216

I'm having a problem with emulator-5554, it keeps telling me it is offline.

When I do a adb devices from the command line it says

emulator-5554 offline

Even after a fresh restart, I try that command and it still says it is offline.

The problem is when I try to install .apk files to the emulator using abd install <path> from the command prompt, it tells me that it is offline, if I create another device and run that one, then try to install the .apk files, it says I have too many devices connected. So in other words, I can't install my .apk files.

How can I get rid of that emulator-5554? I heard that if you do a restart, it should clear all the devices, but that does not seem to be working. It is like it is getting initialized when my computer starts up. Has anyone run into this issue?

Thanks

6
  • 3
    In order to determine whether the problem is the emulator try this: 1. Open an emulator. 2. Open another emulator. 3. adb devices to get the emulators' names. 4. Try to install the APK by excecuting: adb -s NAME_OF_DEVICE install file.apk 5. Tell us what happens.
    – Cristian
    Jun 30, 2010 at 19:30
  • I will give that a try when I get home (at work right now), I didn't know you could specify the device you want to install on. That should be really helpful. I will update in a few hours. thanks for the reply!
    – hanesjw
    Jun 30, 2010 at 20:09
  • Thanks again for the comment. I was able to install the apk on the emulator doing what you said. The disconnected one still remains on my devices list, but all I wanted to do was install that .apk. Thanks again, it worked!
    – hanesjw
    Jul 1, 2010 at 2:06
  • I think this question is related to: stackoverflow.com/questions/6013624/… Try to have a look at this thread.
    – ivy
    Dec 11, 2012 at 9:17
  • This doesn't answer your question, but might solve your problem - adb -d specified usb devices rather than emulators, adb -e emulators rather than usb devices, and adb -s NAME I think can be used to specify specifically which device you want, though I'm unclear on whether the last one always works the way you think.
    – Erhannis
    Sep 16, 2019 at 23:48

48 Answers 48

181

1 . Simply "Wipe data" to fix this issue.

enter image description here

2 . If it doesn't work, go to emulated device and enable developer options > enable usb debugging

7
  • 4
    Uninstalling the app from the emulator did the trick for me. But it is the same idea as wiping the data
    – james
    Mar 28, 2018 at 14:18
  • 4
    This helped ind combination with 'Cold Boot now' just below 'Wipe Data'.
    – S. Gissel
    Apr 24, 2019 at 11:00
  • 3
    Just enabling usb debugging and a cold boot was enough.
    – cosmarc
    Dec 8, 2020 at 7:54
  • 1
    This screen is from Tools - AVD Manager
    – live-love
    Jan 14, 2022 at 0:47
  • cold boot + usb debug
    – Inliner
    Feb 3, 2023 at 12:05
102

In such a case, you can do all of the following in order to be assured that your emulator starts working again :

  1. Go to cmd and type adb kill-server
  2. Go to task manager and find adb in processes. If you find one, right click on it and click on end process tree.
  3. In eclipse, go to Window>Android Virtual Device Manager, click on the AVD you want to launch, click on start and uncheck "Launch From Snapshot" and then click on launch.

That's it! It will take a while and it should resolve your problem.

5
  • This also worked for me (killing ADB didn't solve my problem, in any situations).
    – Booger
    Apr 24, 2014 at 23:21
  • as soon as i killed that process tree, the adb running devices list cleared :) it worked. <3 thanks
    – DeathRs
    Dec 29, 2015 at 8:34
  • 19
    In Android Studio, to change the virtual device Boot Option from Quick Boot to Cold Boot works for me.
    – eldes
    Mar 15, 2018 at 1:42
  • Where can I find the "Launch From Snapshot" setting in Android Device Manager when I execute it from Visual Studio 2019?
    – jacktric
    Jul 16, 2019 at 11:09
  • Only full unistall of emulator and XAML worked in my case. Google becomes too lazy to check each build
    – Tertium
    Jan 15, 2021 at 14:55
47

The way that Android detects emulators is by scanning ports starting at port 5555.

The number you see in the adb devices list (in your case 5554) will be one less than the port that adb is finding open.

You probably have a process running that is listening on port 5555. To get rid of the "offline" device, you will need to find that application and close it or reconfigure it to listen to a different port.

8
  • The question was about ADB. ADB port numbers start at 5555.
    – Brigham
    Nov 13, 2012 at 0:08
  • 6
    "You probably have a process running that is listening on port 5555". This really helped as we were running another server on that port and had totally forgotten about it!
    – abhijit
    Oct 15, 2013 at 13:44
  • 1
    This helped me too! I had a port open on 5555 which shows up as emulator 5554 (?). Everyone who has already tried nonworking"reboot the server" style answers should go ahead and portscan their localhost. I assumed ADB would be using USB devices more directly, not looking at my local ports and making assumptions about there being an emulator there without even doing a protocol check.
    – mvr
    Jun 14, 2015 at 6:17
  • 1
    Many thanks,also fix my problem. I can not belevie there is a qemu process occupy the port. Jan 19, 2022 at 9:08
  • 4
    Thank you, lsof -i tcp:5555 helped me to kill right process Apr 11, 2022 at 22:23
42

This solution is for Windows.

(See @Chris Knight's solution for Mac/Linux)

  1. Start Windows Powershell:

    Start -> type 'powershell' -> Press ENTER

  2. Run the following command: adb devices


PS C:\Users\CJBS>adb devices
List of devices attached
emulator-5656   host
emulator-5652   host
12b80FF443      device

In this case, 12b80FF443 is my physical device, and the emulator-* entries are garbage.

  1. Per @Brigham, "The way that Android detects emulators is by scanning ports starting at port 5555.". The port number is indicated after the emulator name (in this case 5656 and 5652). The port number to check is the emulator port number plus 1. So in this case:-

    5656 + 1 = 5657

    5652 + 1 = 5653

    So let's see which program is using these ports. In this case, the ports to check both start with "565". So I'll search for ports in use starting with 565. Execute: netstat -a -n -o | Select-String ":565"


PS C:\Users\CJBS> netstat -a -n -o |  Select-String ":565"

  TCP    127.0.0.1:5653         127.0.0.1:5653         ESTABLISHED     5944
  TCP    127.0.0.1:5657         127.0.0.1:5657         ESTABLISHED     5944
  1. The final field in this output is the PID (Process ID) - in this case it's PID 5944 for both of these two ports. So let's see what this process ID is. Execute: tasklist /v | Select-String 5944. Replace 5944 with the output of the previous command:

PS C:\Users\CJBS> tasklist /v | Select-String 5944

adb.exe                       5944 Console                    1      6,800 K Running         MyPCName\CJBS          0:06:03 ADB Power Notification Window

What a surprise. It's ADB. As noted by other answers, it could be other programs, too.

  1. Now, just kill this process ID. Execute kill 5944, replacing 5944 with the PID in the previous command.

PS C:\Users\CJBS> kill 5944
  1. To confirm that the spurious emulator is gone, re-run the following command: adb devices

PS C:\Users\CJBS>adb devices
List of devices attached
* daemon not running. starting it now on port 5037 *
* daemon started successfully *
12b80FF443      device

ADB re-starts (as it was previously killed), and it detects no more fake emulators.

3
  • Thank you, in my case VSCode has opened a port 5555 and created a ghost 5554 emulator. Closed VSCode for the time of the operation.
    – Ikon
    May 10, 2021 at 11:50
  • Thanks so much, just what I needed! And I got a thorough lesson in PowerShell commands too. Feb 10, 2022 at 17:41
  • This works great and was the only thing that worked for me after 2 hours of research! For windows: Step 3, just run netstat -a -n -o, copy the contents and paste it in notepad and search for that port your emulator port + 1. Then run "taskkill /PID #### /F" where #### is your port. Then restart ADB and you are good. Sep 7, 2022 at 18:21
32

From the AVD Manager try the "Cold Boot Now" option in the drop-down. It worked for me!

2
  • 7
    This is probably the first thing people should try before going in these over-complicated other solutions...
    – ralfoide
    Jul 1, 2019 at 16:05
  • thanks! I was struggling for almost 2 hours. Jan 1, 2021 at 5:51
24

If you are on Linux or Mac, and assuming the offline device is 'emulator-5554', you can run the following:

netstat -tulpn|grep 5554

Which yields the following output:

tcp        0      0 127.0.0.1:5554          0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      4848/emulator64-x86
tcp        0      0 127.0.0.1:5555          0.0.0.0:*               LISTEN      4848/emulator64-x86

This tells me that the process id 4848 (yours will likely be different) is still listening on port 5554. You can now kill that process with:

sudo kill -9 4848

and the ghost offline-device is no more!

On macOS Big Sur and later, use

sudo lsof -i -P | grep LISTEN | grep 5554

to find out the process.

19

I finally solved this problem, I had to go to the Developer options from the Settings in the Emulator, then scrolled down a little, turned on the USB debugging. Instantly my device was recognized online, and I no longer faced that issue. I tried restarting android studio and emulator, killing adb process, but those did not work.

6
  • 1
    you are a hero! Jan 30, 2018 at 16:00
  • 3
    Hi @Shamsul can you please describe how to access the Developer Options from the Settings, in the Emulator? I presume you are referring to AVD Manager, in Android Studio. I have the same issue described in this thread and have tried all the things suggested except your suggestion. I do not see any Developer Options for the Emulator in the AVD Manager.
    – Eddie
    Feb 13, 2020 at 21:29
  • 1
    Hi Eddie, the usual procedure to turn on the developer option is the same for emulator and real devices. Find the build number in the software information, tap on it repeatedly, after maybe 7-10 taps, you will see that the developer option has been enabled. Feb 16, 2020 at 3:00
  • I resolved the issue by toggling USB debugging in Developer options. I am not sure why this happened out of the blue, but this resolved the problem. May 20, 2021 at 15:11
  • This is what finally worked. It's crazy we have to do this on an emulator.... which is meant to be used for debugging...
    – kbrmys
    Apr 27, 2022 at 10:31
15

I also had the same issue. I've tried all solutions described here, but they didn't help me. Then I've removed all emulators in the Android Virtual Device Manager and created new ones. The problem was in the CPU/ABI system image configuration of the Android Virtual Device Manager. My Windows10 machine emulator with system image x86 is always offline, where the emulator with system image x86_64 is working fine as expected. Just be aware of this

5
  • on my case, x86 system images windows 10, I just need to delete all emulator then recreate them
    – Dika
    Jan 9, 2018 at 5:01
  • 2
    Thank you so much, I've spent so much time trying to get this to work and this was my problem Jan 22, 2018 at 21:15
  • Same here, but on Windows 7. Jun 22, 2019 at 13:38
  • 1
    Thank you man!! almost 2 days dealing with this. You are a hero Nov 23, 2022 at 23:20
  • @RodrigoIbarra glad to help. I also struggled)
    – Volodymyr
    Nov 24, 2022 at 21:50
11

I solved this by opening my commandprompt:

adb kill-server

adb devices

After starting up, ADB now detects the device/emulator.

10

Enable USB Debugging into your emulator

  1. Settings > About Phone > Build number > Tap it 7 times to become developer;
  2. Settings > Developer Options > USB Debugging.

That's it enjoy

1
  • 2
    Re-enabling USB debugging helped me (turning off and on) Apr 21, 2020 at 8:19
9

In my case, I found some process that makes adb not work well.
You can try to kill some strange process and run "adb devices" to test.

It worked for me:
kill the process name MONyog.exe

0
9

Just write

adb -e reboot

and be happy with adb))

3
  • This tells ADB to reboot emulator. It cannot work if it's marked offline. Jan 2, 2019 at 9:10
  • works if you previously execute rm -Rf ~/.android to clean offline devices. Best command and only one to solve my problem. No kill-server or start-server did the trick. Oct 11, 2019 at 18:23
  • I'm not sure about the -e flag, but this is clearly my favorite solution! Sep 19, 2023 at 15:36
5

The "wipe user data" option finally solved my problem. just wipe user data every time you start the emulator. This always works for me! I use windows 8 x64 , eclipse

3
  • tried all above but worked with clearing wipe user data alone.Thanks
    – Sai Ram
    Feb 4, 2019 at 11:14
  • @SaiRam, you didn't try all above, because this hint was repeated in several answers. Also Cold Boot Now helps.
    – CoolMind
    May 15, 2019 at 7:44
  • @SaiRam, sorry. :) Thanks.
    – CoolMind
    May 16, 2019 at 7:13
5

open your emulator,

setting --> about emulated device --> click Build number repeatedly-->open developer options --> open USB debuggin

1
  • The problem is the emulator is just having a black screen. You can only do this if you can access settings.
    – Jeanne vie
    Mar 31, 2020 at 7:46
4

From AVD manager list at the actions dropdown: Cold Boot Now

restarts it without all pain above.

3

Do you have bluestacks installed? If you do, the background processes that it runs creates the offline device "emulator-5554".

Go to the task manager and end all the processes with the description of "Bluestacks"

0
3

Try this ...

  1. Close emulator if it Running.

  2. Start Emulator again and wait for its online.

  3. enter Command in commandprompt and press ENTER key : adb tcpip 5555

(Make sure that only One emulator running at a time.)

  1. adb -s emulator-5555 emu kill

  2. Press Enter Key....

  3. Done.

  4. check devices by command "adb devices" in cmd.

1
  • the issue is that it does not turn to be online
    – Rami Salim
    Jul 30, 2021 at 15:08
3

In my case, I started in 'Cold Boot Now' and clicked on Message to allow the connection.

2

Did you try deleting and recreating your AVD? You can manually delete the AVD files by going to the directory they're stored in (in your user's /.android/avd subdirectory).

1
  • Hi, thanks for the reply. I did try that actually. Still there. I'm tempted to just re-install everything.
    – hanesjw
    Jun 30, 2010 at 19:35
2

Go to windows task manager and end process "adb.exe". There might be more than 1 instances of the same process, make sure to end all of them.

2
  • 2
    How about "adb kill-server"?
    – DagW
    Nov 7, 2013 at 9:03
  • 1
    How about mac ?
    – Bawantha
    Oct 11, 2021 at 8:00
2

on linux or mac the port thats blocked will emulator-id + 1 so 5555 so: sudo lsof -i :5555 will show you the pid of process that are taking the port (should be the second column) so to kill it: sudo lsof -i :5555 | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill

then adb (fake) devices will no longer show on the list

0
2

In my case, the emulator was working with Oreo and lower, but not with Pie, and everything I tried seemed to have no effect. What finally worked was updating the emulator to latest (version 28).

1
  • me too... pretty annoying
    – Analizer
    Mar 28, 2019 at 10:27
1

I found that the emulation environment comes up as "offline" when the adb revision I am using was not recent. I properly updated my paths (and deleted the old adb version) and upon "adb kill-server", "adb devices", the emulation environment no longer came up as "offline".

I was immediately able to use "adb shell" after that point.

1

If the emulator is already open or executing it will tell you is offline. You can double check on the Command Line (Ubuntu) and execute:

 adb devices

You must see your emulator offline, you have to close the running instance of the emulator (since the port will show as busy) and after that you can run your application. Hope this helps someone.

1

I tried everything but only this one works for my case: Use SDK manager, and reinstall the system image. Android Studio, click Configure, SDK Manager, Launch Standalone SDK Manager, Check all "Google APIs Intel x86* System Image", "Intel x86 Atom*System Image" and install. Then re-start Android studio.

You might have to reconfigure and wipe the virtual device with AVD Manager, make sure you choose x86 version.

1
  • For me , it was the x86_64 version that is working, the others did not work Mar 21, 2019 at 9:35
1

Ensure that your enable ADB integration is marked; go to Tools>Android>Enable ADB integration .

if doesn't checked , check this option and close your virtual device and re-open it . this worked for me.. good luck!!

1

In MAC, you can use Activity Monitor utility, since, unlike Linux, we cannot use netstat -tulpn command in MAC. Search for the running instance of the emulator, typically qemu-system-i386. Kill that instance and you will see none of the ghost emulator running.

Simplest way to grab Activity monitor utility is to use spotlight search. just hit cmd-space and type in Activity Monitor.

1

I had the same issue with my virtual device. The problem is due to the Oreo image of the virtual devices that have the Play Store integrated. To solve this problem I installed a new device without the Play Store integrated and all it was fine.

Hope it helps, Bye

1
  • what a weird situation, but it fixed it for me too.
    – reidisaki
    May 21, 2019 at 17:36
1

See emulator-5554 unauthorized for adb devices. On API 29 emulator I run adb devices command and got emulator-5554 unauthorized message. Then I created a new avd device from Google APIs image (in my case Q, x86), not from Google Play.

1

Just to add, it could be that you disabled the developer options from the emulator or the debug mode.

In those cases the terminal will print adb: device offline when trying to perform operations.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.