750
$ adb --help

-s SERIAL  use device with given serial (overrides $ANDROID_SERIAL)

$ adb devices
List of devices attached 
emulator-5554   device
7f1c864e    device

$ adb shell -s 7f1c864e
error: more than one device and emulator

15 Answers 15

1256

Use the -s option BEFORE the command to specify the device, for example:

adb -s 7f1c864e shell

For multiple Emulator, use the process's IP and port as the id, like:

adb -s 192.168.232.2:5555 <command>

See How to get the Android Emulator's IP address?

But if there is only a single Emulator, try:

adb -e <command>

See also http://developer.android.com/tools/help/adb.html#directingcommands

6
  • 41
    For an emulator, you use the IP and port as the id, e.g.: adb -s 192.168.56.101:5555 shell Dec 29, 2015 at 23:31
  • 4
    For an emulator use adb -e shell or adb emu <command>. They'll fail if there's more than one emulator going and you'll have to fall back to -s Jun 3, 2016 at 20:23
  • 2
    Note you have to use the -s option before shell. It is a very bad user experience that you cannot do this the other way around...
    – baptx
    Jul 7, 2019 at 11:23
  • For wireless debugging, you use the IP and port as the id, e.g.: adb -s 192.168.178.81:45635 shell Apr 24, 2022 at 17:18
  • 2
    Note that shell is replaceable with whatever command you want to execute on the previously specified device. In my case the command looks like this: adb -s emulator-5554 reverse tcp:8081 tcp:8081.
    – gignu
    May 24, 2022 at 14:49
375

adb -d shell (or adb -e shell).

This command will help you in most of the cases, if you are too lazy to type the full ID.

From http://developer.android.com/tools/help/adb.html#commandsummary:

-d - Direct an adb command to the only attached USB device. Returns an error when more than one USB device is attached.

-e - Direct an adb command to the only running emulator. Returns an error when more than one emulator is running.

4
  • 15
    Very useful if you only have one USB device and one emulator, which I imagine is most people. Thanks! Mar 4, 2017 at 17:22
  • 22
    And just a little mnemonic to help remember it each time -d is for "device" and -e is for "emulator". And if you already figured this out, give yourself a pat on the back. ;) Mar 6, 2017 at 3:42
  • 2
    This should be the TOP answer Aug 25, 2021 at 17:49
  • Thank you, I just need to know how to go back to normal, or to switch between modes.
    – AmegoDev.
    Apr 1, 2022 at 14:11
53

Another alternative would be to set environment variable ANDROID_SERIAL to the relevant serial, here assuming you are using Windows:

set ANDROID_SERIAL=7f1c864e
echo %ANDROID_SERIAL%
"7f1c864e"

Then you can use adb.exe shell without any issues.

3
  • 4
    Should be set ANDROID_SERIAL=7f1c864e, ie. without quotes.
    – Bjonnfesk
    Oct 8, 2019 at 20:17
  • 4
    For bash, it should be export ANDROID_SERIAL=7f1c864e.
    – nivekmai
    Feb 25, 2020 at 16:35
  • For powershell, it should be $env:ANDROID_SERIAL="7f1c864e" Nov 3, 2022 at 6:29
48

To install an apk on one of your emulators:

First get the list of devices:

-> adb devices
List of devices attached
25sdfsfb3801745eg        device
emulator-0954   device

Then install the apk on your emulator with the -s flag:

-> adb -s "25sdfsfb3801745eg" install "C:\Users\joel.joel\Downloads\release.apk"
Performing Streamed Install
Success

Ps.: the order here matters, so -s <id> has to come before install command, otherwise it won't work.

Hope this helps someone!

44

I found this question after seeing the 'more than one device' error, with 2 offline phones showing:

C:\Program Files (x86)\Android\android-sdk\android-tools>adb devices
List of devices attached
SH436WM01785    offline
SH436WM01785    offline
SH436WM01785    sideload

If you only have one device connected, run the following commands to get rid of the offline connections:

adb kill-server
adb devices
3
  • 2
    adb kill-server fixes the problem with offline emulators Mar 4, 2017 at 8:26
  • adb kill-server also helped to get rid of several emulator-nnnn devices which were haunting my sdk (because it was pulled as a copy from Android Studio) Dec 27, 2018 at 22:20
  • adb kill-server killed my online one and my offline one was not removed Aug 23, 2022 at 19:01
14

The best way to run shell on any particular device is to use:

adb -s << emulator UDID >> shell

For Example:
adb -s emulator-5554 shell
9

As per https://developer.android.com/studio/command-line/adb#directingcommands

What worked for my testing:

UBUNTU BASH TERMINAL:

$ adb devices
List of devices attached 
646269f0    device
8a928c2 device
$ export ANDROID_SERIAL=646269f0
$ echo $ANDROID_SERIAL
646269f0
$ adb reboot bootloader

WINDOWS COMMAND PROMPT:

$ adb devices
List of devices attached 
646269f0    device
8a928c2 device
$ set ANDROID_SERIAL=646269f0
$ echo $ANDROID_SERIAL$
646269f0
$ adb reboot bootloader

This enables you to use normal commands and scripts as if there was only the ANDROID_SERIAL device attached.

Alternatively, you can mention the device serial every time.

$ adb -s 646269f0 shell
7

This gist will do most of the work for you showing a menu when there are multiple devices connected:

$ adb $(android-select-device) shell
1) 02783201431feeee device 3) emulator-5554
2) 3832380FA5F30000 device 4) emulator-5556
Select the device to use, <Q> to quit:

To avoid typing you can just create an alias that included the device selection as explained here.

3
  • 1
    Looks nice. Too bad it is incompatible with Windows (including Cygwin).
    – Sébastien
    Feb 3, 2017 at 8:54
  • The only device ID which is always unique is the USB port of connection (e.g. "usb:3-4"). Other IDs should not be used for identification, as they could be identical for different devices. Here I propose a fork of your nice script, which uses only USB id for -s specification: gist.github.com/dmikushin/4495487dffd01af17c132644b8592cdd Sep 15, 2021 at 17:29
  • @DmitryMikushin thanks for the improvement! Sep 15, 2021 at 20:10
6

User @janot has already mentioned this above, but this took me some time to filter the best solution.

There are two Broad use cases:

1) 2 hardware are connected, first is emulator and other is a Device.
Solution : adb -e shell....whatever-command for emulator and adb -d shell....whatever-command for device.

2) n number of devices are connected (all emulators or Phones/Tablets) via USB/ADB-WiFi:

Solution: Step1) run adb devices THis will give you list of devices currently connected (via USB or ADBoverWiFI)
Step2) now run adb -s <device-id/IP-address> shell....whatever-command no matter how many devices you have.

Example
to clear app data on a device connected on wifi ADB I would execute:
adb -s 172.16.34.89:5555 shell pm clear com.package-id

to clear app data connected on my usb connected device I would execute:
adb -s 5210d21be2a5643d shell pm clear com.package-id

5

For Windows, here's a quick 1 liner example of how to install a file..on multiple devices

FOR /F "skip=1"  %x IN ('adb devices') DO start adb -s %x install -r myandroidapp.apk

If you plan on including this in a batch file, replace %x with %%x, as below

FOR /F "skip=1"  %%x IN ('adb devices') DO start adb -s %%x install -r myandroidapp.apk
1
  • 1
    I recommend replacing install -r .... with %1 and then saving this script somewhere in your path. That way you can directly invoke any adb command you like by calling the script with a parameter. For example, if you call you script adball then you can call adball uninstall myapp
    – avalancha
    Nov 23, 2020 at 8:29
4

Create a Bash (tools.sh) to select a serial from devices (or emulator):

clear;
echo "====================================================================================================";
echo " ADB DEVICES";
echo "====================================================================================================";
echo "";

adb_devices=( $(adb devices | grep -v devices | grep device | cut -f 1)#$(adb devices | grep -v devices | grep device | cut -f 2) );

if [ $((${#adb_devices[@]})) -eq "1" ] && [ "${adb_devices[0]}" == "#" ]
then
    echo "No device found";
    echo ""; 
    echo "====================================================================================================";
    device=""
    // Call Main Menu function fxMenu;
else
    read -p "$(
        f=0
        for dev in "${adb_devices[@]}"; do
            nm="$(echo ${dev} | cut -f1 -d#)";
            tp="$(echo ${dev} | cut -f2 -d#)";
            echo " $((++f)). ${nm} [${tp}]";
        done

        echo "";
        echo " 0. Quit"
        echo "";

        echo "====================================================================================================";
        echo "";
        echo ' Please select a device: '
    )" selection

    error="You think it's over just because I am dead. It's not over. The games have just begun.";
    // Call Validation Numbers fxValidationNumberMenu ${#adb_devices[@]} ${selection} "${error}" 
    case "${selection}" in
        0)
            // Call Main Menu function fxMenu;
        *)  
            device="$(echo ${adb_devices[$((selection-1))]} | cut -f1 -d#)";
            // Call Main Menu function fxMenu;
    esac
fi

Then in another option can use adb -s (global option -s use device with given serial number that overrides $ANDROID_SERIAL):

adb -s ${device} <command>

I tested this code on MacOS terminal, but I think it can be used on windows across Git Bash Terminal.

Also remember configure environmental variables and Android SDK paths on .bash_profile file:

export ANDROID_HOME="/usr/local/opt/android-sdk/"
export PATH="$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools:$PATH"
export PATH="$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$PATH"
2
  • Using Ubuntu 16.04: /home/user/bin/select_device: line 35: fxValidationNumberMenu: command not found /home/user/bin/select_device: line 41: fxMenu: command not found
    – gerbit
    Mar 21, 2018 at 13:31
  • @gerbit fxMenu and fxValidatonNumberMenu are just for reference. I'd commented it to avoid error codes. You can see a complete implementation on my repository: github.com/equiman/hardhatmac/blob/master/tools.sh
    – equiman
    Mar 21, 2018 at 19:45
2

you can use this to connect your specific device :

   * adb devices
  --------------
    List of devices attached
    9f91cc67    offline
    emulator-5558   device

example i want to connect to the first device "9f91cc67"

* adb -s 9f91cc67 tcpip 8080
---------------------------
restarting in TCP mode port: 8080

then

* adb -s 9f91cc67 connect 192.168.1.44:8080
----------------------------------------
connected to 192.168.1.44:8080

maybe this help someone

1

Here's a shell script I made for myself:

#! /bin/sh

for device in `adb devices | awk '{print $1}'`; do
  if [ ! "$device" = "" ] && [ ! "$device" = "List" ]
  then
    echo " "
    echo "adb -s $device $@"
    echo "------------------------------------------------------"
    adb -s $device $@
  fi
done
1

For the sake of convenience, one can create run configurations, which set the ANDROID_SERIAL:

screenshot

Where the adb_wifi.bat may look alike (only positional argument %1% and "$1" may differ):

adb tcpip 5555
adb connect %1%:5555

The advance is, that adb will pick up the current ANDROID_SERIAL.
In shell script also ANDROID_SERIAL=xyz adb shell should work.

This statement is not necessarily wrong:

-s SERIAL  use device with given serial (overrides $ANDROID_SERIAL)

But one can as well just change the ANDROID_SERIAL right before running the adb command.


One can even set eg. ANDROID_SERIAL=192.168.2.60:5555 to define the destination IP for adb.
This also permits to run adb shell, with the command being passed as "script parameters".

0

On shells such as bash or zsh you might get automatic completion for device names after typing adb -s + tabtab.

Also see the project page at https://github.com/mbrubeck/android-completion which says:

On many Linux distributions it is installed and enabled by default. If you don't have it already, you can probably find it in your package repository (e.g. "aptitude install bash-completion").

Device name completion also appears to work on macos, not clear if that was done as part of Android Studio, Android SDK installation or some homebrew package.

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