You run adb devices and see "unauthorized" next to your serial number. Solution: Look at your phone screen. There should be a prompt asking for permission to allow USB debugging. If you don't see it, revoke USB debugging authorizations in Developer Options and try again.
If you have ever rooted a phone, unlocked a bootloader, recovered deleted data, or sideloaded an OTA update, you have already used the —whether you knew it or not.
Google's USB driver rarely works for OEM devices (Samsung, Xiaomi, OnePlus). You often need the from the manufacturer's website. On Linux/macOS, this is rarely a problem.
While the package contains several utilities, three primary tools form the backbone of the suite:
You run adb devices and see "unauthorized" next to your serial number. Solution: Look at your phone screen. There should be a prompt asking for permission to allow USB debugging. If you don't see it, revoke USB debugging authorizations in Developer Options and try again.
If you have ever rooted a phone, unlocked a bootloader, recovered deleted data, or sideloaded an OTA update, you have already used the —whether you knew it or not.
Google's USB driver rarely works for OEM devices (Samsung, Xiaomi, OnePlus). You often need the from the manufacturer's website. On Linux/macOS, this is rarely a problem.
While the package contains several utilities, three primary tools form the backbone of the suite:
