77

While testing my apps, I use emulators and my own phone to see if everything is working ok. My apps are also writing data to shared preferences and a text file.

I can pull the data from my emulators through the DDMS in eclipse so I can read the data files on my computer, but when I try to open those folders through the DDMS on my phone, nothing happens. I click the data folder and nothing happens.

My phone is rooted. Is there any way I could pull the files from my phone? I know that Android keeps these folders private, but there must be a way. The emulator is just way too slow.

2
  • 4
    how to do this on a non-rooted phone?
    – likejudo
    Mar 18, 2014 at 1:30
  • I don't think it's possible considering you'll need to change the file-system permissions on those files/folders. This can't be done without a rooted device.
    – dell116
    Mar 18, 2014 at 15:05

10 Answers 10

160

On rooted device you can do this:

  1. Open cmd
  2. Type adb shell
  3. su
  4. Press 'Allow' on device
  5. chmod 777 /data /data/data /data/data/com.application.package/data/data/com.application.package/*
  6. Go to the DDMS view in Eclipse

After this you should be able to browse the files on the device.

To get the databases:

  1. chmod 777 /data/data/com.application.package/databases /data/data/com.application.package/databases/*

If it returns permission denied on su

Go to Settings > Developer Options > Root access > Apps and ADB

18
  • Finally....this works! Almost one year later and peceps comes through. So I'm guessing this problem has to do with the file system permissions?
    – dell116
    Jan 17, 2012 at 16:39
  • 3
    @Praveenb, I had same problem, but then I repeated above chmod command with additional folders: /data/data/com.application.package/databases /data/data/com.application.packages/databases/*
    – Tom
    May 26, 2012 at 3:42
  • 6
    @peceps : My phone is not rooted. The command in Step 3 work does not work for me. It says permission denied. There is no 'Allow' in the device.
    – Ashwin
    Sep 5, 2012 at 3:01
  • 3
    use chmod -R 777 /data/data/ to apply this command recursively Feb 10, 2014 at 10:04
  • 2
    I get "su: not found" when I try to run su after "adb shell". (I am using a non-rooted phone)
    – Sarang
    Dec 15, 2014 at 9:25
6

No one seems to understand that a retail Nexus One even after being rooted still will not let you browse the file system using DDMS File Explorer. We are talking about real phones here and not the emulator. If you happen to have a Nexus One Developer Phone you can browse the file system using DDMS Filer Explorer, but a retail Nexus One that has been rooted you can't. Got it?

So I hope that answers the question of not being able to use the DDMS File Explorer to browse the file system of a rooted retail Nexus One. After rooting a retail Nexus One there is still something that remains to be done to use DDMS to use the File Explorer to browse the phones File System. I don't know what it is. Maybe someone else knowns.

2
  • Amen, brother. I'd sure like to know what the hell Root Explorer is doing to get in there....
    – dell116
    May 18, 2011 at 18:39
  • 7
    This is a comment, not an answer. Jul 31, 2014 at 18:31
4

If gives "permission denied" on adb shell -> su...

Some ROMs are running adbd daemon in secure mode (adbd has no root access and su command does not even show permission ask dialog on the device). In this case you will get "permission denied" when you try cmd -> adb shell -> su. The solution I've found is one app from the famous modder Chainfire called Adbd Insecure.

1
  • 1
    In CyanoGenMod, go to setup-->Developer options-->root access and change to 'adb and apps' (default is 'apps')
    – JRun
    Oct 13, 2013 at 19:45
3

You must edit permission of data folder.

I use "Root Explorer" (see market) app on root mode.

On top select "Monunted as r/w"

then press over data folder (long click) and find Permission option

Have a somenthing like that

        read    write  execute

User

Group

Others

Make sure that "Others" have a check for read

Then go Eclpse and try again.

Sorry about my english,I hope can help you.

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  • 1
    This is extremely unwise! Jul 31, 2014 at 18:30
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To set permission on the data folder and all it's subfolders and files:
Open command prompt from the ADB folder:

>> adb shell
>> su
>> find /data -type d -exec chmod 777 {} \;
0
2

Much simpler than messing around with permissions in the android FS (which always feels like
a hack for me - because i believe there must be a kind of integrated way) is just to:

Allow ADB root access and Restart the deamon with root permissions.

  1. First be sure that ADB can have root access on your device (or emulator):
    (Settings -> Developer Options -> Root-Access for ADB or Apps & ADB.
  2. Restart the ADB-Service with root-permissions:
    Open a command prompt and type: adb.exe root
  3. Restart ADM (Android Device Manager):
    Enjoy browsing all files
  4. To negate this process:
    Type adb.exe unroot in your command prompt.
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  • @János Maybe its related because i'm using CyanogenMod
    – Cadburry
    Sep 26, 2016 at 21:37
1

Event though it's a bit too late to try to answer this I'll leave what worked for me.

Peceps's solution didn't work because the SuperUser app didn't allow "shell" to have root access. So my solution is to directly use another app like RootExplorer and browse the folders from it.

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  • 1
    I have to say that of all the answers listing adb commands, changing permissions and fiddling about with DDMS that has meant me wasting a whole evening (that I could have spent watching football)... this has been the only, best and simplest solution that has actually allowed me to get to read my database. Much respect and thanks. Nov 24, 2016 at 23:57
1

If it retures "permission denied" on adb shell -> su...

Go to "Developer Options" -> Root access -> "Apps and ADB"

1
  • I am using HTC and can't seem to find Root access in developer option May 12, 2015 at 10:11
0

When I say file system I meant the whole file system. But you can only browse part of the file system on a retail phone, perhaps even most of file system but not ./data. Sorry for any confusion this may have caused.

This is alarming to me because I have a rooted my retail Nexus One and a developer/unlocked Nexus One. Since I rooted my retail Nexus One I can't figure out why I can't browse the whole file system like I can on my developer Nexus One.

-3

If you NEED to do it on your phone, I use a terminal emulator and standard linux commands.

Example:

  1. su
  2. cd data
  3. cd com.yourappp
  4. ls or cd into cache/shared_prefs

http://www.appbrain.com/app/android-terminal-emulator/jackpal.androidterm

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  • No you don't need to do that. Feb 1, 2011 at 21:57
  • 3
    @ Octavian - You're telling me that you can pull files from a real phone, not an emulator, through file explorer in the DDMS? Whenever I click on the "data" folder in file explorer, it does not populate the tree. Your answer below only works for me if I'm using an emulator, not a real phone.
    – dell116
    Feb 1, 2011 at 22:57
  • 1
    If you need to access the data folder then you have to use rooted devices. Sep 5, 2013 at 3:57

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