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The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -08001Implementation notes regarding ADB.
2
3I. General Overview:
4
5The Android Debug Bridge (ADB) is used to:
6
7- keep track of all Android devices and emulators instances
8 connected to or running on a given host developer machine
9
Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080010- implement various control commands (e.g. "adb shell", "adb pull", etc.)
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080011 for the benefit of clients (command-line users, or helper programs like
Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080012 DDMS). These commands are called 'services' in ADB.
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080013
14As a whole, everything works through the following components:
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16 1. The ADB server
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18 This is a background process that runs on the host machine. Its purpose
Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080019 is to sense the USB ports to know when devices are attached/removed,
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080020 as well as when emulator instances start/stop.
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22 It thus maintains a list of "connected devices" and assigns a 'state'
23 to each one of them: OFFLINE, BOOTLOADER, RECOVERY or ONLINE (more on
24 this below).
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26 The ADB server is really one giant multiplexing loop whose purpose is
27 to orchestrate the exchange of data (packets, really) between clients,
28 services and devices.
29
30
31 2. The ADB daemon (adbd)
32
33 The 'adbd' program runs as a background process within an Android device
34 or emulated system. Its purpose is to connect to the ADB server
35 (through USB for devices, through TCP for emulators) and provide a
36 few services for clients that run on the host.
37
Brian Carlstrom9633bca2010-04-26 09:33:47 -070038 The ADB server considers that a device is ONLINE when it has successfully
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080039 connected to the adbd program within it. Otherwise, the device is OFFLINE,
40 meaning that the ADB server detected a new device/emulator, but could not
41 connect to the adbd daemon.
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Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080043 The BOOTLOADER and RECOVERY states correspond to alternate states of
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080044 devices when they are in the bootloader or recovery mode.
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46 3. The ADB command-line client
47
48 The 'adb' command-line program is used to run adb commands from a shell
49 or a script. It first tries to locate the ADB server on the host machine,
50 and will start one automatically if none is found.
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Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080052 Then, the client sends its service requests to the ADB server.
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080053
54 Currently, a single 'adb' binary is used for both the server and client.
55 this makes distribution and starting the server easier.
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57
58 4. Services
59
60 There are essentially two kinds of services that a client can talk to.
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62 Host Services:
Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080063 These services run within the ADB Server and thus do not need to
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080064 communicate with a device at all. A typical example is "adb devices"
Shaju Mathew2e19bd12021-10-06 11:10:21 -070065 that is used to return the list of currently known devices and their
66 states. There are a few other services, though.
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080067
68 Local Services:
Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -080069 These services either run within the adbd daemon, or are started by
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080070 it on the device. The ADB server is used to multiplex streams
71 between the client and the service running in adbd. In this case
72 its role is to initiate the connection, then of being a pass-through
73 for the data.
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75
76II. Protocol details:
77
78 1. Client <-> Server protocol:
79
Shaju Mathew2e19bd12021-10-06 11:10:21 -070080 This section details the protocol used between ADB clients and the ADB
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -080081 server itself. The ADB server listens on TCP:localhost:5037.
82
83 A client sends a request using the following format:
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85 1. A 4-byte hexadecimal string giving the length of the payload
86 2. Followed by the payload itself.
87
88 For example, to query the ADB server for its internal version number,
89 the client will do the following:
90
91 1. Connect to tcp:localhost:5037
92 2. Send the string "000Chost:version" to the corresponding socket
93
94 The 'host:' prefix is used to indicate that the request is addressed
95 to the server itself (we will talk about other kinds of requests later).
96 The content length is encoded in ASCII for easier debugging.
97
98 The server should answer a request with one of the following:
99
100 1. For success, the 4-byte "OKAY" string
101
102 2. For failure, the 4-byte "FAIL" string, followed by a
103 4-byte hex length, followed by a string giving the reason
104 for failure.
105
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -0800106 Note that the connection is still alive after an OKAY, which allows the
107 client to make other requests. But in certain cases, an OKAY will even
Jim Kayef7e359e2017-11-30 10:57:14 -0800108 change the state of the connection.
The Android Open Source Project9ca14dc2009-03-03 19:32:55 -0800109
110 For example, the case of the 'host:transport:<serialnumber>' request,
111 where '<serialnumber>' is used to identify a given device/emulator; after
112 the "OKAY" answer, all further requests made by the client will go
113 directly to the corresponding adbd daemon.
114
115 The file SERVICES.TXT lists all services currently implemented by ADB.
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117
118 2. Transports:
119
120 An ADB transport models a connection between the ADB server and one device
121 or emulator. There are currently two kinds of transports:
122
123 - USB transports, for physical devices through USB
124
125 - Local transports, for emulators running on the host, connected to
126 the server through TCP
127
128 In theory, it should be possible to write a local transport that proxies
129 a connection between an ADB server and a device/emulator connected to/
130 running on another machine. This hasn't been done yet though.
131
132 Each transport can carry one or more multiplexed streams between clients
133 and the device/emulator they point to. The ADB server must handle
134 unexpected transport disconnections (e.g. when a device is physically
135 unplugged) properly.