Hey i was wondering do you need root to do this any more? I want to install/run apps over wireless to stop all this cable switching. I have also read that it can cause some errors though? That was on old posts on this site, I was wondering is it reliable and easy to do now?
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Which android version you use? – CAMOBAP Jan 16 '13 at 11:49
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tablet is running ICS, I'm using min sdk 14 – Paul Jan 16 '13 at 11:54
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Did you actually get this working? I can see you've accepted the top answer, but your comments suggest it still wasn't working for you. I've got the same problem. – Sam May 31 '15 at 5:04
Rooting is not required. With USB cable connected, port 5555 opened across all involved firewalls and debug mode enabled
adb tcpip 5555
then look into wireless properties of your device and the network you use, to see which IP address have been granted to device (or configure your DHCP always to use the same for the device mac address). Then
adb connect 192.168.1.133
(were 192.168.1.133 is a sample IP address).
This is all. You can now use adb shell or adb install or adb upload or the like with USB cable plugged out.
To switch back to USB mode,
adb usb
The device may also revert back to USB mode after reboot.
This mode is needed for development of applications that use attached USB devices directly (USB port is used by device so cannot be used by ADB). It is briefly covered in the USB debugging section of the Android website.
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1thanks, tried this but get 'unable to connect to <ip address:port>'. i'll investigate. – Paul Jan 16 '13 at 12:01
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1Check if the port 5555 is not closed by firewall and if your IP address is correct. It is the device IP address, not the local address of connecting computer. I have tested all these commands before posting here. – h22 Jan 16 '13 at 12:03
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1
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4One hidden step I found that I needed to do for mine, is you need to ping the device once in a while what you are wirelessly connected and about to upload code. If your android device goes to sleep, or is inactive for a bit, you may need to unlock the screen and on a separate command prompt, type
ping 192.168.1.Xto wake up its network connection. – phyatt Oct 4 '13 at 0:00 -
7Tip: To easily find the device ip, before all this do:
adb shell ifconfig wlan0– Mattias Isegran Bergander Feb 20 '14 at 19:40
I ran into the same problem today and find that things are fine on my non-rooted 4.2 Galaxy Nexus device, but does not work on my older (again non-rooted) Samsung Galaxy Y (2.3) device.
I tried the steps given here but looks like one needs a rooted phone to work on some of the earlier models (and maybe other non-nexus devices too).
This is what I tried -
$ adb shell netstat | grep 5555
No socket was opened on this port.
Tried to manually set the steps that adb tcpip does -
$ adb shell setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555
$ adb shell stop adbd
$ adb shell start adbd
$ adb shell getprop | grep adb
This does not show the property that was just set.
This is what it shows on my nexus device where it works without rooting -
$ adb shell getprop | grep adb
[service.adb.tcp.port]: [5555]
So depending on what phone/OS version u have, your mileage might vary.
:-)
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Silly question - how do you start adbd again after stopping it? Once I stop it the phone disconnects from ADB and I can't reconnect to it. – ZoFreX Feb 3 '14 at 18:10
For wireless adb on my Nexus 4 @ Android 4.4.2 (Kitkat) I usually do:
- Turn on usb debug in 'Developer options'
- Connect via usb cable, accept an RSA key dialog
adb tcpip 5555adb connect 192.168.?.?(device IP on local wlan)Disconnect usb cable
Test if connection is still on:
adb devices- If ok you'll see:
List of devices attached
192.168.?.?:5555 device - Else use Kumar's method:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/14855490/818634
- If ok you'll see:
No root required
For wireless ADB without USB cable is possible but you need to use one time setup connection with PC using usb cable. make sure USB debugging mode should be on. Connect device on same wifi. then run
- adb tcpip 5555
- adb connect yourdeviceIP
To find current device IP and to setup adb wireless use app (without rooting device)
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.freeappmakr.adb
Using this app you can setup your device with wireless adb.
If any error in setup use
adb kill-server
then try again
If you installed adbd Insecure on your device, it will prevent you from connecting to your device via WiFi. You have to uncheck the "Enable insecure adbd" in the app adbd Insecure.