that is slick as sh**!!! How to get it to stay on tcpip via terminal on phone??
britoso said:
bump
Found this really useful as my USB driver causes BSODs. thanks packetlss
1. connect device via usb
2. adb tcpip 2222
3. connect over wifi. adb connect 192.168.3.5:2222
4. adb commands as normal
can the OP remove [request] as this is now a [tip] or [howto]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
interesseting... thanks!
i'll try that
EDIT: worked so good - thx!
tbirdguy said:
Does the USB have to be hooked up each time, or is it a 1 time then WIFI is good after that?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do it once and it stays...perhaps till you reboot the phone.
If your IP address on wifi you will need to run the connect command again. Also set the wifi-sleep mode to 'never', possibly install the wifi-keepalive app.
Its awesome to be able to run stuff on your phone straight from eclipse, unplugged; or install/push/pull files
xkonni said:
why not use ssh?
the dropbear-client is included in most custom roms.
edit: i mean dropbear-server of course
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you know what the default pw is for dropbear? when i try to ssh with my local ip and root, i get a connection refused on port 22. i'm using cm6, do i have to enable it somehow?
TCPIP mode without connecting usb
Is it possible to enable ADBD tcpip mode without connecting device to USB port and use adb command? I mean maybe a command we can run in a Terminal Emulator?
bohlool said:
Is it possible to enable ADBD tcpip mode without connecting device to USB port and use adb command? I mean maybe a command we can run in a Terminal Emulator?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
re,it's there any possible that get adb work over TCP/IP ,on all android devices(include non-rooted devices)?
wobiu said:
re,it's there any possible that get adb work over TCP/IP ,on all android devices(include non-rooted devices)?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know how to enable it, just connect it with usb to computer and enter "adb connect tcpip <port>" then disconnect usb and connect phone to wifi, find the ip of phone and on your computer type "adb connect <ip>:<port>"
my problem is how can I do the first step without usb cable, i.e. using a terminal emulator. I have root access.
bohlool said:
my problem is how can I do the first step without usb cable, i.e. using a terminal emulator. I have root access.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
would love to see this as well, can anyone with expertise in the area let us know if this is at all possible?
# adbd
As root on the device returns
Cannot bind tcp 5037
Im not home so i cant test but maybe this could work over tcp port 5037...
Sent from my Nexus One
bohlool said:
I know how to enable it, just connect it with usb to computer and enter "adb connect tcpip <port>" then disconnect usb and connect phone to wifi, find the ip of phone and on your computer type "adb connect <ip>:<port>"
my problem is how can I do the first step without usb cable, i.e. using a terminal emulator. I have root access.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
for rooted device。you can use"start adbd" command to start adb daemon ,instead of plug into usb.
What am i looking for is a way to use adb over wifi for all device including non-rooted.
wobiu said:
for rooted device。you can use"start adbd" command to start adb daemon ,instead of plug into usb.
What am i looking for is a way to use adb over wifi for all device including non-rooted.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What is the port number then? is it 5037? Can I set it somewhere? (for rooted devices of course)

[Q] OSX, adb usb, adb devices = error: device not found

when I type adb devices cmd in the terminal it does not list my device and its plugged in....
when I try to type adb usb it says no devices found...
for the record nothing is wrong with my USB connection cable because, I'm able to connect my HTC ReZound via USB cable to my macbook, the CDROM and STORAGE auto mounts to my desktop so i know the connection is working, because I'm able to copy files, update music via winamp sync playlists, also my paid EasyTeather copy works, etc.
I updated & installed most recent Android SDK adt-bundle-mac-x86_64-20130917 and updated the device manager for my ver 4.0.3 and all tools, even tryed using a stand alone platform-osx-tools.zip that contains a adb and fastboot...\
I read up on this and found nothing tryed everything....
adb kill-server > adb start-server - does nothing
adding device in the adb_usb.ini didn't help either.
chmod a+r /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules after creating file didn't help.
rebooted many times .
i've attached a terminal cmd window below to show.
USB debugging is enabled on the device, yes? Does the "USB debugging enabled" notification show up when you plug it into the computer?
MaxxPayne said:
when I type adb devices cmd in the terminal it does not list my device and its plugged in....
when I try to type adb usb it says no devices found...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
are you doing proper methods in command prompt for sdk's adb such as directing it to the folder its in...example did you type cd c:/androidsdk/platform_tools/ in command prompt for example
I used to have a mac ....but here
Download htc sync for mac
http://www.iskysoft.com/convert-mobile/sync-htc-to-mac.html
Download the sdk and all you need is a folder called platform tools
http://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html
Extract the platform tools folder Put it on your desktop
Open terminal type "cd" then hit space then drag and drop the platform tools folder into the terminal after that hit enter
Then you can run any command just make sure to put "./ " before the command without quotations so if you wanna flash a boot you would put
./fastboot flash boot boot.img and hit enter
Note that adb works perfectly well on my Mac without the HTC Sync drivers.

[TUT] ADB over WI-FI

ADB over Wi-Fi​Some of us might like to connect the device over WiFi for debugging, instead of using the data cable. Here's the required tutorial to do so
Requirements
1. Android device (duh!!!)
2. ADB in the computer (again duh!!!)
3. Root privileges
4. Terminal emulator (download from here)​
Let's begin then​Open terminal emulator on your device. Enter the following code
Code:
su [color="red"]Grant superuser here[/color]
setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555 [color="red"]Can be anything else[/color]
stop adbd
start adbd
Check it with this
Code:
getprop service.adb.tcp.port
It will return 5555 or the number you entered in the above code​
Enter the following code on your computer in command prompt or shell
Code:
adb connect 192.168.0.151
Instead of 192.168.0.151, enter your device IP address​
To make your device listen on USB again, just restart the device. And enter the code on your computer
Code:
adb usb
I would definitely use the USB cable to push large files or even small files that you really don't want to risk corrupting (partition images you plan on dding, etc).
Very importantly, keep in mind, when your phone is listening for adb via WiFi, it's wide open... anybody that has adb installed and knows your device's IP address can access it without a password. Again, a simple reboot will turn it off though.​
Credits
JeepFreak for this post in the One X forum​
Reserved
Reserved for app​
I want to thank the OP, however belatedly, for writing these root instructions for users to connect their PC and phone via adb over Wi-Fi without USB cables being involved.
As the OP is well aware, non-rooted Android 10 and below allowed wireless adb connections AFTER a USB connection was first established (adb start-server && adb tcpip 5555 && adb connect [IP]:5555), but that changed (for the better) in Android 11 and above with the new new Developer options Wireless debugging random port assignments (adb connect [IP]:[PORT] or adb pair [IP]:[PORT] [PIN]) such that the adb wireless connection never needs USB cable ever again.
Given Android 11 allows Developer options Wireless debugging via a random port, and Android 12 new Developer options Wireless debugging allows that to be accessed even easier with a new Developer options Wireless debugging tile, the only thing missing is a way to get, after the fact, the random port assignment that Android uses for the adb wireless connection to your PC.
Some related threads for reference might be...
[adb,scrcpy,vysor] What ports does Android 12 randomly set when Wi-Fi connecting via Wireless debugging adb "pair" or "connect" commands?
(PSA) Using the new Android 12 TILE for 'Developer options' 'Wireless debugging' to establish adb connection over Wi-Fi without USB
What's the difference between Windows/Android adb "connect" versus adb "pair" when mirroring Android 12 over Wi-Fi onto a Windows PC?
The only question that's missing an answer preventing a perfect completely Wi-Fi automatic solution is...
Does anyone know how to obtain that random Android port address from the PC?

ADB connect without turning ADB USB (keeping both USB ports active) , Root required.

You can enable ADB through network while keeping the USB active for devices.
The best way I found was to sideload the app "WiFi ADB - Debug Over Air"
From the computer
ADB connect *IP ADDRESS*
I use ADB Link. Works wonderful.

Connect Android phone over Wi-Fi using ADB

(Many will consider this question a duplicate of similar questions but I don't think this question should be marked as duplicate because the answer requested here is different than others.)
I am searching for the solutions since many years and read a lot of pages on internet and StackOverflow but hasn't found any solution.
Once an non-rooted Android phone is authorized over USB using ADB then how to connect it over Wi-Fi every time without ever connecting the phone over USB?
I know that executing
Code:
adb start-server
then
Code:
adb tcpip 5555
and then
Code:
adb connect <IP.address.of.phone>
will connect the phone over Wi-Fi IF it is connected using USB when issuing these commands.
According to the answers/forums, there are 2 ways to connect Android phone over Wi-Fi:
The user has to first connect to USB even though the device is already authorized.
The phone needs to be rooted.
But I think, what I want to achieve, as per the question, must be possible because if ADB can connect over USB and then Wi-Fi, then there must be some way to accomplish with directly connecting over Wi-Fi if computer is already authenticated. The missing thing is to know what exactly ADB is doing when switching from USB to Wi-Fi. I think, it could be getting authorization again. But what if we store the authorization information (finger print? or encryption key?) once and use it every time to connect over Wi-Fi? (Please note that when first time authenticating the computer over USB, its finger print is showed in the Android phone, and it never asks again until the authorization is revoked/invalidated somehow. So, I think the requirement here is to revalidate the computer.)
I viewed the ADB repository and read the text files mentioning how ADB works. In one txt file I read that
Code:
adbd
(ADB Daemon) is started on port 5555 on the Android phone/emulator when
Code:
adb connect ___
command is executed. Is there anyway to manually start the daemon through a terminal app on the installed on phone? I tried 'adb', 'adbd' and 'setprop' commands in the Termux app but these commands doesn't exist. According to the txt files of the repository, the ADB on computer is sending the commands to the Android device/emulator and can start 'adbd' or set/open the port 5555 using
Code:
setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555
command. Is there a way to do this on Android phone using a terminal app on a non-rooter phone?
Somebody who has knowledge of networking, Android and C/C++ language may be able to answer. One can look in the GitHub repo of ADB source code if they want to know what is happening during the connection process.
I'm a little late to answer your question at the time you asked it, but if it still helps the OP, non-rooted Android 10 and below allowed wireless adb connections AFTER a USB connection was first established (adb start-server && adb tcpip 5555 && adb connect [IP]:5555), but that changed (for the better) in Android 11 and above with the new new Developer options Wireless debugging random port assignments (adb connect [IP]:[PORT] or adb pair [IP]:[PORT] [PIN]) such that the adb wireless connection never needs USB cable ever again.
Given Android 11 allows Developer options Wireless debugging via a random port, and Android 12 new Developer options Wireless debugging allows that to be accessed even easier with a new Developer options Wireless debugging tile, the only thing missing is a way to get, after the fact, the random port assignment that Android uses for the adb wireless connection to your PC.
Here are some related posts about that subject which may help the OP.
[adb,scrcpy,vysor] What ports does Android 12 randomly set when Wi-Fi connecting via Wireless debugging adb "pair" or "connect" commands?
(PSA) Using the new Android 12 TILE for 'Developer options' 'Wireless debugging' to establish adb connection over Wi-Fi without USB
What's the difference between Windows/Android adb "connect" versus adb "pair" when mirroring Android 12 over Wi-Fi onto a Windows PC?
The only question that's missing an answer preventing a perfect solution is...
Does anyone know how to obtain that random Android port address from the PC?

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