I was having that problem too (Windows 7), even though my /Windows/system32/drivers/etc/hosts file already had 127.0.0.1 localhost
in it.
I tried changing the ADBHOST info & port in the eclipse Preferences, but that didn't do anything.
netstat -b
shows '127.0.0.1' as the source address for adb and the emulator, but always lists my machine host name as the 'foreign address.' On a hunch, I tried debugging with my machine not connected to any network (no WiFi, nothing plugged in)... and it worked! (DDMS was able to connect to the VM on the emulated device and I was able to debug just fine.)
I think that messages sent by DDMS &/or adb are not staying on my local machine (they're getting sent to my local router). (It's just a guess; I don't know how to conclusively test that.) IOW, loopback wasn't working as it should.
Since I already had 127.0.0.1 in my localhosts, I added the local subnet address of my machine into my hosts file, guessing that DDMS/adb might be using that address (vs. 127.0.0.1). That seemed to solve the problem for me.
So now my hosts file has these lines:
127.0.0.1 localhost
::1 localhost
192.168.1.102 localhost
(The local IPv4 address for my machine is 192.168.1.102 . You can check yours with the ipconfig
command.)
(I came across some webpages that how to set up a virtual network adapater for Windows that handles loopback, e.g. Setting up a Microsoft Loopback Adapater (from Oracle Distilled), but haven't had time to take that in and see if that's a viable solution to all of this, too.)