Android-sdk-platform-tools-common [cracked] May 2026
If you have ever connected an Android device to a Linux computer for development, debugging, or advanced system modifications, you have likely encountered tools like adb (Android Debug Bridge) and fastboot . On Debian-based Linux distributions (such as Ubuntu, Linux Mint, or Pop!_OS), these essential utilities are packaged together as android-sdk-platform-tools-common .
But what exactly is this package, what does it contain, and why is it important? This article breaks down everything you need to know. android-sdk-platform-tools-common is a software package available in the official repositories of Debian, Ubuntu, and their derivatives. It provides the core command-line tools from Google’s Android SDK Platform Tools, precompiled and packaged specifically for Linux environments. android-sdk-platform-tools-common
sudo udevadm control --reload-rules sudo udevadm trigger Add your user to the plugdev group: If you have ever connected an Android device
The android-sdk-platform-tools-common package often installs udev rules automatically. If not, you can manually add rules: This article breaks down everything you need to know
# Create a udev rules file sudo nano /etc/udev/rules.d/51-android.rules Add a line for your device vendor (e.g., Google, Samsung, OnePlus). Example for Google devices:
sudo apt update sudo apt install android-sdk-platform-tools-common After installation, verify that the tools are accessible: