Update
This bug has now been fixed as of ADB version 1.0.41, which is part of Platform Tools version 29.0.4. The fix for the bug was committed on 31st July 2019:
Restore default port for adb connect
.
The default port of 5555 was removed a while back, but the help text was
never updated, and other contexts still allow a default port.
Bug: https://issuetracker.google.com/128561172
Inputting adb connect 192.168.1.20
without the trailing port number now results in ADB connecting to the target device, restoring previous behaviour.
Old answer
This would appear to be a bug within ADB, introduced in December 2018 or January 2019. I believe this relates to recent changes to this else
statement in socket_spec.cpp.
} else {
std::string addr(spec.substr(4));
port_value = -1;
// FIXME: ParseNetAddress rejects port 0. This currently doesn't hurt, because listening
// on an address that isn't 'localhost' is unsupported.
if (!android::base::ParseNetAddress(addr, &hostname_value, &port_value, serial, error)) {
return false;
}
if (port_value == -1) {
*error = "missing port in specification: ";
*error += spec;
return false;
}
}
If a port value is not specified, the variable port_value
is initialised at -1 and does not change. This value is not altered by android::base::ParseNetAddress
either. If the ParseNetAddress
check passes then we will always fall into the error-catching statement immediately afterwards.
adb tcpip 5555
thenadb connect 192.168.0.242
adb tcpip 5555
with no devices connected returnserror: no devices/emulators found
. In my case, the development builds of my device are already listening for ADB on that port.