Velvet Star Monitor

Standout celebrity highlights with iconic style.

news

adb command not found

Writer Andrew Henderson

I need to run an adb forward command before I could use the ezkeyboard application which allows user to type on the phone using browser.

When I run adb forward tcp:8080 tcp:8080 command I get the adb command not found error message.

I can run android command from terminal. Why adb is not working?

3

26 Answers

In my case with Android Studio 1.1.0 path was this

/Users/<username>/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools

Add the following to ~/.bash_profile

export PATH=~/Library/Android/sdk/tools:$PATH
export PATH=~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools:$PATH
6

Is adb installed? To check, run the following command in Terminal:

~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools/adb

If that prints output, skip these following install steps and go straight to the final Terminal command I list:

  1. Launch Android Studio
  2. Launch SDK Manager via Tools -> Android -> SDK Manager
  3. Check Android SDK Platform-Tools

Run the following command on your Mac and restart your Terminal session:

echo export "PATH=~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools:$PATH" >> ~/.bash_profile

Note: If you've switched to zsh, the above command should use .zshenv rather than .bash_profile

3

Make sure adb is in your user's $PATH variable.

or

You can try to locate it with whereis and run it with ./adb

5

I am using Mac 10.11.1 and using android studio 1.5, I have my adb "/Users/user-name/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools"

Now edit you bash_profile

emacs ~/.bash_profile

Add this line to your bash_profile, and replace the user-name with your username

export PATH="$PATH:/Users/user-name/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools"

save and close. Run this command to reload your bash_profile

source ~/.bash_profile

From the file android-sdks/tools/adb_has_moved.txt:

The adb tool has moved to platform-tools/

If you don't see this directory in your SDK, launch the SDK and AVD Manager (execute the android tool) and install "Android SDK Platform-tools"

Please also update your PATH environment variable to include the platform-tools/ directory, so you can execute adb from any location.

so on UNIX do something like:

export PATH=$PATH:~/android-sdks/platform-tools

1

This is the easiest way and will provide automatic updates.

  1. install homebrew

     /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL )"
  2. Install adb

     brew install --cask android-platform-tools
  3. Start using adb

     adb devices
2

Type the below command in terminal:

nano .bash_profile

And add the following lines (replace USERNAME with your own user name).

export ANDROID_HOME=/Users/USERNAME/Library/Android/sdk
export PATH=${PATH}:${ANDROID_HOME}/tools
export PATH=${PATH}:${ANDROID_HOME}/platform-tools

Close the text editor, and then enter the command below:

source .bash_profile

1

If you don't want to edit PATH variable, go to the platform-tools directory where the SDK is installed, and the command is there.

You can use it like this:

  1. Go to the directory where you placed the SDK:

    cd /Users/mansour/Library/Developer/Android/sdk/platform-tools

  2. Type the adb command with ./ to use it from the current directory.

    ./adb tcpip 5555

    ./adb devices

    ./adb connect 192.168.XXX.XXX

For mac users with zshrc file (who don't have bash profile).

  1. Go to your user folder and tap cmd + fn + shift + "." (on Mac laptop keyboard !)

  2. Hidden files are visible, open .zhrc file with a Text Editor

  3. Paste this line, don't forget to change the username between braces :

export PATH="$PATH:/Users/{username}/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools"

you can save and close the .zhrc

  1. Open terminal and reload the file with this :
source ~/.zshrc

Now you can use adb command lines !

Mac users just open /Users/(USERNAME)/.bash_profile this file in a editor.
and add this line to add path.

export PATH="/Users/myuser/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools":$PATH

this is the default path if you install adb via studio. and dont forget to change the username in this line.

1

In my case, I was in the platform-tools directory but was using command in the wrong way:

adb install

instead of the right way:

./adb install
1

Considering you have already downloaded SDK platform tools. These commands are for MAC users.

This command will set ADB locally. So if you close the terminal and open it again, ADB commands won't work until you run this command again.

export PATH=~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools:$PATH

These commands will set ADB globally. So once you run these commands no need to set them again next time.

echo 'export PATH=$PATH:~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools/' >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile
1

On my Mac (OS X 10.8.5) I have adb here:

~/Library/android-sdk-mac_86/platform-tools

So, edit the $PATH in your .bash_profile and source it.

1

You need to install adb first, the new command (in 2021) is:

brew install --cask android-platform-tools

+ The reason is: you are in the wrong directory (means it doesn't contain adb executor).

+ The solution is (step by step):

1) Find where the adb was installed. Depend on what OS you are using.

Mac, it could be in: "~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools"

or

Window, it could be in: "%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Android\sdk\platform-tools\".

However, in case you could NOT remember this such long directory, you can quickly find it by the command "find". Try this in your terminal/ command line, "find / -name "platform-tools" 2> /dev/null" (Note: I didn't test in Window yet, but it works with Mac for sure).

*Explain the find command,

  • Please note there is a space before the "/" character --> only find in User directory not all the computer.
  • "2> /dev/null" --> ignore find results denied by permission. Try the one without this code, you will understand what I mean.

2) Go to where we installed adb. There are 3 ways mentioned by many people:

  • Change the PATH global param (which I won't recommend) by: "export PATH=~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools" which is the directory you got from above. Note, this command won't print any result, if you want to make sure you changed PATH successfully, call "export | grep PATH" to see what the PATH is.

  • Add more definition for the PATH global param (which I recommend) by: "export PATH=~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools:$PATH" or "export PATH=$PATH:~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools"

  • Go to the path we found above by "cd ~/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools"

3) Use adb:

  • If you change or update the PATH, simply call any adb functions, since you added the PATH as a global param. (e.g: "adb devices")

  • If you go to the PATH by cd command, call adb functions with pre-fix "./ " (e.g: "./ adb devices")

I solved this issue by install adb package. I'm using Ubuntu.

sudo apt install adb

I think this will help to you.

If you are using a mac, try this below command.

source $HOME/.bash_profile

To avoid rewriting the $PATH variables every time you start a terminal, edit your .bash_profile (for Macs, it's just .profile) file under your home directory (~/), and place the export statement somewhere in the file.

Now every time you start terminal, your $PATH variable will be correctly updated. To update the terminal environment immediately after modifying the profile file, type in:

source ~/.profile 
1
nano /home/user/.bashrc
export ANDROID_HOME=/psth/to/android/sdk
export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools 

However, this will not work for su/ sudo. If you need to set system-wide variables, you may want to think about adding them to /etc/profile, /etc/bash.bashrc, or /etc/environment.

ie:

nano /etc/bash.bashrc
export ANDROID_HOME=/psth/to/android/sdk
export PATH=$PATH:$ANDROID_HOME/tools:$ANDROID_HOME/platform-tools 

in my case I added the following line in my terminal:

export PATH="/Users/Username/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools":$PATH

make sure that you replace "username" with YOUR user name.

hit enter then type 'adb' to see if the error is gone. if it is, this is what you should see: Android Debug Bridge version 1.0.40

...followed by a bunch of commands..and ending with this: $ADB_TRACE comma-separated list of debug info to log: all,adb,sockets,packets,rwx,usb,sync,sysdeps,transport,jdwp $ADB_VENDOR_KEYS colon-separated list of keys (files or directories) $ANDROID_SERIAL serial number to connect to (see -s) $ANDROID_LOG_TAGS tags to be used by logcat (see logcat --help)

if you get that, run npm run android again and it should work..

UNABLE TO LOCATE ADB #SOLVED Simply Download Sdk platform tools. Extract the Downloaded file. Go to Sdk Manager in Android Studio and copy the link. Go to file Explorer and paste the path for Sdk you copied to view the Sdk files. You will notice that the Adb file is missing, open downloaded file (platform tools) copy contents and replace every content in your Sdk tool file (the file where you noticed adb is missing)and save. You are good to go.

In my case this is the solving of this problem

  1. Make sure you have installed the android SDK. Usually the location of SDK is located to this location

    /Users/your-user/Library/Android/sdk

  2. After that cd to that directory.

  3. Once you are in that directory type this command./platform-tools/adb install your-location-of apk

if youd dont have adb in folder android-sdk-macosx/platform-tools/ you should install platform tools first. Run android-sdk-macosx/tools/android and Install platform tools from Android SDK manager.

you have to move the adb command to /bin/ folder

in my case:

sudo su
mv /root/Android/Sdk/platform-tools/adb /bin/
  • Make sure you have adb installed
  • To install it you could run the "sudo apt install adb".
  • You could also try revoking any USB authorizations on your device and try connecting with USB debugging enabled.

If you are using fish:
fish_add_path /Users/<name>/Library/Android/sdk/platform-tools/
Or you can add the same to ~/.config/fish/config.fish
Might need to re start the shell

Your Answer

Sign up or log in

Sign up using Google Sign up using Facebook Sign up using Email and Password

Post as a guest

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy