124

On a non-rooted android device, I can navigate to the data folder containing the database using the run-as command with my package name. Most files types I am content with just viewing, but with the database I would like to pull if from the android device.

Is there a download copy or move command from this part of adb shell? I would like to download the database file and view its content using a database browser.

One answer here involves turning entire application package into a compressed archive, but there is no further answer on how to extract that archive once this is done and moved to the machine, leaving me very sidetracked when there might be a more direct solution to begin with

2

12 Answers 12

253

By design user build of Android (that's what you have on your phone until you unlock the bootloader and flash the phone with userdebug or eng software) restricts access to the Internal Storage - every app can only access its own files. Fortunately for software developers not willing to root their phones Google provides a way to access the Internal Storage of debuggable versions of their packages using run-as command.

To download the /data/data/debuggable.app.package.name/databases/file from an Android 5.1+ device run the following command:

adb exec-out run-as debuggable.app.package.name cat databases/file > file

To download multiple files in a folder under the /data/data/debuggable.app.package.name/ at once - use tar:

adb exec-out run-as debuggable.app.package.name tar c databases/ > databases.tar
adb exec-out run-as debuggable.app.package.name tar c shared_prefs/ > shared_prefs.tar
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  • 9
    Or, just use run-as to copy the file to a spot on external storage, and pull the database file from there, rather than messing around with file permissions. Jul 4, 2014 at 11:02
  • 5
    The run-as has no permission to write to the sdcard - there is something new added with the latest update... :(
    – slott
    Jan 13, 2015 at 11:09
  • 4
    When I run adb shell "run-as package.name chmod 666 /data/data/package.name/databases/file" adb ends me error -->run-as: exec failed for chmod666 Error:Permission denied . I'm in Nexus 7 without root
    – Shudy
    Jan 13, 2015 at 12:02
  • 2
    Write access to external sd card is no longer possible with adb.
    – slott
    Jan 13, 2015 at 13:40
  • 4
    If you are finding that you are getting back a blank or nearly blank file, you may find that the file is simply an error from the console that has been redirected to this file that you have created. A frequent issue here is that you are trying to copy a DB from the Release variant of your app. You can only copy DBs from the Debug variant of your app. If this happens, just install the debug variant and try the command again. Hope this helps someone. Apr 14, 2017 at 18:02
75

The accepted answer doesn't work anymore for me (blocked by Android?)

So instead I did this:

> adb shell
shell $ run-as com.example.package
shell $ chmod 666 databases/file
shell $ exit                                               ## exit out of 'run-as'
shell $ cp /data/data/package.name/databases/file /sdcard/
shell $ run-as com.example.package
shell $ chmod 600 databases/file
> adb pull /sdcard/file .
10
  • 3
    This should be the new correct answer OR @Alex P. you should add this answer for newer Android versions. Also in my case I had to use 777 and apply it to the database-directory first/as-well before I could access the db file.
    – muetzenflo
    Mar 31, 2015 at 9:10
  • 1
    My device is rooted, but I found I still need to run su to get the run-as command working.
    – ThomasW
    Apr 9, 2015 at 8:26
  • What if you don't have SD card?
    – Gyum Fox
    Sep 23, 2015 at 12:19
  • 1
    if you don't have an SD card, there's still a "sdcard" directory anyways. Sep 23, 2015 at 22:50
  • 1
    Great!. it worked for me too. Can we make a batch/shell file? just passing db file name as param and we have the db file. Aug 18, 2017 at 11:09
32

If anyone looking for pulling database from debug application may use the procedure below:

  1. search and open device file explorer

search and open device file explorer

  1. Select your handset and then browse to data/data directory

go to data/data directory

  1. Now find your application package and go to databases folder. You can see the databases there and upon right click, you will get option to save this in your drive.

enter image description here

6
  • 1
    Wow, so much easier and safer compared to using adb-shell Mar 10, 2019 at 12:43
  • In Android Studio 4.1.3 View->Tool Windows->Device File Explorer
    – redocoder
    Mar 23, 2021 at 9:26
  • Easiest way! Thank you! Aug 27, 2021 at 9:45
  • Best easiest working way !
    – baptgb
    Aug 10, 2022 at 11:28
  • Hi, this is nice way to get a file from device. But can I do this without opening or creating a project? Oct 26, 2022 at 3:35
9

I've published a simple shell script for dumping databases:

https://github.com/Pixplicity/humpty-dumpty-android

It performs two distinct methods described here:

  1. First, it tries to make the file accessible for other users, and attempting to pull it from the device.
  2. If that fails, it streams the contents of the file over the terminal to the local machine. It performs an additional trick to remove \r characters that some devices output to the shell.

From here you can use a variety of CLI or GUI SQLite applications, such as sqlite3 or sqlitebrowser, to browse the contents of the database.

2
  • This script is for debuggable applications, how about if app is not debuggable?
    – blueware
    Feb 21, 2019 at 9:41
  • Your only options are likely to use backup tools, if the app in question exposes that data as part of a backup. Beyond that, I'm afraid it would require elevated permissions. Feb 27, 2019 at 0:35
7

I couldn't get anything else to work for me but this:

adb shell
run-as package.name
cat /databases/databaseFileName.db > /sdcard/copiedDatabaseFileName.db
exit
exit
adb pull /sdcard/copiedDatabaseFileName.db /file/location/on/computer/

The first exit is to exit out of the run-as, the second exit is to exit out of adb shell to do the pull.

0
5

For app's debug version, it's very convenient to use command adb exec-out run-as xxx.yyy.zzz cat somefile > somefile to extract a single file. But you have to do multiple times for multiple files. Here is a simple script I use to extract the directory.

#!/bin/bash
P=
F=
D=

function usage()
{
    echo "$(basename $0) [-f file] [-d directory] -p package"
    exit 1
}

while getopts ":p:f:d:" opt
do
    case $opt in
        p)
            P=$OPTARG
            echo package is $OPTARG
            ;;
        f)
            F=$OPTARG
            echo file is $OPTARG
            ;;
        d)
            D=$OPTARG
            echo directory is $OPTARG
            ;;
        \?)
            echo Unknown option -$OPTARG
            usage
            ;;
        \:)
            echo Required argument not found -$OPTARG
            usage
            ;;
    esac
done

[ x$P == x ] && {
    echo "package can not be empty"
    usage
    exit 1
}

[[ x$F == x  &&  x$D == x ]] && {
    echo "file or directory can not be empty"
    usage
    exit 1
}

function file_type()
{
    # use printf to avoid carriage return
    __t=$(adb shell run-as $P "sh -c \"[ -f $1 ] && printf f || printf d\"")
    echo $__t
}

function list_and_pull()
{
    t=$(file_type $1)
    if [ $t == d ]; then
        for f in $(adb shell run-as $P ls $1)
        do
            # the carriage return output from adb shell should
            # be removed
            mkdir -p $(echo -e $1 |sed $'s/\r//')
            list_and_pull $(echo -e $1/$f |sed $'s/\r//')
        done
    else
        echo pull file $1
        [ ! -e $(dirname $1) ] && mkdir -p $(dirname $1)
        $(adb exec-out run-as $P cat $1 > $1)
    fi
}

[ ! -z $D ] && list_and_pull $D
[ ! -z $F ] && list_and_pull $F

Hope it would be helpful. This script is also available at gist.

Typical usage is

$ ./exec_out.sh -p com.example.myapplication -d databases

then it will extract all files under your apps databases directory, which is /data/data/com.example.myapplication/databases, into current directory.

1
  • 2
    even for multiple files it is still just a single command. check the update stackoverflow.com/a/18472135/1778421 if you would prefer you could also add another pipe on the host side to unpack the files
    – Alex P.
    Jul 10, 2017 at 8:35
3

Much much simpler approach to download the file onto your local computer:

In your PC shell run:

adb -d shell 'run-as <package_name> cat /data/data/<package_name>/databases/<db_name>' > <local_file_name>
2
  • Pretty close but this pulls out a malformed db for me.
    – Nae
    Mar 15, 2019 at 13:13
  • I had to skip the -d in my case, otherwise this is the way I always look for (i.e. google for) when trying to pull a file. Oct 13, 2020 at 10:47
1
#!/bin/bash
#export for adb
export PATH=$PATH:/Users/userMe/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools
export PATH=$PATH:/Users/userMe/Library/Android/sdk/tools

adb -d shell 'run-as com.android.app  cp /data/data/com.android.app/files/db.realm /sdcard'
adb pull sdcard/db.realm /Users/userMe/Desktop/db

You can use this script for get Realm database.

1

The database file is emtpy when using adb run-as. This can be resolved by calling close() on the RoomDatabase instance. Call close() to let SQLite write its journal to disk. I've created this button that closes the database connection on request:

via GIPHY

Here is how to call close on the RoomDatabase instance.

1
  • I was facing the issue : DB copied but not with the latest data. Closing the db connection before db file copy fixed my problem.
    – Suchith
    Oct 29, 2020 at 11:08
1

Steps to pull app db(installed in debug mode) from device

Close DB connection if opened

Open cmd (command prompt) (Change dir to your adb path)

cd C:\Program Files (x86)\Android\android-sdk\platform-tools

(list the app files)

adb -d shell "run-as com.xyz.name ls /data/data/com.xyz.name/files/"

(copy required file to sdcard)

adb -d shell "run-as com.xyz.name cp /data/data/com.xyz.name/files/abc.db /sdcard/abc.db"

(copy from sdcard to machine adb folder)

adb pull /sdcard/abc.db

Open DB connection

Destination file path in my case C:\Users{userName}\AppData\Local\VirtualStore\Program Files (x86)\Android\android-sdk\platform-tools Or Device storage

0

If someone is looking for another answer that can be used to retrieve Database as well as Shared Preferences then follow this step:

In your build.gradle file of your app add line

debugCompile 'com.amitshekhar.android:debug-db:1.0.0'

now when you run your app in non-release mode then your app will automatically open 8080 port from your device IP address make sure your device is connected via wifi and your laptop is sharing the same network. Now simply visit the url

http://your_mobile_device_ip:8080/

to watch all data of database along with shared preferences.

0

Here's a solution that works on a device running Android 5.1. The following example is for Windows.

You need sed (or sed.exe on windows, e.g. from cygwin.) ( On Unix, it'll just be there ;) ). To remove bad '\r' characters, at least on windows.

Now just run the following command:

adb exec-out "run-as com.yourcompany.yourapp /data/data/com.yourcompany.yourapp/databases/YourDatabaseName" | c:\cygwin\bin\sed.exe 's/\x0D\x0A/\x0A/'>YourDatabaseName.db

The sed command strips out trailing /r characters.

Of course you should replace "com.yourcompany.yourapp" with the package name of the app and "YourDatabaseName" with the name of the database in the app.

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