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I'm running Android 4.4.2 and I enabled the "Bluetooth HCI snoop log" as described here Sniffing/logging your own Android Bluetooth traffic

After turning bluetooth on and off I rebooted the phone. I could not find the log file in the expected location:

$ adb pull /sdcard/btsnoop_hci.log
remote object '/sdcard/btsnoop_hci.log' does not exist

How can I get to the btsnoop_hci.log?

2
  • 5
    The answer marked as correct is not actually the correct answer. Please scroll to the highest voted answer for the ACTUAL correct answer.
    – PaulR
    Sep 8, 2017 at 13:06
  • Try this for android O, samsung latest: adb pull /data/log/bt/btsnoop_hci.log Mar 27, 2018 at 11:14

12 Answers 12

139

UPDATE: The btsnoop hci log seems to be getting phased out of the user-accessible areas on a lot of phones. Assuming you have hci logging enabled, you can get a bugreport

adb bugreport anewbugreportfolder

Then decompress the folder. If you're lucky there is an 'FS' folder that contains the btsnoop_hci.log log several layers down (not sure why some phones have this and some don't.) If you don`t have it, grab the bug report text file that looks like this

bugreport-2018-08-01-15-08-01.txt

Run btsnooz.py against it. Per Google`s instructions,

To extract snoop logs from the bug report, use the btsnooz script.

Get btsnooz.py.
Extract the text version of the bug report.
Run btsnooz.py on the text version of the bug report:

btsnooz.py BUG_REPORT.txt > BTSNOOP.log

As of 1/12/21 the link to btsnooz is here: https://android.googlesource.com/platform/packages/modules/Bluetooth/+/refs/heads/master/system/tools/scripts/btsnooz.py

LEGACY ANSWER:

You can see where your phone is storing the hci log by reading the bt_stack.conf file. Try

adb shell cat /etc/bluetooth/bt_stack.conf

You will see a line that looks like

# BtSnoop log output file
BtSnoopFileName =/sdcard/btsnoop_hci.log <--your file location

It is usually, but not always (depends on the phone) on the root of the sdcard. There is also a line in this configuration file which may reflect if hci logging is actually on or not

# EnableBtSnoop logging function
# valid value : true , false
BtSnoopLogOutput=false

Toggling the 'Enable Bluetooth HCI snoop log' option in the developer options should change it to

# EnableBtSnoop logging function
# valid value : true , false
BtSnoopLogOutput=true

I say "should" because for some phones this doesn't update this file. You should:

  1. Read the bt_stack.conf file. See where the HCI log should be and if bt snoop logging is actually enabled or not
  2. If developer options say btsnoop_hci logging is on but the bt_stack.conf file says it is off, try power cycling bluetooth and/or your phone.
  3. If your phone is rooted, manually set BtSnoopLogOutput=true

If none of the 3 options work, you're out of luck. BT Snoop hci logging is a bit inconsistent across different phones. I've seen a few phones where I just couldn't get it to work not matter what but for the most cases you should be able to get it going. A rooted phone is not a requirement.

13
  • How can i set set BtSnoopLogOutput=true on a rooted phone? Aug 21, 2015 at 8:12
  • 2
    Google Pixel seems to be stuck on BtSnoopLogOutput=false
    – Senseful
    Jul 4, 2017 at 8:28
  • 1
    Some other places you may find the bt_stack.conf file are /system/etc/ and /vendor/etc/
    – DearVolt
    Jul 11, 2017 at 20:13
  • 6
    I found mine in the bugreport zip at: FS\data\misc\bluetooth\logs Feb 12, 2019 at 23:29
  • 1
    If you go the btsnooz.py route, note that it's a python2 script. It took me a while to notice. The error related to running with python3 is: "TypeError: write() argument must be str, not bytes"
    – rrmoelker
    Jun 25, 2020 at 15:35
18

On Nexus 5X and Pixel C Android O you have to enable bluetooth, enable HCI snooping in developer settings, disable and reenable bluetooth and reboot.

After that you can get the log by going to developer settings and "take bug report" and get a full log.

The file bt_stack.conf is not changed and there is no new file on /sdcard as on other devices

4
  • 1
    I can confirm that this is the only method that works for me. I'm using the Pixel 2 XL on Android 8.1 Oreo. The "take bug report" feature generates an archive and the log file will be in that archive under FS/data/misc/bluetooth/logs/btsnoop_hci.log
    – jbb
    Feb 27, 2018 at 17:41
  • This is really the most consistent of the methods that works without any rooting, USB connection, etc. and on the most phones. Jun 21, 2018 at 17:40
  • This worked for my Samsung Galaxy S7. The bug report contains a file FS/data/log/bt/btsnoop_hci.log that can be opened with WireShark.
    – ZeroOne
    Nov 11, 2018 at 21:38
  • Are you sure you need to reboot? It works for me without doing that. May 20, 2020 at 12:26
11

For a user version Pixel/Nexus, you may not have the permission to pull out /data/misc/bluetooth/logs/btsnoop_hci.log. You can get the hci log like this:

adb shell dumpsys bluetooth_manager
adb bugreport > BUG_REPORT.txt

You will get a BUG_REPORT.txt and zip file. HCI log will be found under FS\data\misc\bluetooth\logs of the zip file.

3
  • 1
    adb shell dumpsys bluetooth_manager ; adb bugreport > BUG_REPORT.txt
    – Fukai
    Feb 28, 2018 at 7:11
  • This just made the btsnoop_hci.log appear on my Mi 9.
    – Avamander
    Sep 20, 2020 at 19:31
  • works also for moto g6 with Android 9, thanks a lot
    – Cor
    Feb 17, 2022 at 11:17
9

On a OnePlus 6 (A6003, Android 9) phone (and I believe other OnePlus phones) the location is:

/sdcard/oem_log/btsnoop

This location does not require rooting nor accessing through adb. The log will have a .cfa extension and is in a binary pcap format suitable for analysis with e.g. Wireshark.

5
  • Yes, but it is still not readable. Did you do something with this logs? it isn't utf-8 and i can't decode that with any coding format. i have only IQOS 2.4 ?????[][]???? etc. How to read that?! One plus 7 pro
    – Kamil
    Sep 15, 2019 at 11:43
  • 1
    @Kamil This is a binary format (pcap) which you can analyse with e.g. Wireshark (wireshark.org) by simply opening the file. I added this to my answer.
    – rszalski
    Sep 17, 2019 at 18:58
  • Okay i got it. I just was sure that its plaintext logs. Thank you very much.
    – Kamil
    Sep 18, 2019 at 9:12
  • OMG dude, thanks so much! I'm exactly with an OP6 and the file is right there as you said. Why is the location not standard?
    – Csaba Toth
    Sep 2, 2020 at 7:23
  • It is not there on my OnePlus 6P Android 11
    – andresp
    Apr 18, 2023 at 19:14
6

This is what solved it for me:

1)adb shell cat /etc/bluetooth/bt_stack.conf

to see what is the log file name, for me it is :

/data/log/bt/btsnoop_hci.log

The tricky part is that files get generated with timestamp in their names so you won't be able to get them(it) just by using

adb pull /data/log/bt/btsnoop_hci.log

2)Use adb pull /data/log/bt/ instead, and you will get the whole folder, with all logs

4

On mine, bt_stack.conf showed /sdcard/Android/data/btsnoop_hci.log

1
  • 3
    Every device could be different. Location of this log file is specified in /etc/bluetooth/bt_stack.conf Mar 13, 2017 at 15:47
3

For Samsung s8, the magic location is /data/log/bt/
and you can get it if you take a bugreport

1
  • Thanks for the upvote but see also PaulFreund's answer for non-rooting solution. Sep 5, 2018 at 6:52
1

On a Xiaomi POCO X3 (MIUI) (may be only Poco X3)

Enable developer mode and HCI log.

  1. Call * # * # 284 # * # *

  2. Apply

  3. Explore the folder at /MIUI/debug_log/

  4. Copy bugreport-******.zip to PC

  5. Unzip the archive to a new folder

  6. Find at the new folder another ZIP archive and unzip it

  7. Find log and Wireshark format files (cfa) in FS\data\misc\bluetooth\logs

0

@TwinPrimesAreEz is excellent but there is a fourth option; at least when your device is rooted. Call:

/system/bin/btsnoop

Somewhere this tool was removed but it still exists on my device. Whatismore, it seems to be called when bluetooth is enabled. In logcat I see: "btsnoop_dump: : snoop_log_open: Unable to open the Dir entry". Not sure why it is unable to open that dir (btw, it is /data/media/0) But I suspect that this tool somehow interferes with the new HCI snooping option integrated into Android. But if you call that tool directly (e.g. via adb shell or Terminal emulator) it works. For me it created file /data/media/0/hci_snoop20180203164422.cfa.

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  • 1
    @Mans: Yes, you can open it using Wireshark. Oct 26, 2018 at 5:49
0

All the above were helpful -- on an S8 and Windows 10, the option from Fukai/Rene about using the bug report was the best for me. (Slightly different file path, but the zip file did have the log in it.)

However, I later noticed that I got a NOTIFICATION in Android to "SHARE YOUR BUG REPORT", and when I selected the notification I had options to email/save to G Drive/etc. Emailed the txt and zip to myself, and that was that, skipping adb and the other rigmarole.

0

On redmi note 7 I found log directly on phon in location:

/storage/emulated/0/MIUI/debug_log/common/btsnoop_hci_20220416214313.cfa

using search, I have written "bt" and found theae files! enter image description here

0

On my old Samsung A5 (SM-A520F) it worked when turning on the HCI snooping in the developer settings and then rebooting. Then finally, the log files were contained in the bugreport generated via adb bugreport.

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