ADB over TCP did not work for me. Found this work-around in a WSL GitHub issue that worked, adding the steps here with a few extra details:
(1) In WSL, add the following to ~/.bashrc
:
export WSL_HOST_IP="$(tail -1 /etc/resolv.conf | cut -d' ' -f2)"
export ADB_SERVER_SOCKET=tcp:$WSL_HOST_IP:5037
(2) Add a Windows Firewall Rule
- Open Windows Defender Firewall and go to Advanced Settings.
- Right click on "Inbound Rules" and click "New Rule"
- Select "Port" then Specific TCP port "5037", then "Allow the connection"
- Check Domain, Private, and Public as needed for your Internet connection (I only added Domain and Private)
- Name the rule whatever suits you
- After the firewall entry is added, right click on it and go to Properties
- Go to Scope -> Remote IP Addresses -> Add "172.16.0.0/12" (this is the WSL VM subnet)
(3) Start ADB Server (with specific arguments to make it listen on all addresses)
- Create a a VBS script (e.g.
"C:\Users\user\Documents\Development\wsl_adb_start.vbs"
) and put the following into it:
CreateObject("WScript.Shell").Run "adb.exe kill-server", 0, True
CreateObject("WScript.Shell").Run "adb.exe -a -P 5037 nodaemon server", 0, True
Note: this assumes that adb is on your path. If not, add the full path to it (usually something like %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Android\Sdk\platform-tools\adb.exe
)
- Run the script by opening up powershell and executing:
WScript "C:\Users\shuba\Documents\Development\wsl_adb_start.vbs"
.
- (Re)-start WSL
The VBS script invocation is the only step you will have to do per-boot: your WSL VM will connect to your host ADB instance. After this, start up WSL and enjoy!