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At the moment I can't even get the Hello World app from the Android tutorial to work. I'm trying to run it on my Galaxy S4. My phone has USB debugging enabled and has USB verification of apps disabled. I have Android 4.2.2 SDK (API17) downloaded and installed and am currently using Eclipse with the ADT plugin on Windows.

First it gives the "Failed to parse the output of 'adb version'" error message and then prints the following in the console:

[2013-06-12 23:02:50 - TestApp] ------------------------------
[2013-06-12 23:02:50 - TestApp] Android Launch!
[2013-06-12 23:02:50 - TestApp] The connection to adb is down, and a severe error has occured.
[2013-06-12 23:02:50 - TestApp] You must restart adb and Eclipse.
[2013-06-12 23:02:50 - TestApp] Please ensure that adb is correctly located at 'C:\Program Files (x86)\Android\android-sdk\platform-tools\adb.exe' and can be executed.

The command "adb devices" shows both my phone and an emulator, and running from the emulator doesn't work either. It doesn't even let me choose what device I want to run on, it just gives the error immediately.

What I've tried so far:
restarting my computer
adb kill-server/start-server and restart Eclipse
going to Task Manager and ending the adb.exe process, then restarting Eclipse
adding adb.exe as trusted/closing firewall
made sure I installed all the correct drivers
uninstalled Eclipse and redownloaded the ADT bundle
copied the contents of sdk/platform-tools to sdk/tools (and I saw in another thread someone suggested copying to sdk/tool but I didn't find a folder named that so I created one)

in the process of trying: updating JDK to latest version using Android Studio

edit: Downloaded the ADT bundle from the Android Developer site and I'm still getting the same issues with their version of eclipse.

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  • Seems like you've tried a lot of things...is there any reason you're using Eclipse? How about Android Studio?
    – bee
    Jun 14, 2013 at 2:13
  • I've been using Eclipse because it seemed to be easier to work with and because I already use it for other things. I'm trying Android Studio now, but my internet connection is currently very slow so I won't know if it'll work for a while. Fingers crossed, though.
    – Eric Liu
    Jun 14, 2013 at 3:26
  • Do you happen to have another adb.exe lying around? Try searching for adb.exe in your drives and remove those which are not located inside the SDK location.
    – TactMayers
    Jun 14, 2013 at 3:59
  • Uh. Well. That's strange. It's actually working now.
    – Eric Liu
    Jun 14, 2013 at 5:56
  • Well. That's weird. It's actually working now. So I uninstalled and unzipped the ADT Bundle again, then uninstalled when it still wasn't working, then installed Android Studio only to find that it's completely overwhelming for a complete noob, and then unzipped the ADT bundle again and now it works. How/why/what...?
    – Eric Liu
    Jun 14, 2013 at 5:57

3 Answers 3

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Your adb is not located in tools folder. Here is the Solution:

  • In folder: \android-sdk-windows\ go to folder \platform-tools

  • Copy the files and paste them into folder \tools

  • Restart Eclipse

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  • Yea same answer : stackoverflow.com/a/18292147/1405983 Dec 1, 2015 at 8:42
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As I said in the comment above, I reinstalled the ADT Bundle after installing Android Studio and everything seems to be working fine now. I'm afraid of uninstalling Android Studio just in case something about it is keeping ADT working. Not sure why this is, but it's another potential solution.

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After much trials and errors on the several listed solutions, this is what worked for me. I added the following path to my enviromental variables PATH and restarted eclipse and worked like a charm... <path to sdk>\platform-tools

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