adb: device not found - android

I'm trying to build a Kivy app on my Android phone using Buildozer. But adb is not finding my device. This is the error I am getting:
dan#dan-asus:~/kivy$ adb usb
error: device not found
dan#dan-asus:~/kivy$ adb devices
List of devices attached
I've added my vendor and product id that I got from lsusb in my /lib/udev/rules.d/70-android-tools-adb.rules file as so:
# Lenovo A789
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="17ef", ATTR{idProduct}=="7497", MODE="0666", OWNER="dan", TAG+="uaccess"
Have two 1.1 and two 2.0 USB outlets. Tried all four of them. Made sure I restarted adb every time I made a change and even tried to reboot my phone a few time.
What am I missing?
adb version is 1.0.31

I know this should be a comment, but I don't have enough reputation for that... so here is my "answer".
I can think of a couple of things that you don't mention specifically in your question:
Do you have a file ~/.android/adb_usb.ini? If yes, is the vendor ID written there? (in your case should be 0x17EF in a single line). Try with that and restart your ADB server.
Is ADB enabled in your device? You can check that with lsusb -v -d 17ef:7497 | grep -B 3 -i iInterface and look for some interface with class 255, subclass 66, protocol 1. That's your ADB USB interface in the device, if you don't find it, check the device's settings/configuration.
Hope it helps.

Related

Insufficient permissions for device in Android Studio Workspace running in openSUSE 13.2

I have a rooted Motorola Defy+ running a Cyanogenmod v11 custom ROM (nightly build) created by Quarx. Using Android Studio Workspace,(ASW) v.1.1.0, when I try and debug on this device, I get
????????????[null]
listed in the Choose Device window, with the Logcat window showing
insufficient permissions for device
I would really like to use this device and ROM for debugging purposes.
When I enter lsusb from the command line I get,
Bus 002 Device 002: ID 22b8:431d Motorola PCS
This is the correct device id for Motorola units. I have installed 51-android.rules and 71-android.rules in /etc/udev/rules.d/ with the correct Motorola ids in these files.
I've also tried Revoke USB debugging authority, from Developer Options on the device, with no luck.
I have not tried running ASW as root hoping that there might be another option; is there?
Update: I was able to get in and access ADB by
uvachem-gsmith2:/home/greg/Android/Sdk/platform-tools # ./adb
I then did a kill server, did an SU to root user and restarted the server. I then tried to connect to the device from Android Studio. Got a message on the device about accepting the RSA key from the PC, said "Yes" and then was able to deploy the app to the device. So back to my original question, Is there another way to access this device without logging in as root? It seems as if there is a permission issue on the phone file system that is preventing this...
Update #2 The core problem here was a permission thing. Even though running ADB as root will allow access to the rooted Android device, a better solution is to change permissions in the udev file for this device...resetting 664 to 666, (see answer below). This allows the PC to access the file system on the device.
I had this while using a Linux machine with a Nexus 4 running Android 5.1
The fix was to enable both 'debug over USB' and 'connect as MTP'. The opposite is true when using the same device and Android Studio and adb on OSX though - to allow Android Studio to recognise the handset, I need to disable 'connect as MTP'.
I found a simple answer that worked for me:
adb kill-server
sudo adb start-server
sudo adb devices
You will find your device then.
Reference: http://itsfoss.com/fix-error-insufficient-permissions-device/
It's simple.
Just change your USB mode to File Transfer mode then it works.
Android 8
MTP is no longer available. On my android 8 "Transfer Files" option did not work.
"Transfer photos PTP" Is worked, and Studio showed the device name.
Steps on your cell phone
Open the developer options
Enable USB debugging.
change USB connection to PTP
Steps on Linux
on console run sudo usermod -aG plugdev $LOGNAME
Android 9
With Android 9 use the option File Transfer.
Changing permissions in this line from /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules,
#Motorola
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="22b8", MODE="0664", GROUP="plugdev"
to,
#Motorola
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="22b8", MODE="0666", GROUP="plugdev"
resolves this issue in a manner that DOES NOT require running adb as root.
IN my phone Symphony W75,
in option USB computer connection-> selecting Connect as Media device(MTP) has solved the problem.
Long to short,
I had the same problem with a Prestigio PMP5570C tablet,
all you have to do is to confirm on your tablet that you want to copy data to/from your computer (what i forgot), and add the 2 lines that #portsample wrote.
You can find the idVendor of your device typing
lsusb
in UBUNTU 12.04, then you get:
Bus 001 Device 011: ID 2207:0010,
where 2207 is your vendor id.
Summed up the question and answer...
I updated my device (Nvidia Shield) that was previously connecting fine, so I knew that the PC setup is correct already. The developer settings seem to have a new layout on Android 7.0.
It is under Settings > Preferences > Developer options > Networking > Select USB configuration
Here, I needed to select PTP and everything works fine again:
Enable USB debugging
Use USB to transer file
This procedure solves the problem for me:
- On the Android device, drag the top menu and select "USB for file transfer"
- Press "Run" again
Go to Developer Options -> Default USB Configurations and Change to PTP
Run these two commands in terminal
sudo adb kill-server
sudo adb start-server
Should Work!
I made a script for this error. For me it works fine in Fedora 28, but it should work in many Linux distributions.
Just create a file with the content of the selfexpanied script. I called it usbDebbugingAndroidStudio.sh
Give him execution permission with: chmod +x usbDebbugingAndroidStudio.sh
And run it: sudo ./usbDebbugingAndroidStudio.sh
After that check the list displayed by the command lsusb and introduce the Id of
your device.
For example:
My output was: Bus 006 Device 002: ID 05c6:9091 Qualcomm, Inc.
So I type 05c6 and press enter.
The script:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#This script configure Android Debug Bridge permissions to solve the following
#error: com.android.ddmlib.AdbCommandRejectedException: insufficient permissions for device
#This error is produced when you try to install an APK from Android Studio in your device.
#You can check the vendorId here:
#https://developer.android.com/studio/run/device#setting-up
#If your device's brand isn't listed check the info displayed by the command lsusb
lsusb
#My output was:
#Bus 006 Device 002: ID 05c6:9091 Qualcomm, Inc.
#The id for this line is 05c6
echo -n "Enter the id of your mobile device: "
read usbProviderId
cd /etc/udev/rules.d/
sudo touch 51-android.rules
(
sudo cat << _EOF_
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="$usbProviderId", MODE="0666", GROUP="plugdev"
_EOF_
) | sudo tee 51-android.rules
#Give read and write permissions to the file
sudo chmod a+r /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules
#Kill the Android Debug Bridge server to restart it
cd $HOME/Android/Sdk/platform-tools
sudo ./adb kill-server
#If this still doesn't work unplug the usb cable and connect again.
#And repeat the last step Kill the ADB server.
What the F... ! :)
Note : I have seen it on android 8.1 on a One+5t...
Even we do all of above, it is necessary to make something on your android device .. in addition to go in dev options menu (usb debug) (don't hesitate to reset "cancel authorization" or something like this (I am in french version ;) )
If some people meet the same problem than me, maybe it could be usefull for you too :
Don't forget to authorize devices in your phone (each time of usb connect on the android device if you don't select always box). Beside, you can suppress the old authorized devices on your phone and start with proper parameter to authorize clearly your pc on your android device
When you connect the android device, a pop up or notification ask to authorize a mac address or equivalent to the device : authorize it if you want to authorize connection between your linux pc and your android device.
It is necessary to obtain autorisation on your android device when you use connect the usb cable (if you don't accept all the time but if it is the first time this box is going to appear on your devices) if you don't do it, adb devices show unauthorized even all rights are good (666, UDEV etc)
Note : thank you for your precious help.
A last thing, sorry for my english
I'm facing this issue while run flutter app from android studio 4.1, i did remove usb cable and plug into second usb port and its working :),
I'm writing this if someone face same issue then they can get help.
Same issue on Fedora 32, to fix this try this:
adb kill-server
adb start-server
For me and possibly many others the issue is to do with access rights to devices on the machine. Now that this is well documented in the android documentation, I think the best solution is here
On Debian based Systems you can run lsusb or dmesg to get vendor id if your vendor does not exist on the given list
I have face the same problem and i have resolved this by
Adding the path of your_android_sdk_path to the environment variable like
sudo export $PATH:/your_android_sdk_path/platform-tools/adb
its your wish how you want to add this to your account or system wide by editing these file ~/.bashrc file or ~/.profile
or
/etc/profile, /etc/bash.bashrc, or /etc/environment if u want to add to system wide access.
and then create the link of that in bin
sudo ln -s /your_android_sdk_path/platform-tools/adb /bin/adb
if you have used adb devices or any command then first kill the server like
adb kill-server
then start the server like
adb start-server
adb devices
now you can see your devices are listed properly without an issue
As the error message said, it is a permission insufficient problem. In my experience, it only happened on my Linux machine, and works well on MacOS and Windows. Launching your Android Studio with root permission could avoid this problem.
$sudo /your_android_studio_path/bin/studio.sh
In my situation:
cd /etc/udev/rules.d/
sudo chmod a+r ./*.rules #the name of your rules files.
Then,I can use adb without this error.
if accepted answer not worked for you then just simple follow steps:
Just open your android studio terminal:-
adb kill-server
adb start-server
it worked for me.
Without running Linux
sudo apt-get install adb. Don't forget to enable USB debugging.
Ref: https://developer.android.com/studio/run/device

adb install over usb not working

I have a bash script running in work which automates the install of various APK samples (some malicious, some not - for testing purposes) to a HTC Desire Z handset running Sophos AV.
Runs well but every now and then an APK will try to install and the shell prompt will just hang at install. At the same time Sophos detects it as malicious but instead of displaying a box offering to uninstall it, it displays a box to delete it instead. Whether this is connected to the adb install issue I'm not sure but it's happened everytime.
It appears to install ok (2539 KB/s (634874 bytes in 0.244s)) .Package size is 640k.
I am running the command adb install -s /location/of/sample.apk
Any ideas?
Sorry for the lengthy post
Thanks
In case this helps others I had a different problem with similar symptoms. ADB install -r "apk path" would hang indefinitely.
I troubleshooted a myriad of things and identified that it was my USB cable length.
I have an USB extender cable as that I plug my devices into. The combined length of my device's cable and the USB extender cable caused this issue. Removing the extension cable fix the issue and eventually I replaced my USB extender cable with a shorter extension cable for the final solution.
try restarting adb server:
adb kill-server
adb start-server
Have you added udev rules file that contains a USB configuration for type of device you want to use.Incase you havn't that may be a reason for this issue. Execute 'lsusb -v' in Terminal. This will give information regarding Unique Vendor id of each connected device in a list.Find the Vendor id of your device.Once you identify the vendor id follow the instructions given in the link for Ubuntu environment. link:http://zoumpis.wordpress.com/2013/06/09/using-hardware-devices-while-developing-and-android-application/

Android Debug Bridge (adb) device - no permissions [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
set up device for development (???????????? no permissions)
(30 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
I have a problem connecting HTC Wildfire A3333 in debugging mode with my Fedora Linux 17. Adb says:
./adb devices
List of devices attached
???????????? no permissions
my udev rules (first rule for Samsung which works just fine and second for HTC which is not):
SUBSYSTEM=="usb",SYSFS{idVendor}=="04e8",SYMLINK+="android_adb",MODE="0666",GROUP="plugdev"
SUBSYSTEM=="usb",SYSFS{idVendor}=="0bb4",SYMLINK+="android_adb",MODE="0666",GROUP="plugdev"
For Samsung devices everything's okay:
./adb devices
List of devices attached
00198a9422618e device
I have been trying all of the answers given in a simmilar thread wthout any luck: Using HTC wildfire for android development
I just had this problem myself under Debian Wheezy.
I restarted the adb daemon with sudo:
sudo ./adb kill-server
sudo ./adb start-server
sudo ./adb devices
Everything is working :)
The cause of that problem has to do with system permissions (thanks # IsaacCisneros for this suggestion). Somehow HTC Wildfire (and maybe the others) need something more from the system than Samsung devices. Simple solution is to run Eclipse as a root, but this is not very comfortable with non-sudo Linux systems like Fedora.
I've found another way of achieving the same goal, which seems to be more user friendly and is lesser security hole then running entire IDE with super user privileges. Mind this is still only a workaround of the problem. System root usage should be minimalized only to administrative tasks, and “adb” was designed to work with normal user account without SUID. Despite of the fact that the proper setting of SUID is quite secure, every single permission increase is a potential system security hole.
1.Setting ownership of the adb binary (owner – root, owner group - user_group):
chown root:user_group adb
2.Setting permissions with SUID:
chmod 4550 adb
This should result something similar to this (ls -llh):
-r-sr-x---. 1 root user_name 1.2M Jan 8 11:42 adb
After that you will be able to run adb as a root, event though you'll be using your normal user account. You can run Eclipse as a normal user and your HTC should be discovered properly.
./adb devices
List of devices attached
HT0BPPY15230 device
I have a similar problem:
$ adb devices
List of devices attached
4df15d6e02a55f15 device
???????????? no permissions
Investigation
If I run lsusb, I can see which devices I have connected, and where:
$ lsusb
...
Bus 002 Device 050: ID 04e8:6860 Samsung Electronics Co., Ltd GT-I9100 Phone ...
Bus 002 Device 049: ID 18d1:4e42 Google Inc.
This is showing my Samsung Galaxy S3 and my Nexus 7 (2012) connected.
Checking the permissions on those:
$ ls -l /dev/bus/usb/002/{049,050}
crw-rw-r-- 1 root root 189, 176 Oct 10 10:09 /dev/bus/usb/002/049
crw-rw-r--+ 1 root plugdev 189, 177 Oct 10 10:12 /dev/bus/usb/002/050
Wait. What? Where did that "plugdev" group come from?
$ cd /lib/udev/rules.d/
$ grep -R "6860.*plugdev" .
./40-libgphoto2-2.rules:ATTRS{idVendor}=="0bb4", ATTRS{idProduct}=="6860", \
ENV{ID_GPHOTO2}="1", ENV{GPHOTO2_DRIVER}="proprietary", \
ENV{ID_MEDIA_PLAYER}="1", MODE="0664", GROUP="plugdev"
./40-libgphoto2-2.rules:ATTRS{idVendor}=="04e8", ATTRS{idProduct}=="6860", \
ENV{ID_GPHOTO2}="1", ENV{GPHOTO2_DRIVER}="proprietary", \
ENV{ID_MEDIA_PLAYER}="1", MODE="0664", GROUP="plugdev"
(I've wrapped those lines)
Note the GROUP="plugdev" lines. Also note that this doesn't work for the other device ID:
$ grep -Ri "4e42.*plugdev" .
(nothing is returned)
Fixing it
OK. So what's the fix?
Add a rule
Create a file /etc/udev/rules.d/99-adb.rules containing the following line:
ATTRS{idVendor}=="18d1", ATTRS{idProduct}=="4e42", ENV{ID_GPHOTO2}="1",
ENV{GPHOTO2_DRIVER}="proprietary", ENV{ID_MEDIA_PLAYER}="1",
MODE="0664", GROUP="plugdev"
This should be a single line, I've wrapped it here for readability
Restart udev
$ sudo udevadm control --reload-rules
$ sudo service udev restart
That's it
Unplug/replug your device.
Try it
$ adb devices
List of devices attached
4df15d6e02a55f15 device
015d2109ce67fa0c device
You udev rule seems wrong. I used this and it worked:
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="0bb4", MODE="0666", GROUP="plugdev"
(ATTR instead of SYSFS)
Changing the USB Mode from phone did the trick for me. (I set it to File Transfer)
under ubuntu 12.04, eclipse juno. I face the same issue. This what I found on Yi Yu Blog
The solution is same as same as Leon
sudo -s
adb kill-server
adb start-server
adb devices
Stephan's answer works (using sudo adb kill-server), but it is temporary. It must be re-issued after every reboot.
For a permanent solution, the udev config must be modified:
Witrant's answer is the right idea (copied from the official Android documentation). But it's just a template. If that doesn't work for your device, you need to fill in the correct device ID for your device(s).
lsusb
Bus 001 Device 002: ID 05c6:9025 Qualcomm, Inc.
Bus 002 Device 002: ID 0e0f:0003 VMware, Inc. Virtual Mouse
...
Find your android device in the list.
Then use the first half of the ID (4 digits) for the idVendor (the last half is the idProduct, but it is not necessary to get adb working).
sudo vi /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules and add one rule for each unique idVendor:
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="05c6", MODE="0666", GROUP="plugdev"
It's that simple. You don't need all those other fields given in some of the answers. Save the file.
Then reboot. The change is permanent. (Roger shows a way to restart udev, if you don't want to reboot).
...the OP’s own answer is wrong in so far, that there are no “special system permissions”. – The “no permission” problem boils down to ... no permissions.
Unfortunately it is not easy to debug, because adb makes it a secret which device it tries to access! On Linux, it tries to open the “USB serial converter” device of the phone, which is e.g. /dev/bus/usb/001/115 (your bus number and device address will vary). This is sometimes linked and used from /dev/android_adb.
lsusb will help to find bus number and device address. Beware that the device address will change for sure if you re-plug, as might the bus number if the port gets confused about which speed to use (e.g. one physical port ends up on one logical bus or another).
An lsusb-line looks similar to this:
Bus 001 Device 115: ID 4321:fedc bla bla bla
lsusb -v might help you to find the device if the “bla bla bla” is not hint enough (sometimes it does neither contain the manufacturer, nor the model of the phone).
Once you know the device, check with your own eyes that ls -a /dev/bus/usb/001/115 is really accessible for the user in question! Then check that it works with chmod and fix your udev setup.
PS1: /dev/android_adb can only point to one device, so make sure it does what you want.
PS2: Unrelated to this question, but less well known: adb has a fixed list of vendor ids it goes through. This list can be extended from ~/.android/adb_usb.ini, which should contain 0x4321 (if we follow my example lsusb line from above). – Not needed here, as you don’t even get a “no permissions” if the vendor id is not known.
I'll prepend this postscript here at the top so it won't get lost in my earlier explanation.
I can reliably produce and resolve the no-permissions problem by simply changing the USB connection type from Camera (PTP) to Media device (MTP). The camera mode allows debugging; the media mode causes the no-permissions response in ADB.
The reasoning seems pretty evident after reflecting on that for a moment. Unsecured content on the device would be made accessible by the debugger in media server mode.
===========
The device is unpermissioned until you accept the RSA encryption warning on the debugged device. At some point after connecting, the device will ask to accept the debugging connection. It's a minimal security protocol that ensures you can access the device beyond the initial swipe lock. Developer mode needs to be enabled, I believe.
The "no permissions" flag is actually a good first indicator that adb recognizes the device as a valid debugging target. Notice that it doesn't list your other USB devices.
Details at the following and related pages.
http://developer.android.com/tools/device.html
Same problem with Pipo S1S after upgrading to 4.2.2 stock rom Jun 4.
$ adb devices
List of devices attached
???????????? no permissions
All of the above suggestions, while valid to get your usb device recognised, do not solve the problem for me. (Android Debug Bridge version 1.0.31 running on Mint 15.)
Updating android sdk tools etc resets ~/.android/adb_usb.ini.
To recognise Pipo VendorID 0x2207 do these steps
Add to line /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="0x2207", MODE="0666", GROUP="plugdev"
Add line to ~/.android/adb_usb.ini:
0x2207
Then remove the adbkey files
rm -f ~/.android/adbkey ~/.android/adbkey.pub
and reconnect your device to rebuild the key files with a correct adb connection.
Some devices will ask to re-authorize.
sudo adb kill-server
sudo adb start-server
adb devices
Had the same issue. It was a problem with udev rules. Tried a few of the rules mentioned above but didnot fix the issue. Found a set of rules here, https://github.com/M0Rf30/android-udev-rules. Followed the guide there and, voila, fixed.
I encountered the same problem today.
I followed the official instructions, but I didn't noticed that I SHOULD
run command "chmod a+r /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules"
After I set this file to world readable and re-plug my usb cable,the status became unauthorized. Then just grant the permission and everything goes fine.
I agree with Robert Siemer and Michaël Witrant. If it's not working, try to debug with strace
strace adb devices
In my case it helps to kill all instances and remove socket file /tmp/ADB_PORT (the default is /tmp/5037).
Another possible source of this issue is USB tethering. If you have used USB tethering, turn it off, then unplug the device from USB, plug it back in, then do
adb kill-server
adb devices
That did the trick in my case (Ubuntu 12.04, Nexus S, SDK in home dir, never needed root to get it running). Depending on your device, you may need to run adb devices as root, though.
Try "android update adb" command. It helps me with samsung galaxy gear.
The output of ls -al /usr/bin/adb should show that it is owned by user root and group root. You can use Linux ACL (Access Control Lists) to give your local user permissions for adb as follows:
setfacl -m "u:userName:rwx" /usr/bin/adb
This is preferable to setting the SUID bit on /usr/bin/adb and also limits the users who can use adb to userName and root.
The answer is weaved amongst the various posts here, I'll so my best, but it looks like a really simple and obvious reason.
1) is that there usually is a "user" variable in the udev rule some thing like USER="your_user" probably right after the GROUP="plugdev"
2) You need to use the correct SYSFS{idVendor}==”####″ and SYSFS{idProduct}=="####" values for your device/s. If you have devices from more than one manufacture, say like one from Samsung and one from HTC, then you need to have an entry(rule) for each vendor, not an entry for each device but for each different vendor you will use, so you need an entry for HTC and Samsung. It looks like you have your entry for Samsung now you need another. Remember the USER="your_user". Use 'lsusb' like Robert Seimer suggests to find the idVendor and idProduct, they are usually some numbers and letters in this format X#X#:#X#X I think the first one is the idVendor and the second idProduct but your going to need to do this for each brand of phone/tablet you have.
3) I havent figured out how 51-adb.rules and 99-adb.rules are different or why.
4) maybe try adding "plugdev" group to your user with "usermod -a -G plugdev your_user", Try that at your own risk, though I don't thinks it anyriskier than launching a gui as root but I believe if necessary you should at least use "gksudo eclipse" instead.
I hope that helped clearify some things, the udev rules syntax is a bit of a mystery to me aswell, but from what I hear it can be different for different systems so try some things out, one ate a time, and note what change works.
Close running adb, could be closing running android-studio.
list devices,
/usr/local/android-studio/sdk/platform-tools/adb devices
On THL W100 running the device as root (as described above) worked only together with tethering enabled (I used AirDroid for that).
I had the same situation where three devices connected to one same host but only one had 'no permissions' others were online.
Adding SUID or SGID on adb was another issue for me. Devices seen offline every time adb restarts - until you acknowledge on the devices every time.
I solved this 'no permissions' issue by adding 'o+w' permission for a device file.
chmod o+w /dev/bus/usb/00n/xxx

Android Ouku tablet device drivers

I am developing (not end user), on Eclipse and I want to connect to Ouku tablet. I cannot find the drviers for this that work. Anyone know how to get Ouku tablet connected via USB. I cannot even see the device
Have you tried using the android update adb command, or manually putting the VID into your adb_usb.ini file (even though it telss you not to)?
more ~/.android/adb_usb.ini
# ANDROID 3RD PARTY USB VENDOR ID LIST -- DO NOT EDIT.
# USE 'android update adb' TO GENERATE.
# 1 USB VENDOR ID PER LINE.
You may need to use dmesg or lsusb or look in device manager to figure out the VID; also on linux you may need to put it in your udev rule.
Finally, do your know for a fact that this device has an adbd listening on USB? First make sure you have enabled USB debugging in settings. If you can get a shell open from a terminal program or connectbot on the device, you might want to try
getprop | grep adb
and
ps | grep adbd
Maybe this could also help, came accross this driver link
On this page
I had a P801W with VID: 0x05C6
After installing the driver package and updating the devices:
Update Driver
Select option: "Browse My Computer for Driver Software"
Select option: "Lett me pick from the list"
Select Mobile -> Google Inc -> ADB Interface
I had to to this for 4 new devices in my list, but after these steps $adb shell worked on me
Based on what I have learned today, this link could also provide good information in resolving this with the standard USB ADB Drivers from Google, by simply modifying the driver .inf description file.

Debugging in Eclipse with real Android phone on Ubuntu 10.10

I can't get adb to recognising my HTC Desire on my new upgrade of Ubuntu 10.10 Maverick Meerkat.
adb devices shows
List of devices attached
???????????? no permissions
Now, there are plenty of tutorials for changing rule files under /etc/udev/rules.d/.
However, I cannot find one specific for 10.10.
Can anyone tell me whether the rule file name and content is the same as described at link text, or are we looking at some new settings for this new release?
Many thanks
On Linux Mint/Ubuntu 11.04 with a Samsung Galaxy S2, I didn't use any rules, but when "reset adb" or when "Devices view" it shows:
???????????? no permissions
I had to :
sudo killall adb # if I don't, I get "error: insufficient permissions for device"
sudo ./adb usb
Then I was able to take screenshots following this tutorials: http://www.addictivetips.com/mobile/how-to-take-screenshots-of-android-device/
Cheers
My magic spell for Ubuntu 11.04:
$killall adb
$sudo adb usb
* daemon not running. starting it now on port 5037 *
* daemon started successfully *
restarting in USB mode
Then go to eclipse and start debugging on real device
Ok I am a little late to the party but here is another approach...
Create a file called 51-android.rules in /etc/udev/rules.d with the following contents
SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="04e8", MODE="0666", GROUP="plugdev"
Then run the following command to reload the udev rules ...
udevadm control --reload-rules
Now plug in your galaxy S2 mobile phone into the computer's USB port and run adb devices.
NOTE: You will need to change the vendor id (highlighted in bold) to match your phone's vendor id (in the OP's case it should be 0bb4 for HTC)
Okay, I guess the tutorials work, I created both 70-android.rules and 51-android.rules, re-typed them again (get rid of the funny quotes when you copy from the web).
Restart
And now it is recognised!
On windows, I had to download a Special App from HTC in order to get the proper USB drivers to connect to my Evo. The app in question allows you to synch your outlook contacts/calendar (weee...) with those on your phone. I rather doubt there's something similar available for ubuntu/Linux.
I strongly suspect you're up against a similar situation. The standard USB drivers don't work with HTC phones, so you need Something Else.
If this is something that stopped working with the upgrade, you'll need to take a close look at any USB-related changes.
Good luck.
Hi all i am very frustrated by checking all sides
But one day i got the solution of this problem pls follow the following steps
First open your device terminal
1)on the top left hand corner in Application ->Accessories->terminal
2) on terminal window type following commands
$ sudo su then press enter after that terminal want password which is set by you
in installation or giving at the time of logging.
$<Enter password> password is not shown but it is type internally you can just type
whole password
$ mkdir ~/.android
$vi ~/.android/adb_usb.ini
press ctri+z here
$ echo "0x0451" > ~/.android/adb_usb.ini
$cat /root/.android/adb_usb.ini
$sudo mount -t usbfs none /proc/bus/usb
$cd path of android sdk tools from home
like /home/tv-014/Desktop/newandroid/android-sdk-linux/platform-tools
in my system i have put android-sdk-linux at desktop and in it one platform-tools
folder contain the adb.exe file
so after cd command we have the path from home to platform-tools folder.
$ ./adb kill-server
$ ./adb start-server
$ ./adb devices
Now you got the list of devices attach to your systems.

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