If the original is deprecated, use HuskyDG/magisk-adb-fastboot (a community-maintained fork).

# /data/adb/service.d/adbd.sh #!/system/bin/sh setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555 start adbd

Once you have downloaded the .zip file to your phone's internal storage (e.g., /sdcard/Download/ ), follow these steps:

Enable Wireless Debugging in the target device's Developer Options. Note the IP address and port number provided. In your terminal, run: adb connect [IP_ADDRESS_HERE]:[PORT] Use code with caution. 3. On-Device Flashing

Type adb --version or fastboot --version to ensure the tools are recognized.

Before you begin, ensure your device is rooted with the latest version of Magisk Manager (or KernelSU/APatch) and that you have a stable internet connection.

When you flash this module, you inject these binaries directly into your system $PATH (usually /data/adb/modules/adb-fastboot/system/bin ). This allows any terminal emulator (like Termux) on your rooted phone to execute PC-level commands.

Because the official Magisk Module Repository was decentralized, the safest and most reliable place to download this module is from trusted developer hubs on GitHub. Step 1: Download the Module Zip File

: Connect a second Android device via an OTG cable to unbrick it or flash custom recoveries.

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Ambarish Kumar

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Ambarish Kumar

Hi, there! I am Ambarish K. I'm a Linux enthusiast who runs Ubuntu 18.04 LTS.