Related
Now I know your first thought “I bet this tool didn’t even use Search like the rest of the shlubs on here”. Well you are mistaken. I have not only searched xda but even tried Google and Yahoo (just in case) as well. I have found numerous posts (like HERE and HERE and many others) with similar situations but haven’t seen a resolution. Here is the rundown:
Running JF’s 1.5 CRB21 ROM
Hard SPL (HSPL10.95.3000)
JF’s 1.43 Recovery Image
SDK 1.5_r1
Fastboot.exe placed in System32
Haykuro’s Updated Drivers placed in System32
Windows XP 2002 SP3
I have been able to flash nandroid backups without issue in the past but adb started intermittently not recognizing my phone when I flashed from JF’s RC33 to JF’s 1.5. I was able to restore a backup once but now adb will not recognize my phone at ALL. Tried different USB plugs and cables with no result. If I mount the phone to view the SD card via Windows Explorer it shows as “HTC Dream Composite ADB Interface” in Device Manager. However if I boot into the Bootloader (which I have the Hard SPL HSPL10.95.3000) , connect via USB, hit back to go into Fastboot, and try to flash a nandroid backup I get "Waiting on Device" infinitely. “Adb shell” yields “Device Not Found”. The "adb devices" command yields a blank list. But if I type "Fastboot Reboot" it will reboot the phone so I know it is communicating and the cable is in good order. I have deleted my SDK and drivers and re-downloaded/installed them and STILL cannot get adb to connect. It has to be something simple I am missing here right? Any idea why this would have worked without issue in the past and now not at all? Could it have been a Windows Security update? (That's about the only thing I can thing that has changed other than the newer ROM)
Thank you for your help.
Did you update you USB Drivers or try reloading them?
Also.... Settings > Applications > Development > USB debugging has to be checked....
and stop being a tool.
nah im jk.
USB Debugging is checked - thanks Senorkabob for at least trying to help.
Phoenix - I apologize for posting in the wrong place. If I could move it, I would. I apparently missed the "How to be a Good Xda Citizen" thread... I shall repent
Could you choose View -> "Devices by Connections" in Device Manager and uninstall the USB Root Hub device your android is connected to. This should clean up all the device nodes and allow you a clean start. Click "Scan for hardware changes" in the toolbar and wait for the system to detect your phone. In the new hardware detected wizard, make sure you specify the path to drivers folder of the correct architecture, i.e. x86 or x64.
gPhunk said:
USB Debugging is checked - thanks Senorkabob for at least trying to help.
Phoenix - I apologize for posting in the wrong place. If I could move it, I would. I apparently missed the "How to be a Good Xda Citizen" thread... I shall repent
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Repent .. Repent..
Did reloading the USB Driver work?.. Did for me =)
billc.cn said:
Could you choose View -> "Devices by Connections" in Device Manager and uninstall the USB Root Hub device your android is connected to. This should clean up all the device nodes and allow you a clean start. Click "Scan for hardware changes" in the toolbar and wait for the system to detect your phone. In the new hardware detected wizard, make sure you specify the path to drivers folder of the correct architecture, i.e. x86 or x64.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How do I know which one to install? (I am running Vista Home Premium 32bit)
Thank you for your help
Use the x86 drivers. Also try installing them in safe mode. That made it work for me
ubernicholi said:
Use the x86 drivers. Also try installing them in safe mode. That made it work for me
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks man - I was able to install the drivers but am still unable to view my device. It shows as "HTC Dream" in Device Manager but when I run "adb devices" in the command line, it yields a blank list. Further commands (I.e. adb shell) say "cannot find device. Running fastboot commands result in "waiting on device". This happens on both my laptop and my home pc so I am beginning to think it's the phone. Should I have something loaded on the phone? I have USB Debugging checked so that's not it. Any ideas?
possibly the problem is that ADB does not work in Bootloader mode, it is designed to work while the phone is running.
However if I boot into the Bootloader (which I have the Hard SPL HSPL10.95.3000) , connect via USB, hit back to go into Fastboot, and try to flash a nandroid backup I get "Waiting on Device" infinitely. “Adb shell” yields “Device Not Found”. The "adb devices" command yields a blank list. But if I type "Fastboot Reboot" it will reboot the phone so I know it is communicating and the cable is in good order.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yuo are obviously trying this in bootloader mode, underline for emphasis.
try >fastboot devices
see if that shows you your phone
Otherwise try ADB while in the OS already.
I'm currently getting some strange errors while trying to control my N4 over adb.
http://prntscr.com/1km24i
On Ubuntu I get "device unauthorized" and on Windows 8 I get "device offline".
Same thing happens over USB.
Any idea?
PS: I'm currently on 4.2.2. I where on 4.3 yesterday but installed 4.2.2 again after some strange errors.
HashWorks said:
I'm currently getting some strange errors while trying to control my N4 over adb.
http://prntscr.com/1km24i
On Ubuntu I get "device unauthorized" and on Windows 8 I get "device offline".
Same thing happens over USB.
Any idea?
PS: I'm currently on 4.2.2. I where on 4.3 yesterday but installed 4.2.2 again after some strange errors.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As the message have stated, you need to allow the adb access on your phone.
You need to first connect the phone to your PC with USB cables, then the authorization message will pop out on the screen. Tick remember your choice, then allow it.
ksilver89 said:
As the message have stated, you need to allow the adb access on your phone.
You need to first connect the phone to your PC with USB cables, then the authorization message will pop out on the screen. Tick remember your choice, then allow it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not getting any message.
Maybe because I already authorized my pc before. A few weeks ago adb worked just fine.
HashWorks said:
I'm not getting any message.
Maybe because I already authorized my pc before. A few weeks ago adb worked just fine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Remove /data/misc/adb/adb_key, reboot your phone and try connect again. The message should come up.
Perfect, worked. Thanks!
I just got my phone back from LG (the mainboard "Fried"). I have the new update pushed to the phone. I have to re-root the phone now as its basically a new phone.
I am getting the Device offline as well message in ADB. As I don't have root, how can I fix this error? I can't navigate to that particular directory. I had no authotization message show up on my computer when I plugged the phone in for the first time... so not sure how to get past this...
usafle said:
I just got my phone back from LG (the mainboard "Fried"). I have the new update pushed to the phone. I have to re-root the phone now as its basically a new phone.
I am getting the Device offline as well message in ADB. As I don't have root, how can I fix this error? I can't navigate to that particular directory. I had no authotization message show up on my computer when I plugged the phone in for the first time... so not sure how to get past this...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This shouldn't be happening on new phone, because the key won't be created if you haven't authorized it.
Can you check your adb version? Try updating it with android sdk manager.
I am going to try and re-download the ADB SDK. I think it's an issue with whatever version I downloaded. I've tried to run the ADB Manager.exe and nothing happens. Currently flying to London so it will have to wait until I get back. Nice of LG to fix my phone and they didn't charge me a dime. Although I did lose everything.
Hello,
I'm having the same problem "Please check the confirmation dialog on your device", but there is no such dialog on the device.
Things I tried and DID NOT SOLVE:
1) Remove /data/misc/adb/* - Failed, there was nothing there (full wipe before flash a new rom)
2) Try different ROMs - Failed, tried AOKP Milestone 1 and 2 and CM10. Dialog never showed up.
3) Try different usb cable OR usb port - Failed, adb is recognized, but no confirmation dialog on the device (device shows as unauthorized)
4) Removed all drivers and installed them again - Failed, same problem;
5) Updated android-sdk (or full delete and reinstall [remembering to adb kill-server]) - Failed, problem continues even with platform-tools up-to-date.
6) Removed all folder C:\Users\Myself\.android - Failed, it was never recreated;
7) Tried to connect via adb over wifi, device is found but unauthorized persists;
Things that gave me some clues:
1) Reboot to recovery mode allowed me to use ADB without any authorization (only while in recovery);
2) Recovery sideload works without any problem;
3) HOWEVER, when connecting to another computer (Windows XP, fresh install on a virtual machine), dialog appears and adb works!
The scenario:
1) Devices tried: Galaxy Nexus / Galaxy S3 I9300
2) ROMs tried: AOKP (4.2.2) / CM10 (4.2.2)
3) Windows 7 x64
The problem is on the computer side, that's a fact. However, I would like to SOLVE it without having to reformat my computer, or change my OS.
Where to start?
Thanks!
legalbrr2 said:
Hello,
I'm having the same problem "Please check the confirmation dialog on your device", but there is no such dialog on the device.
Things I tried and DID NOT SOLVE:
1) Remove /data/misc/adb/* - Failed, there was nothing there (full wipe before flash a new rom)
2) Try different ROMs - Failed, tried AOKP Milestone 1 and 2 and CM10. Dialog never showed up.
3) Try different usb cable OR usb port - Failed, adb is recognized, but no confirmation dialog on the device (device shows as unauthorized)
4) Removed all drivers and installed them again - Failed, same problem;
5) Updated android-sdk (or full delete and reinstall [remembering to adb kill-server]) - Failed, problem continues even with platform-tools up-to-date.
6) Removed all folder C:\Users\Myself\.android - Failed, it was never recreated;
7) Tried to connect via adb over wifi, device is found but unauthorized persists;
Things that gave me some clues:
1) Reboot to recovery mode allowed me to use ADB without any authorization (only while in recovery);
2) Recovery sideload works without any problem;
3) HOWEVER, when connecting to another computer (Windows XP, fresh install on a virtual machine), dialog appears and adb works!
The scenario:
1) Devices tried: Galaxy Nexus / Galaxy S3 I9300
2) ROMs tried: AOKP (4.2.2) / CM10 (4.2.2)
3) Windows 7 x64
The problem is on the computer side, that's a fact. However, I would like to SOLVE it without having to reformat my computer, or change my OS.
Where to start?
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Make sure to use the latest ADB executable, also check if you don't have any other adb.exe in your computer, from command promt: where adb.exe
maxrfon said:
Make sure to use the latest ADB executable, also check if you don't have any other adb.exe in your computer, from command promt: where adb.exe
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
No, adb.exe is up-to-date and there's a single instance of it on my computer.
Problem must be somewhere else.
Thanks anyway
legalbrr2 said:
Hello,
No, adb.exe is up-to-date and there's a single instance of it on my computer.
Problem must be somewhere else.
Thanks anyway
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
please delete the sdk settings folder on your pc, on my linux box i deleted ~/.android and it worked
Regards
c.cicali said:
Hello,
please delete the sdk settings folder on your pc, on my linux box i deleted ~/.android and it worked
Regards
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Doesn't work yet..
Tried to delete "C:\Users\Myself\.android" and "Documents\.android".
Did a full search on filesystem, and found no other .android folders.
Thanks anyway.
legalbrr2 said:
Doesn't work yet..
Tried to delete "C:\Users\Myself\.android" and "Documents\.android".
Did a full search on filesystem, and found no other .android folders.
Thanks anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After removing your .android directories, you need to restart the adb server to send fresh credentials to the phone.
First unplug the phone from your computer, then run:
Code:
$ adb kill-server
$ adb start-server
Now plug your phone back in and you should see a dialog on the device asking to confirm new credentials for your computer.
After confirming the credentials you should be able to connect to your device.
I hope that this helps...
legalbrr2 said:
Hello,
I'm having the same problem "Please check the confirmation dialog on your device", but there is no such dialog on the device.
Things I tried and DID NOT SOLVE:
1) Remove /data/misc/adb/* - Failed, there was nothing there (full wipe before flash a new rom)
2) Try different ROMs - Failed, tried AOKP Milestone 1 and 2 and CM10. Dialog never showed up.
3) Try different usb cable OR usb port - Failed, adb is recognized, but no confirmation dialog on the device (device shows as unauthorized)
4) Removed all drivers and installed them again - Failed, same problem;
5) Updated android-sdk (or full delete and reinstall [remembering to adb kill-server]) - Failed, problem continues even with platform-tools up-to-date.
6) Removed all folder C:\Users\Myself\.android - Failed, it was never recreated;
7) Tried to connect via adb over wifi, device is found but unauthorized persists;
Things that gave me some clues:
1) Reboot to recovery mode allowed me to use ADB without any authorization (only while in recovery);
2) Recovery sideload works without any problem;
3) HOWEVER, when connecting to another computer (Windows XP, fresh install on a virtual machine), dialog appears and adb works!
The scenario:
1) Devices tried: Galaxy Nexus / Galaxy S3 I9300
2) ROMs tried: AOKP (4.2.2) / CM10 (4.2.2)
3) Windows 7 x64
The problem is on the computer side, that's a fact. However, I would like to SOLVE it without having to reformat my computer, or change my OS.
Where to start?
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know that this post is old, but I came across the same problem while attempting to root my Galaxy S4 today. This ended up being the solution:
1. Grant yourself root access on the PC that is running adb
2. Remove RSA Keys:
rm /home/username/.android/*
3. Restart adb server:
adb kill-server
adb start-server
I hope that this helps.
SOLVED!
I guess I should have read the previous post before I posted this but anyway maybe this helps.
I had this happen to my Verizon Samsung Galaxy S4 SCH-I545 running 4.3 (VRUEM2K) after I rooted using saferoot, then removed the SuperSU app using SuperSU's so-called "safely unroot" menu option. It will no longer request the RSA key from the Ubuntu system I previously authorized (and used to root) and won't re-root using saferoot or motochopper. But since I dual-boot Windows 7 (I hardly use it, came with the laptop), I figured I'd give Odin a try and re-flash it to stock which didn't do anything to the "custom" flag and I still got "unauthorized" in adb in Ubuntu, but I noticed it does show up fine with adb in Windows. I tried the windows verison of saferoot and it was able to re-root my phone and re-install SuperSU just fine. Phone still showed "unauthorized" in Ubuntu.
After posting this I saw the previous comment saying to rm -rf ~/.android/ in Ubuntu. I also cleared all previously authorized computers and disable dev mode on my phone, rebooted, turned dev mode back on, rebooted again. Not sure if this helped, but I went through the following steps as root:
[email protected]:~# adb kill-server
[email protected]:~# adb devices
* daemon not running. starting it now on port 5037 *
* daemon started successfully *
List of devices attached
15506b89 unauthorized
At this point I pretty much said "F it, not gonna work" and walked away to get a snack, leaving my phone plugged in. I was only gone a couple minutes and when I came back, the RSA authorization request had popped up on my phone. I checked the box to always allow this computer and authorized it. Then SUCCESS, as seen below:
[email protected]:~# adb devices
List of devices attached
15506b89 device
Removing the .android directory seemed to do it, but you need to wait a few minutes for the computer to re-request the RSA key.
after a week of searching. I NEVER KNEW it pop to accept to authorized. WOW cant believe it... after reading this thread im lol'ding right now.
I had tried to kill adb etc but keep saying aunauthorized. solution was to reboot my phone with usb connected,after boot it the dialog to connect appear and my s4 got authorized. backup success.
thanks to the adb kill-server guy! worked for me
gonpwnya said:
thanks to the adb kill-server guy! worked for me
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ditto
Hi all,
I recently bought a OPT and wanted to root it, but I can't get the RSA Fingerprint dialog to appear.
What I've done:
Installed Android SDK and platform tools and all that stuff according to the guide in the general section
Installed Koush's universal drivers and also specifically installed the Oneplus drivers
Rebooted rebooted rebooted both my computer and phone multiple times
Revoked USB authorization multiple times (according to some this works, but not for me)
Tried both MTP and PTP
Switched off and on developer options and USB Debugging
Factory reset my phone
When I start a command prompt in the platform tools directory and execute "adb version", " Andoid Debug Bridge version 1.0.32 Revision eac51f2bb6a8-android" pops up, so I think my ADB is working properly. But when I execute "ADB devices" the ADB server starts up and then nothing is listed under connected devices.
I'm using Windows 10. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
This might work
This didn't work for me, but give it a try.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/oneplus-2/general/guide-make-oneplus-2-adb-devices-t3218332
Hi everyone,
I have a Nexus 6P which simply refuses to connect via USB on my Mac (i.e. it doesn't show up as a valid device under adb devices or via Android File Transfer). I believe it was working at some point but it seems to have stopped now. Might be worth noting, I did try connecting it to my car's charger a few months ago but had the worst time with it, it would charge and disconnect every few seconds (may or may not be relevant in this case as it pertains to the USB). I tried a different charger and it works fine with it though.
I have tried a lot of different things (which I'll list below) but have had no luck getting my Nexus 6P being recognized as a device when I connect it to my Mac (or any other). I do have the Developer settings enabled and I am able to switch to MTP but I never get the prompt to change USB mode. Anytime I connect my device, adb devices doesn't list it at all. I tried ADB File transfer as well and that also says "Please connect your device".
Here are some of the things I have tried so far:
1. Used different cables - no luck
2. Used a different mac - no luck
3. Tried a different Nexus 6P with my cable, it works fine (so it is not a cable issue)
4. Tried a different Nexus 6P with my mac, it works fine (so my Mac seems to be OK too)
5. Restarted in recovery mode - no luck
6. Tried removing a bunch of apps in case there was something conflicting - no luck so far
7. Chatted up Google support - They couldn't tell me much outside of the last option - Factory Reset - I have been holding off on that since I want to be able to transfer my files out first but I really want to avoid having to try that before exhausting all other options. They did offer to replace with a refurb'ed device but I had to decline that.
I did create a bug report dump using the device to see if anything interesting showed up and the only thing noticeable there is an exception related to USB. I am putting that info here in case it is useful in helping with this.
Code:
DUMP OF SERVICE usb:
USB Manager State:
USB Device State:
mCurrentFunctions: mtp,adb
mCurrentFunctionsApplied: true
mConnected: false
mConfigured: false
mUsbDataUnlocked: false
mCurrentAccessory: null
Kernel state: DISCONNECTED
Kernel function list: mtp,ffs
USB Debugging State:
Connected to adbd: true
Last key received: null
User keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /data/misc/adb/adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
System keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
USB Host State:
USB Port State:
otg_default: port=UsbPort{id=otg_default, supportedModes=dual}, status=UsbPortStatus{connected=true, currentMode=ufp, currentPowerRole=sink, currentDataRole=device, supportedRoleCombinations=[source:host, sink:device]}, canChangeMode=true, canChangePowerRole=false, canChangeDataRole=false
USB Audio Devices:
USB MIDI Devices:
Settings for user 0:
Device permissions:
Accessory permissions:
Device preferences:
Accessory preferences:
Any help here is really appreciated! Thanks
desimunda42 said:
Code:
USB Debugging State:
Connected to adbd: true
Last key received: null
User keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /data/misc/adb/adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
System keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That seems suspicious. Was this taken while the phone was connected to your mac?
Here's my phone's dump while NOT connected to a computer
Code:
USB Manager State:
USB Device State:
mCurrentFunctions: mtp,adb
mCurrentFunctionsApplied: true
mConnected: false
mConfigured: false
mUsbDataUnlocked: false
mCurrentAccessory: null
Kernel state: DISCONNECTED
Kernel function list: mtp,ffs
USB Debugging State:
Connected to adbd: true
[COLOR="red"] Last key received: blahblahblahblah (not null)
User keys: blahblahblahblah (no exception)
[/COLOR] System keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
Here it is when connected to computer
Code:
DUMP OF SERVICE usb:
USB Manager State:
USB Device State:
mCurrentFunctions: mtp,adb
mCurrentFunctionsApplied: true
[COLOR="red"] mConnected: true
mConfigured: true
[/COLOR] mUsbDataUnlocked: false
mCurrentAccessory: null
[COLOR="red"] Kernel state: CONFIGURED
[/COLOR] Kernel function list: mtp,ffs
USB Debugging State:
Connected to adbd: true
[COLOR="Red"] Last key received: blahblahblahblah (not null)
User keys: blahblahblahblah (no exception)
[/COLOR] System keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
Are you on a custom rom? Do you get an authorization prompt if you call "adb device" after doing "Revoke USB debugging authorizations" from Develop options?
adotkdotjh said:
That seems suspicious. Was this taken while the phone was connected to your mac?
Are you on a custom rom? Do you get an authorization prompt if you call "adb device" after doing "Revoke USB debugging authorizations" from Develop options?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I wasn't connected to my Mac at the time I pulled the report (I confirmed by repeating it just now and still get that 'FileNotFoundException" in the logs for USB device. I don't have a custom rom, I have the standard OEM from the Google Store and didn't do anything else with it.
Also, I did revoke the USB debugging auth multiple times and inspite of that I never get any prompt when I connect.
I also got the report while connected to the Mac and am still seeing the same exception:
Code:
DUMP OF SERVICE usb:
USB Manager State:
USB Device State:
mCurrentFunctions: mtp,adb
mCurrentFunctionsApplied: true
mConnected: false
mConfigured: false
mUsbDataUnlocked: false
mCurrentAccessory: null
Kernel state: DISCONNECTED
Kernel function list: mtp,ffs
USB Debugging State:
Connected to adbd: true
Last key received: null
User keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /data/misc/adb/adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
System keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
USB Host State:
USB Port State:
otg_default: port=UsbPort{id=otg_default, supportedModes=dual}, status=UsbPortStatus{connected=true, currentMode=ufp, currentPowerRole=sink, currentDataRole=device, supportedRoleCombinations=[source:host, sink:device]}, canChangeMode=true, canChangePowerRole=false, canChangeDataRole=false
USB Audio Devices:
USB MIDI Devices:
Settings for user 0:
Device permissions:
Accessory permissions:
Device preferences:
Accessory preferences:
desimunda42 said:
Hi everyone,
I have a Nexus 6P which simply refuses to connect via USB on my Mac (i.e. it doesn't show up as a valid device under adb devices or via Android File Transfer). I believe it was working at some point but it seems to have stopped now. Might be worth noting, I did try connecting it to my car's charger a few months ago but had the worst time with it, it would charge and disconnect every few seconds (may or may not be relevant in this case as it pertains to the USB). I tried a different charger and it works fine with it though.
I have tried a lot of different things (which I'll list below) but have had no luck getting my Nexus 6P being recognized as a device when I connect it to my Mac (or any other). I do have the Developer settings enabled and I am able to switch to MTP but I never get the prompt to change USB mode. Anytime I connect my device, adb devices doesn't list it at all. I tried ADB File transfer as well and that also says "Please connect your device".
Here are some of the things I have tried so far:
1. Used different cables - no luck
2. Used a different mac - no luck
3. Tried a different Nexus 6P with my cable, it works fine (so it is not a cable issue)
4. Tried a different Nexus 6P with my mac, it works fine (so my Mac seems to be OK too)
5. Restarted in recovery mode - no luck
6. Tried removing a bunch of apps in case there was something conflicting - no luck so far
7. Chatted up Google support - They couldn't tell me much outside of the last option - Factory Reset - I have been holding off on that since I want to be able to transfer my files out first but I really want to avoid having to try that before exhausting all other options. They did offer to replace with a refurb'ed device but I had to decline that.
I did create a bug report dump using the device to see if anything interesting showed up and the only thing noticeable there is an exception related to USB. I am putting that info here in case it is useful in helping with this.
Code:
DUMP OF SERVICE usb:
USB Manager State:
USB Device State:
mCurrentFunctions: mtp,adb
mCurrentFunctionsApplied: true
mConnected: false
mConfigured: false
mUsbDataUnlocked: false
mCurrentAccessory: null
Kernel state: DISCONNECTED
Kernel function list: mtp,ffs
USB Debugging State:
Connected to adbd: true
Last key received: null
User keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /data/misc/adb/adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
System keys:
IOException: java.io.FileNotFoundException: /adb_keys: open failed: ENOENT (No such file or directory)
USB Host State:
USB Port State:
otg_default: port=UsbPort{id=otg_default, supportedModes=dual}, status=UsbPortStatus{connected=true, currentMode=ufp, currentPowerRole=sink, currentDataRole=device, supportedRoleCombinations=[source:host, sink:device]}, canChangeMode=true, canChangePowerRole=false, canChangeDataRole=false
USB Audio Devices:
USB MIDI Devices:
Settings for user 0:
Device permissions:
Accessory permissions:
Device preferences:
Accessory preferences:
Any help here is really appreciated! Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I usually only get the key prompt for ADB authorzation when I connect my device and type "adb devices"..... If worse comes to worse, You can restore your phone to factory settings without wiping your sd card. Then you could test that option with compromising your data. Just flash each image from the archive yourself when restoring the firmware as opposed to using the flash-all scipt, or resetting the phone from settings... DO NOT flash the "userdata.img" included in the factory firmware archive or issue the command "fastboot format userdata" during the restore process and all of your files will be fine. This may be an option as long as fastboot is still functional on your device. Ive come across so many different devices in so many different conditions over the years, as long as the device could power on and the usb port was functional, fasboot has worked time and time again.
PS adb on Mac can be a bit tricky especially if this is the first time youre attempting to o install and use it. Unless you set the correct enviornment variables during the install process, you will oly be able to access adb from inside the folder that its stored in on your mac. Youll have to pull up your terminal and and direct it to the folder containing adb and fastboot. Its usually ina a folder called "platform-tools" Which can be found in the dictory in whch you installed the Android SDK or SDK Tools packages... Now that I think about it, you have to download adb from the SDK package I just mentioned. After doing so, youll find the platform tools folder and it should contain what you need. As long as java is correctly installed on your mac then everything should work once you issue the "adb devices" command in a terminal session thats points at the "platform-tools" folder. YOU ALSO HAVE TO HAVE JDK INSTALLED in order for it to work with your device. I just looked at what you posted and it looks like youred missing JDK"...
If you havent done any of this yet the thats the problem. If everything I just typed seems confusing then you can try this which explains everything you need to do to set up adb a whole lot better than my attempt above lol buts its going to take some time to accomplish https://seo-michael.co.uk/how-to-setup-adb-on-os-x/
or
You can also install and configure adb a whole lot easier by issuing the following commands from within your mac terminal.... (This will install Brew on your Mac, if you arent familiar with what it is, Its a software distrobution platform. Sort of like git hub and linux software repos. When in doubt, do a little reading first. It'll solve all your problems....
-Install Brew - Copy and paste this command into a mac terminal and follow the prompts that show up.
/usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"
-Once that finishes, next use this command
brew update && brew cask install java
-Once that is complete enter this last command
brew install android-platform-tools
Those 3 commands will do 99 percent of the work. When its done just find the platform tools folder and go from there. Hope this helps.
Sass86oh said:
PS adb on Mac can be a bit tricky especially if this is the first time youre attempting to o install and use it. Unless you set the correct enviornment variables during the install process, you will oly be able to access adb from inside the folder that its stored in on your mac. Youll have to pull up your terminal and and direct it to the folder containing adb and fastboot. Its usually ina a folder called "platform-tools" Which can be found in the dictory in whch you installed the Android SDK or SDK Tools packages... Now that I think about it, you have to download adb from the SDK package I just mentioned. After doing so, youll find the platform tools folder and it should contain what you need. As long as java is correctly installed on your mac then everything should work once you issue the "adb devices" command in a terminal session thats points at the "platform-tools" folder. YOU ALSO HAVE TO HAVE JDK INSTALLED in order for it to work with your device. I just looked at what you posted and it looks like youred missing JDK"...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
He says he already tried adb devices which didn't list anything. That tells me adb is configured correctly. Otherwise it should've given errors. Plus, he also said another Nexus 6P worked on the same mac.
adotkdotjh said:
He says he already tried adb devices which didn't list anything. That tells me adb is configured correctly. Otherwise it should've given errors. Plus, he also said another Nexus 6P worked on the same mac.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep
Sass86oh said:
I usually only get the key prompt for ADB authorzation when I connect my device and type "adb devices"..... If worse comes to worse, You can restore your phone to factory settings without wiping your sd card. Then you could test that option with compromising your data. Just flash each image from the archive yourself when restoring the firmware as opposed to using the flash-all scipt, or resetting the phone from settings... DO NOT flash the "userdata.img" included in the factory firmware archive or issue the command "fastboot format userdata" during the restore process and all of your files will be fine. This may be an option as long as fastboot is still functional on your device. Ive come across so many different devices in so many different conditions over the years, as long as the device could power on and the usb port was functional, fasboot has worked time and time again.
PS adb on Mac can be a bit tricky especially if this is the first time youre attempting to o install and use it. Unless you set the correct enviornment variables during the install process, you will oly be able to access adb from inside the folder that its stored in on your mac.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the detailed steps but like adotkdotjh mentioned, I already have a working adb (and it worked fine with a different Nexus 6P on the same mac). How would 'fastboot' work if the computer does not even see my device under list of devices? I've never done any image flashing before so that would be quite an unfamiliar territory but I'd be willing to explore. Where would I get these image files and how do I issue the command to the device while it is not being recognized? Thanks
desimunda42 said:
Yep
Thanks for the detailed steps but like adotkdotjh mentioned, I already have a working adb (and it worked fine with a different Nexus 6P on the same mac). How would 'fastboot' work if the computer does not even see my device under list of devices? I've never done any image flashing before so that would be quite an unfamiliar territory but I'd be willing to explore. Where would I get these image files and how do I issue the command to the device while it is not being recognized? Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fastboot (also refered to as "download mode") is a tool used to essentially reprogram your device in the event that you are unable to enter into recovery mode in oreder to fix whatever issue your device is having. Android devices have 3 working modes, normal function, recovery mode, and fastboot. Number one is obvious, recovery allows you to completely reset your device without using a computer if every other measure youve tried hasn't worked. When you use this feature everything on your device is erased and your phone is completely restored to factory settings. Its convienet becuase not everyone is computer savvy and its to the point. But say you were updating (system update) your phone and accidently dropped it causing the battery to fall out and the device to shut off in the middle of the update process. What will most likely happen is the system partition will become corrupt, causing the phone to stick at the initial boot screen. Usually if that happens you can still access recovery mode and just reset but if for some reason that didnt work you would go to the manufacturers website and download the latest firmware for your device. You put the phone into fastboot mode by holding volume down and then pressing and holding the power button at the same time (while the phone is off).The process varies bydevice, If done correctly you will see on your screen a bunch of info along with Andy (the Android) chillin with his hatch open. You connect your phone to your computer and as long as your computer is set up correctly with adb and fastboot, you now have the abailty to reprogram (flash) your device using a series of commands that are issued from either the command line (windows) or terminal (linux/mac).
YOUR BOOTLOADER NEEDS TO BE UNLOCKED BEFORE CONTINUING. IF YOU DONT SEE A LITTLE LOCK AT THE BOTTOM OF YOUR DEVICE UNDER THE GOOGLE LOGO WHEN YOU FIRST TURN IT ON THEN YOU NEED TO GO TO SETTINGS, ABOUT DEVICE, FIND BUILD NUMBER AND TAP IT RAPIDLY UNTIL YOU SEE A MESSAGE POP UP SAYING YOU UNLOCKED DEVELOPER OPTIONS. GO BACK TO THE SETTINGS MENU AND SELEC DEVELOPER OPTIONS WHICH SHOULD NOW BE THERE AND INSIDE THERES AN OPTION CALLED "ALLOW OEM UNLOCKING" TURN IT ON. AND CONTINUE
Eextract the firmware archive you downloaded which will produce a folder containing 2 ".img files" files, another ".tar" archive, and some script files that you can use to make the process pretty much automated.
There are two of them, one for Windows (flash-all.bat) and one for Linux and Mac (flash-all.sh)....
Open the folder that was extracted from the firmware archive... Hold shift then right click a blank area in the folder. Select "open command prompt here" (Windows)
or
Type in terminal : cd ~/downloads/xxx where "xxx" is the name of the folder that was extracted but make sure that folder is moved to your "downloads" directory first
Then type the following commands:
IF YOU HAVENT UNLOCkED YOUR BOOTLOADER BEFORE THEN THIS IS WHERE YOU WILL NEED TO:
For Mac/Linux type: ./fastboot flashing unlock **Make sure you use the ./ or the command wont be recognized**
For Windows type: fastboot flashing unlock
Select yes on the phone when it asks if youre sure..... BAM, unlocked bootloader.
Your phone is completely free of restrections if you want to install custom firmware now. If not you can relock it after flashing the stock firmare by enterning fastboot mode again and typing
fastboot flashing lock or ./fastboot flashing lock (mac/linux).....
Now we can proceed with flashing the device...
For Windows: flash-all.bat and hit enter. The computer will do the rest.
Linux/Mac: ./flash-all.sh Make sure you use the ./ or the command wont be recognized.
If youre feeling brave you can do the entire process yourself by extracting the files in that second archive that was produced and flash each of them individually using a series of command in a specific order.
The 2nd extracted archive will give you a folder with five .img files
boot.img
cache.img
system.img
recovery.img
userdata.img ***** DO NOT FLASH THIS IMAGE. FORGET ITS EVEN THERE****
Take all five and move them to the original folder that was extracted. There are 2 other .img files that were extracted from the first archive also like I mentioned above, one that says "BOOTLOADER.xxx.xx.img" and one that says "RADIO.xxx.xxx.img"... Rename RADIO.xxx.xxx.img to | radio.img |and the other to| bootloader.img |ALL LOWER CASE keep them in that folder along with the other five. Now you should have 7 total image files in one folder. (Its smart to use the folder that your command prompt or terminal was opened in, if you decide to use a different folder then you have to direct each fastboot command to the folder where the .img file is located.
from the command line you flash each img individually with the following commands.....
(Mac/Linux need to include ./ before every fastboot command begins like this: ./fastboot or it wont work.
fastboot flash bootloader bootloader.img
fastboot reboot-bootloader (phone will reboot then go back into fastboot mode, dont worry should only take seconds)
fastboot flash radio radio.img
fastboot reboot-bootloader (reboots again)
fastboot flash boot boot.img
fastboot erase cache
fastboot flash cache cache.img
fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
fastboot flash system system.img
fastboot flash vendor vendor.img
fastboot format userdata (this command takes place of the "userdata.img" file I told you to forget about)
fastboot reboot
As long as you see action on the screen and a "complete" after every command then youre in business. If you get an error check your spelling. THE COMMAND LINE IS CASE SENSETIVE. You might type the correct words but if one letter is capital the command wont work. If theres an extra space between words then the command wont work so check everything. Safe rule: Everything should be in lower case letters with 1 space after every word.... THIS S*** MATTERS
Its not as hard as it seems if you arent familiar with the process, but its also not something to mess with unless youve done your homework. Read up on it, there are so many good posts and people in here so you'll be able to find everything you need without any issue.
Fastboot can also be used to install a custom recovery like TWRP which would then allow you to install custom firmware (roms) on your device as long as theres support for it. Nexus devices are built for that very reason! They tend to have a huge selection of development within the Android community. They come with Android as Google intended it to be! No extra BS.... And its wicked easy to unlock the bootloader. That is why they are, in my opinion, the best Android devices available. But someone who doesnt really care much for things like modding and installing custom firmware might see the Nexus as plain device which lacks the bells and whistles included in other devices. Which is ok! I personally love the simplicity of pure Android and the whole philosophy behind the Nexus Program. To each is own! If you need anything else send me a message!
Have not read it all on here lol install this on your Mac https://www.android.com/filetransfer/ and see if it sees you 6p make sure you plug in them change from charging to file transfer on the phone then exit out of the app and reboot that will tell you if your Mac sees your phone
Hi,
I recently rooted my Samsung Galaxy Tab A thanks to the wonderful folks of this forum. However, now that it's rooted I can't seem to connect to it via adb. For example, I see the device listed when I run "adb devices", but it is listed as "unauthorized". I no longer received the prompt to allow USB debugging. More precisely, I can still access the developer options and see that "USB debugging" is enabled, I just don't receive the pop-up prompt to "Allow USB debugging?" that list my local computer's RSA fingerprint/etc after I plug in the usb... the device just remains unauthorized and never asks me to click ok to allow usb debugging.
As suggested elsewhere, I tried removing the adbkey and adbkey.pub in the .android directory on my local computer and the killing/starting the adb server to generate new keys on the local machine, but that also doesn't seem to help...
Additionally, I noted that there is also no longer a button under developer option to "Revoke USB authorizaiton" (maybe because there are now no longer any keys in /data/misc/adb/adb_keys ?)
Any idea how to get adb shell to work again? Or maybe it not possible after rooting?
Thanks!
__adam_ said:
Hi,
I recently rooted my Samsung Galaxy Tab A thanks to the wonderful folks of this forum. However, now that it's rooted I can't seem to connect to it via adb. For example, I see the device listed when I run "adb devices", but it is listed as "unauthorized". I no longer received the prompt to allow USB debugging. More precisely, I can still access the developer options and see that "USB debugging" is enabled, I just don't receive the pop-up prompt to "Allow USB debugging?" that list my local computer's RSA fingerprint/etc after I plug in the usb... the device just remains unauthorized and never asks me to click ok to allow usb debugging.
As suggested elsewhere, I tried removing the adbkey and adbkey.pub in the .android directory on my local computer and the killing/starting the adb server to generate new keys on the local machine, but that also doesn't seem to help...
Additionally, I noted that there is also no longer a button under developer option to "Revoke USB authorizaiton" (maybe because there are now no longer any keys in /data/misc/adb/adb_keys ?)
Any idea how to get adb shell to work again? Or maybe it not possible after rooting?
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I finally solved this problem.... I don't think it was particular to the Galaxy Tab A.
In order to get adb working again I had to put the device into recovery mode (power down, then power up while holding power, up-volume, home button). I then went to the terminal application of the Team Win Recovery. In terminal I issues "stop adbd" then "start adbd". At this point the device now shows up on the local host PC when I run "adb devices" (it shows up as "recovery" rather than unauthorized). I can adb root/shell to the device now. This is really all I need to do. I expect this will solve my problem in non-recovery mode as well. Or, at this point I can push my PC pub key to the device and it should be fine.