70

While implementing the BluetoothChat application .apk inside G1 device, it always pops up a message:

$adb install -r /home/parveen/workspace/BluetoothChat/bin/BluetoothChat.apk 
-bash: adb: command not found

Why is this error popping up every time, and how can the problem be fixed?

1
  • 2
    Belongs on Superuser.com
    – t0mm13b
    Mar 25, 2010 at 16:49

26 Answers 26

117

Updating the path as listed above in ~/.bashrc makes other bash commands stop working altogether.

the easiest way I found is to use what eaykin did but link it your /bin.

sudo ln -s /android/platform-tools/adb /bin/adb

No restart is required just type following command :

adb devices

To make sure it's working.

6
  • ln: creating symbolic link `/bin/adb': Permission denied This error is arising... Any idea ???/ Feb 15, 2013 at 9:01
  • 4
    For those that don't know, you have to be running this command as sudo. sudo ln -s /android/platform-tools/adb /bin/adb Sep 5, 2014 at 4:06
  • I am glad that my solution in 2011 helped, even though it sits at the bottom of this page with a mark of "0" usefulness :)
    – eaykin
    Jan 12, 2017 at 11:09
  • 9
    Here an updated command: sudo ln -s ~/Android/Sdk/platform-tools/adb /bin/adb
    – allofmex
    Mar 16, 2018 at 7:49
  • haha, on fedora here. ln does not exist, /android does not exist, and /bin/adb does not exist.
    – Jonathon
    Nov 24, 2022 at 17:14
103

I found the solution to my problem. In my ~/.bashrc:

export PATH=${PATH}:/path/to/android-sdk/tools

However adb is not located in the android-sdk/tools/, rather in android-sdk/platform-tools/. So I added the following

export PATH=${PATH}:/path/to/android-sdk/tools:/path/to/android-sdk/platform-tools

And that solved the problem for me.

1
  • Works fine for me on Elementary OS 5.1. I had to ´source ~/.bashrc´ after Jan 28, 2021 at 11:35
22

sudo apt install adb

in your pc adb not installed.

Try this, working for me

1
  • 5
    Please note this is in cases where adb exists due to Android Studio but cannot be found. Reinstalling via the apt may cause further issues. Jan 26, 2021 at 6:58
17

I had the same issue on my fresh Ubuntu 64 bit installation, and the path was set up correctly.

Thus, which adb would resolve correctly, but trying to run it would fail with adb: command not found.

The very helpful guys at #android-dev pointed me to the solution, namely that the 32 bit libraries hadn't been installed. On my previous computers, this had probably been pulled in as a dependency for another package.

On Ubuntu (probably other Debians as well), running [sudo] apt-get install ia32-libs

1
17

NOTE: while using adb on Linux you'll need to type ./adb to execute adb commands unless you create a path in ~/.bashrc. In a terminal write:

sudo gedit ~/.bashrc

Add the following line at the end of the file. Once you're done, save and exit.

Android tools

export PATH=~/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/platform-tools:~/Development/adt-bundle-linux/sdk/tools:$PATH

Then in a Terminal run this command to reload your .bashrc: Code:

source ~/.bashrc

Now you can just run adb without put ./ before every command.

12

Ubuntu 18.04

This worked for me:

  1. Find out and copy platform-tools path, in my case is '/home/daniel/Android/Sdk/platform-tools'
  2. Open bashrc nano ~/.bashrc
  3. Save platform-tools path export PATH="${PATH}:/home/daniel/Android/Sdk/platform-tools"
  4. Reset bash_profile source .bash_profile
  5. adb devices is now working
1
  • 2
    Works also on Ubuntu 20.04, instead of the 4. step, you can just restart terminal (I can't find .bash_profile file.). Mar 25, 2021 at 7:42
8
Follow these steps:

Set android vars

Initially go to your home and press `Ctrl + H` it will show you hidden files now look for .bashrc file, open it with any text editor

then place the lines below at the end of file:

export ANDROID_HOME=/myPathSdk/android-sdk-linux
export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools


Now Reboot the system

It Works!
1
  • No need to reboot (at least on my Kubuntu 16.04), just to re-open terminal
    – demaksee
    Feb 27, 2018 at 15:43
8

You need to add $ANDROID_SDK/platform-tools to your PATH, where $ANDROID_SDK is wherever you installed the Android SDK.

9
  • if we keep on adding program directories to $PATH, won't it take longer for each command to run, because now more locations have to be accessed to find where the command is. Jan 3, 2018 at 12:34
  • 2
    @RohanBhatia: If finding programs on the PATH is a significant amount of overhead on your development machine, you may need a new development machine. For example, I just ran the Linux command time which adb, where which searches the PATH for adb and time prints the amount of time the rest of the command took. That took 2 milliseconds. That's with ~20 directories in my PATH, some of which have hundreds of commands. Jan 3, 2018 at 12:45
  • I was just listing a possibility. I didn't know it takes only this much time to search for the command. Jan 3, 2018 at 12:54
  • 1
    @RohanBhatia: I strongly recommend that you add it to the PATH environment variable. Jan 3, 2018 at 12:57
  • 1
    @RohanBhatia: That will depend on the conventions used by your Linux distro. Jan 3, 2018 at 13:17
7

For Ubuntu 20.04

After trying many solution

sudo apt install adb

worked for me.

After installing try command adb devices for starting daemon successfully then again use same command adb devices to get the list of devices

0
6

In my case "adb" is located in "~/Android/Sdk/platform-tools/"

the following command solved the problem:

export PATH=$PATH:~/Android/Sdk/platform-tools/
5

I have same problem as you. finally as i know, in linux & mac OS, we use ./adb instead of adb

1
  • 1
    In linux, you can also use adb. You just need add a path to adb command in your environment. You just need to edit bashrc file and add a path to adb command there. It should work fine after that. Sep 22, 2012 at 10:41
3

I have just resolved the problem myself on mint(ubuntu). It seems that adb is a 32 bit executable at least according to readelf -h. for the program to work in 64-bit ubuntu or whatever installation, we must have 32-bit libraries inplace.

solved the problem with

sudo dpkg --add-architecture i386
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libc6:i386 libncurses5:i386 libstdc++6:i386
2

The way I fix this problem is:

  1. create a link from adb file(drag 'adb' with holding alt then drop to any directory and select 'link here')
  2. use #sudo cp adb /bin (copy link from 1 to /bin)

I've done this several times and it works 100%(tested on Ubuntu 12.04 32/64bit).

2

adb is in android-sdks/tools directory. You simply type this command: adb logcat.

If you want to your stack traces in a text file use this command: adb logcat > trace.txt. Now your traces are copied into that file.

If it is not working then go to android-sdks/platform-tools then put this command: ./adb logcat > trace.txt. Hope it will helps to you.

2

In Ubuntu i could run the following command:

  sudo apt install android-tools-adb
1
  • 2
    Please augment your code-only answer with some explanation, in order to reduce the impression that StackOverflow is a free code writing service.
    – Yunnosch
    Dec 19, 2017 at 19:08
1

I had this problem when I was trying to connect my phone and trying to use adb. I did the following

  1. export PATH=$PATH{}:/path/to/android-sdk/tools:/path/to/android/platform-tools

  2. apt-get install ia32-libs

  3. Connected my phone in USB debug mode and In the terminal type lsusb to get a list of all usb devices. Noted the 9 character (xxxx:xxxx) ID to the left of my phone.

  4. sudo gedit /etc/udev/rules.d/99-android.rules

  5. Add [ SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTRS{idVendor}=="####:####", SYMLINK+="android_adb", MODE="0666" GROUP="plugdev" TEST=="/var/run/ConsoleKit/database", \ RUN+="udev-acl --action=$env{action} --device=$env{DEVNAME}" ] (whatever is in [...] )to the file and replace "####:####" with the number from step 3cop

  6. sudo service udev restart

  7. Restarted my System

  8. open terminal browse to adb directory and run ./adb devices

And it shows my phone hence adb starts working without error.

I hope it helps others

1

Make sure you installed sudo apt-get install android-tools-adb Now check sudo adb It will show help of adb

Now please kill/start adb use following commands -

sudo adb kill-server sudo adb start-server

Lastly, sudo adb devices

Hopefully this will work !!!

0

updating the $PATH did not work for me, therefore I added a symbolic link to adb to make it work, as follows:

ln -s <android-sdk-folder>/platform-tools/adb <android-sdk-folder>/tools/adb
0

I was getting this error also and Ubuntu suggested me to install it so I installed* it and this worked in my case.
* - sudo apt-get install android-tools-adb

Note:x64 architecture

0

creating a symbolic link was the solution for me either. However before working I had to grant access and execute rights to the created symbolic links.

I am not sure if it was @eaykin's answer or @crazymacleod's that worked for me, as I did both before finding the above mentioned solution.

Thanks!

0

For Fedora

sudo dnf install adb 
0

Please try to update your bash profile.

For linux users: You need to add your Android SDK location.

For MAC users , in addition to the above step one extra change is required: You also need to add your Android Platform Tools location.

For more detail you can watch this video for reference: https://youtu.be/0-S5a0eXPoc?t=1211

0

WHAT WORKED FOR ME:

 1. nano ~/.zshrc
        or
  nano ~/.bashrc

 
2. alias adb='~/Android/Sdk/platform-tools/adb'

Home this helps you out.

0

Steps to install ADB in arch linux using pacman

  1. It is crucial to make sure your system is up to date before installing ADB. Run the following command in your terminal as the root user to do this.
  2. sudo pacman -Syyu
  3. After updating your system again,
  4. sudo pacman -S android-tools
  5. When asked hit enter to yes
  6. And you are done.
0

None of the solutions here worked for me. It was driving me nuts because adb would work fine in a terminal window, but not in Android Studio's terminal.

After enough messing around, I finally found that for some reason under Settings -> Tools -> Terminal, the Shell path was not set to /bin/bash. (I don't remember what it was originally set to now and I can't see it anymore, it was something to do with sh)

Changing this to /bin/bash solved the problem for me.

0

adb should be installed together with Android Studio. It doesn't automatically update environment variables to make adb (and other Android tools) accessible from the console.

$ sudo cd /etc/environment.d && touch android.conf
$ sudo nano android.conf
ANDROID_HOME=/home/gelassen/Android/Sdk
PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools
$ source android.conf

Test by $ adb devices

Ref. linux man about environment.d

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