97

I have HTC Comet connected to Eclipse with SDK 2.2. I do a debug build - the application does not run; though it does get installed on the device. On the device I get this message box on the Comet screen

Waiting for Debugger
Application HunyDew (process com.airvine.hunydew) is waiting for the debugger to attach.
[Force Close]

Whereas in the Eclipse console I get these set of messages

[2010-12-07 01:42:29 - hunydewprj] Android Launch!  
[2010-12-07 01:42:29 - hunydewprj] adb is running normally.  
[2010-12-07 01:42:29 - hunydewprj] Performing com.airvine.hunydew.HunyDewAAStartsHere activity launch  
[2010-12-07 01:42:47 - hunydewprj] Application already deployed. No need to reinstall.  
[2010-12-07 01:42:47 - hunydewprj] Starting activity com.airvine.hunydew.HunyDewAAStartsHere on device 308730C861BC  
[2010-12-07 01:42:49 - hunydewprj] ActivityManager: Starting: Intent { act=android.intent.action.MAIN cat=[android.intent.category.LAUNCHER] cmp=com.airvine.hunydew/.HunyDewAAStartsHere }  
[2010-12-07 01:42:49 - hunydewprj] Attempting to connect debugger to 'com.airvine.hunydew' on port 8601  
[2010-12-07 01:43:09 - hunydewprj] Launch error: Failed to connect to remote VM. Connection timed out.  

The application runs fine in the Emulator - please help - what is it that I am missing here? Any hints/suggestions? Thanks

11
  • 2
    Do you have turn on the option "USB Debugging" in your phone? Settings - Applications - Development - USB Debugging. Dec 7, 2010 at 10:23
  • That option was set in the phone.
    – abRao
    Dec 7, 2010 at 11:10
  • I've gotten that and I remember it went away after a few seconds and then the app would eventually launch. Are you getting that?
    – chaimp
    Dec 30, 2010 at 2:43
  • 17
    This often happens if you have more than 1 instance of Eclipse opened... the only solution I've found is to close other instances; if anybody has better solution - help out.
    – nikib3ro
    Jan 19, 2011 at 19:07
  • For me, the fix described below did the trick. martinahrer.at/2009/04/16/…
    – user1205527
    Feb 12, 2012 at 19:12

31 Answers 31

69

Some devices will only let the debugger attach if the application has the android.permission.SET_DEBUG_APP permission set in its manifest file:

<manifest>
  <uses-permission android:name="android.permission.SET_DEBUG_APP"></uses-permission>
</manifest> 
7
  • 8
    This was missing I added it - and the behavior remained the same- it does not work
    – abRao
    Dec 7, 2010 at 11:09
  • Is your phone accessible on port 8601? If in eclipse you go to the Window menu -> Show View -> Other -> Android -> Devices, does that view show your app listening on that port?
    – Iain
    Dec 7, 2010 at 11:44
  • yes the phone appears to be accessible on port 8601 - If I do a screen capture (of the Device) from Eclipse - it works.
    – abRao
    Dec 7, 2010 at 11:59
  • 23
    I was having the same issue, except I was running into it with the Android Emulator. I figured out that if you put your computer to sleep while Eclipse or the emulator are running, that messes up the connection between them. My problem went away after I restarted both, the emulator, and Eclipse.
    – Vivek
    May 14, 2011 at 16:53
  • 1
    Great help, Actually I followed Viveks help. I'd never added that line to the manifest but had actually let my machine go to sleep. After restarting both the emulator and Eclipse i was back up and running. thank you
    – wired00
    May 11, 2012 at 4:36
54

The Dialog Waiting for Debugger is shown if you are building a debug application or somewhere in your source code, you called Debug.waitingForDebugger();

Inside Android Studio 2.0 and above, there is an option of Attach Debugger to Android Process. It is the last menu item in the Run menu.

Screen shot of Run menu options in Android Studio

3
  • Thanks - this was exactly my problem - Android N - Google Pixel - IntelliJ
    – bsautner
    Jan 3, 2017 at 17:17
  • 4
    Prior to today I never had to do this, but now I have to. I must have changed a setting accidentally. But which? Feb 16, 2017 at 15:02
  • Thank you this is help
    – daparic
    Mar 24, 2020 at 14:35
19
+25

Not sure if this is what you are looking for, but try putting:

android:debuggable="true"

in the application tag in the AndroidManifest.xml

3
  • Thank you - yes I do have that -
    – abRao
    Dec 27, 2010 at 11:33
  • 13
    That has nothing to do with his problem, Eclipse automatically enables debugging when you launch in debug mode. You DO NOT want to add that to your manifest unless you specifically want your release builds to output debugging info. Mar 26, 2012 at 13:41
  • I removed this line: android:debuggable="false" , and it works perfectly now.
    – Davoud
    Apr 22, 2018 at 4:03
10

I've got this problem for long that I cant get my android emulator or device connect to the debugger while both the console and the emulator were displaying waiting for connecting to the debugger.

And configuration for debug inside eclipse also confused me so much before, but today, i got this problem solved, by the following steps:

When you want to debug a android project, for instance, mypro. you would right click on it in the "Package Explorer". Then choose "Debug as"-->"Android Application".

Then the emulator might stop at the "Waiting for connecting to debugger"(or something else similar to this).

Then you need to connect to the debugger yourself by click "DDMS" to open the DDMS perspective, and click "Devices" tab.

Then you can see a list of processes that are running on your emulator or device.

Double click on the one which you are debugging, then change to the Debug perspective, you can see the debugger is connected and you could debug your program. That's how I solved this problem.

By the way, my OS is Win7 32-bit. Eclipse's version is Helios Service Release 2. Android SDK is rev. 16 and platform-tools' 10.

Update.

I found that it is the problem of my TCP/IP configuration. The debugger can't be connected when i assign a static IP address(for access to internet).

So every time when the debugger is unable to connect, I always do the following steps:

1.close current eclipse window.

2.change the config of IP address to dynamic, it means getting a IP address by DHCP.

3.open up the eclipse again.

then the debugger is able to be connected. I thought it might be a issue of the internal mechanism of java debugger which is using socket connection.

2
  • 4
    "2.change the config of IP address to dynamic, it means getting a IP address by DHCP." How do you do this? Clarify please!
    – Ksice
    Sep 10, 2012 at 13:46
  • @Ksice Hi, that means "Retrieve an IP address dynamically". Actually, the internal mechanism of Android debugger is based on TCP/IP protocol, so when you are using static IP address, it seems the system can't connect your terminal device or emulator with the debugger
    – Yuan
    Sep 13, 2012 at 6:16
10

I get this if I switch the usb cable to a difference port on my PC, odd but it works when I switch it back again. Also I think I've got this when there's been another device or emulator running at the same time, or two instances of Eclipse open.

4
  • Same for me, it didn't look like I had two instances of Eclipse open, but the processes tab of Windows Task Manager showed them. Jun 29, 2012 at 13:10
  • Yes you are right, i had two instances of eclipse running. After closing second instance of eclipse, issue was resolved. Jan 24, 2013 at 10:13
  • If you've been trying out android development IntelliJ IDEA, then this can also happen if you have both Eclipse and IntelliJ open at the same time. Aug 13, 2013 at 15:29
  • I managed to get into this situation by having two instances of IntelliJ IDEA debugging two apps at the same time. After that one of the apps would no longer start, kept saying "Waiting for debugger". Finally fixed it by disconnecting the USB cable and powering the device down and up again.
    – RenniePet
    Oct 22, 2014 at 22:52
4

For those getting this annoying behavior in 4.2.2 you have to un-check the setting for "wait for debugger" in the developer options. Of course, those options were hidden by Google, and you have to do a sneaky trick to get them to show back up. I had set them before they disappeared, and couldn't for the life of me find them again.

This page explains the procedure

1
  • we can get those options back on, i guess i figured it out. but thanks, this helped.
    – stack_ved
    Jul 11, 2013 at 14:34
3

Running Android Studio, I ran into this problem and after trying various remedies restarting Android Studio is what appeared to fix the problem.

3

My solution is to use the Dalvik Debug Monitor. Sometimes there is a red or green bug beside a process. Click on the device you're trying to load to. Select the Actions tab and reset adb. This usually attaches the debugger for me. I find that doing debugging through this Monitor works better for me than using the Android Eclipse plugin Logcat.

2
  • I can confirm that resetting the ADB (via the Actions tab) like you described fixed this problem for me. This is debugging with an emulator running 4.0.
    – ubzack
    Nov 9, 2011 at 22:44
  • 1
    Can you explain what you mean by the following: "My solution is to use the Dalvik Debug Monitor. Sometimes there is a red or green bug beside a process. Click on the device you're trying to load to. Select the Actions tab and reset adb." What are the steps to do this ?
    – toto_tata
    Feb 22, 2012 at 8:35
2

Closing the emulator and closing eclipse. Reopening Eclipse and starting the simulator worked for me.

The key thing to look for is in the Devices pane of Eclipse. If you start the emulator or device and it shows up in the device name list but says [null] and no running processes show beneath it, then it won't work correctly with loading your app into it.

If the name of the device comes up and is Online then things seem to work smoothly.

Don't know why it doesn't work out all the time though.

2

In my case, the problem is caused by adb connected with another device.

If several devices are connected in PC, remove other devices except required one.

2

I end up going into "Debug" perspective.

Then in the "Debug" frame, there are debug list or running list.

You have to decide which one is your current one that has this problem (Waiting for debug...)

Then do right-click and choose "Terminate and Remove".

Then you try to run again. And that warning box will be gone.

2

I solved this issue this way:

Go to Run menu ====> click on Edit Configurations ====> Micellaneous and finaly uncheck the option Skip installation if APK has not changed

enter image description here

enter image description here

2

Rebooting the phone was the solution for me.

1

If your development environment is Windows make sure the USB drivers are correctly installed.

One way to ensure that the USB drivers are installed correctly is to get the PDANet Windows installer and let it install the USB drivers.

You can find the PDANet page here.

2
  • I could get it to work without having to download the PDANet. I just redid everything including uninstalling the previous application - using adb uninstall (previously I was using the Settings Applet to uninstall the application). Thank you though for posting about PDANet. So far Lain's suggestion was the only one I was missing - but his answer was before the bounty was offered. I like your answer too - I hope someone else votes your answer - if that happens then you and Lain can share the bounty - the system does not let me split the bounty.
    – abRao
    Dec 29, 2010 at 10:17
  • That has nothing to do with his problem, the drivers are clearly installed already as the console output shows ADB querying the device and finding the application is installed already then launching it. Mar 26, 2012 at 13:45
1

I would try to connect to the phone with ddms on its own without Eclipse. You might be running an emulator inside eclipse that you dont see or have some other problems with Eclipse.

Just run ddms from a command prompt and see if the device appears and you can connect to it.

You can also see if appears when you run adb devices and see that your phone is listed (and maybve something else..)

1

I got the same problem, I know I wasn't running any other instances, and I could see it with adb devices. I just did a restart of eclipse and it worked.

1

Rebooting the PC was the only thing that worked for me. It worked when I had this problem with an Android 2.2 phone, and also an Android 3.1 tablet.

1
  • Worked for me - it may be a coincidence but there was a windows update waiting. Jul 11, 2018 at 12:45
0

I ran into this problem today. After spending most of the day trying to fix it, the only thing that ended up working was to create a new workspace and import my project into it. I hope this helps someone avoid all the trouble that I went through.

0
0

I also enounter this problem. In my environment, I use a tomcat as server and android as client. I found, If tomcat is started, this error " Launch error: Failed to connect to remote VM. Connection timed out." will occur. If tomcat is not run, adb works well.

0

I tried all the solutions above, it fixes the issue sometimes, but still from time to time I happened to get stuck with the "Waiting for the debugger to attach" message box.

The final solution in my case was to unplug all the Android devices but the one I want to debug on. I don't know which one is the culprit: the Nexus 7 running JB 4.2, the HTC One X running ICS, the HTC Desire S running Gingerbread, or the combintation of the 3, but as soon as I only have one device plugged in, it runs smooth as silk.

0

I used Task Manager to kill adb.exe to solve this problem. Adb.exe will automatically start after being killed.

Killing adb.exe has solved a lot of problems related to debug and emulators for me so far.

0

For Android Studio users I encountered this problem first time while trying to run a bare bone project just after updating my jdk location. So I stumbled across this post. In my case simple Build->Clean Project did the job.

0

I was also having the same problem when using Android Studio and GenyMotion. I am able to solve this problem by pausing the program and resuming it again after "Waiting for debugger" message is shown. It may work while using other IDEs and emulators as well.enter image description here

0

Android Studio 1.2.2 on Mac OS 10.10 Same problem as others have reported. I closed Android Studio, then checked from command line in terminal:

ps -efw|grep -i android

This reported a java process (.gradle/daemon) associated with Android Studio. I killed this process, restarted Android Studio, and the problem went away.

0

disable you developer option in your phone.

Settings > Developer option > Disable

This worked for me, when i tried to use my application without debugging it.

0

What solved the problem for me was going to: "Run"->"Attach Debugger to Android process" and then select your process.

You do this in Android Studio.

0

I had the same issue, fixed it by explicitly selecting desired device in debug configuration. Unfortunately, even after that log sometimes stops when debugger tries to connect. In this case in DDMS perspective find the desired process. It will be highlighted with green bug. Click stop and then debug it again.

0

This may be old, but for Genymotion's latest update 2.7.1, go to Developer options, if in case you dont know how to open that option, go to About phone and click Build number few times and Developer options will be enabled. Turn ON Developer option, check USB debugging.

Tested on Genymotion 4.4 and up. Weird solution eh ? But definitely works. Hope it helps. Happy codings.

0

In Debug mode Android Studio connects to your Device via socket(:8600). Somehow your socket connection is choked and thus not responding to incoming connections.

Restart Android Studio and your problem will be resolved

0

"Wait for debugger"in Developer options may have been set to wait your application.Please clear that option and application should run normally.

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