AVD Manager will not detect my HTC Hero phone as a virtual device

I need to use my phone as an emulator / target / virtual device when starting the application. I installed HTC Sync and the USB driver is fine. I turned on USB debugging in the settings.

What else needs to be done to get Eclipse AVD Manager to detect my phone? I launched it at the forge, after the same steps that I took now. “Suddenly,” he just discovered a telephone. That makes no sense! Argh

Help me please?

+9
android eclipse avd emulation
Feb 10 2018-10-10
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8 answers

When I did this, I never installed HTC Sync. I used the AVD Manager to install the USB driver and followed these

+4
Feb 10 2018-10-10
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Finally - it works! In Run Configurations → Target → Select "Manual" instead of "Automatic", then you need to select a device or emualtor when starting the application. And then I could choose my phone instead of emulators.

+10
Feb 10 '10 at 13:35
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HTC Hero (Android 2.1)
eclipse Helios (3.6)
Windows XP SP3

I got this work by doing the following

  • Make sure your project is set up for debugging in the android:debuggable="true" manifest android:debuggable="true"
  • On the hero, make sure it is configured for remote debugging
    Menu > Settings > Applications > Development > USB Debugging
    (the next three steps I got from here )
  • Install HTC Sync (3.0)
  • Use USBDeview to remove device
  • Connect device
  • Verify that the device is added by running "C: \ Program Files \ android-KFD windows \ platform tools \ adb.exe devices", which says that the server is outdated and automatically killed and restarted it and showed my device is connected.
  • In addition, it was safe to "C: \ Program Files \ HTC \ HTC Sync 3.0 \ adb.exe devices"
  • Then in eclipse click on the menu drop-down menu on the debug toolbar> Debug Configurations ... delete all existing configurations and close
  • The next time you debug, it finds HTC Hero and debugs it
+6
Jan 07 2018-11-11T00:
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A few tips that helped me get my Phone (Incredible 2):

  • In Run Configurations, make sure the target is set to Manual (otherwise, it may use the emulator by default)

  • Install the phone drivers (from the startup menu when connecting) and HTC Sync. If the "Debug mode" does not work, my phone will only be recognized by HTC sync and eclipse in the "Sync" mode.

  • Check which version of the SDK you are using. My phone was not upgraded to Android 4.0, so I had to download the previous SDK version (2.1.3)

+2
Nov 15 '12 at 18:03
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I had a simulated problem, but I had to enable usb debugging on my actual physical phone, and it updated the drivers on windows, and now it works

+1
Mar 02 2018-12-12T00:
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Your phone is not a virtual device. Just plug it in, make sure USB debugging is turned on on your phone and your application starts or debugs.

0
Feb 10 2018-10-10
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Even if you installed the USB driver, there may be a hidden incorrect USB registration in Windows. You can use USBDeview to check registered drivers and delete all entries for your phone before connecting to it, and then select the driver from the SDK on request.

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Feb 10 '10 at 12:52
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I had a similar problem - USB debugging is enabled, no problems with the drivers, but the device was not found. I tried to start the imported project. I created a new Android Sample Project and was able to run it on the device. After that, the imported project is also launched on the device.

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Mar 30 2018-12-12T00:
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