Troubleshooting Bluetooth problems

Dzickus, Hhlp, Devurandom Versio 37,38 Last review: 2023-09-04

Bluetooth is a short range wireless protocol that is used to connect to various low bandwidth I/O devices (like keyboards, mice, headsets). Newer versions have a low-energy mode with a slightly higher bandwidth and range.

The Bluetooth solution is composed of a userspace daemon, bluetoothd, that communicates through a management port in the kernel to the hardware drivers. Applications that want to communicate with the bluetoothd daemon do so over a d-bus api. This includes the various GNOME bluetooth applets.

Identifying Bluetooth Problems

Was the bluetooth hardware found?

  • make sure bluetooth was found and enabled (note hci0: and 'UP RUNNING'):

    $ hciconfig
    hci0:	Type: Primary  Bus: USB
    	BD Address: xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx  ACL MTU: 1021:4  SCO MTU: 96:6
    	UP RUNNING PSCAN
    	RX bytes:15047 acl:0 sco:0 events:2433 errors:0
    	TX bytes:599323 acl:0 sco:0 commands:2431 errors:0
  • If the command returns nothing (no hci: info), then there is a hardware issue

    $ lsusb -v | grep Bluetooth | grep DeviceProtocol
    bDeviceProtocol         1 Bluetooth
  • If the lsusb command returns nothing, there is no hardware, a dmesg output would be needed

  • If the lsusb commands returns Bluetooth, then check for attached driver

    $ lsusb -t | grep Wireless
        |__ Port 4: Dev 4, If 1, Class=Wireless, Driver=btusb, 12M
        |__ Port 4: Dev 4, If 0, Class=Wireless, Driver=btusb, 12M
  • If Driver is empty, lsusb -v output would be needed to add ids

  • If hciconfig shows output but not UP

    $ hciconfig up
  • List of paired devices:

    $ bluetoothctl
    [bluetooth]# show
    [bluetooth]# devices
    [bluetooth]# info <mac addr of any device you have problems with>

Is the bluetoothd daemon running?

  • Verify under systemd bluetooth is 'Active' and 'enabled'

    $ systemctl status bluetooth
    ● bluetooth.service - Bluetooth service
       Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service; enabled; vendor preset: enabled)
       Active: active (running) since Wed 2017-10-04 16:07:40 EDT; 1 day 22h ago
         Docs: man:bluetoothd(8)
     Main PID: 27427 (bluetoothd)
       Status: "Running"
        Tasks: 1 (limit: 4915)
       CGroup: /system.slice/bluetooth.service
               └─27427 /usr/libexec/bluetooth/bluetoothd
  • Verify obex is configured to run (to transfer files from phone)

    $ systemctl --global --user is-enabled obex
    enabled

Simple debugging

Most bluetooth problems happen in the bluez package (bluetoothd), ie the userspace daemon.

  • Enabling bluetoothd debugging

    $ \<edit\> /usr/lib/systemd/system/bluetooth.service
    \<add '-d' to ExecStart line as option to bluetoothd\>
    \<save and quit\>
    $ systemctl daemon-reload
    $ systemctl restart bluetooth

    Debugging is enabled and can help pinpoint where some of the bluetooth problems are

  • Capture the logs to put in bugzilla report

    $ journalctl -r -u bluetooth > /tmp/bluetoothd.out

Resolving firmware problems

It happens that the firmware of bluetooth adapters enters a state where it is unable to pair with a certain (or all) bluetooth devices. You might be able to resolve such problems by resetting your adapter.

In the case of a laptop with a built-in bluetooth adapter this might be achieved by:

  1. Enter the laptop’s firmware settings (BIOS) and disable the built-in adapter

  2. Save settings and restart the laptop

  3. Enter the firmware settings a second time and enable the bluetooth adapter again

  4. Save and restart

  5. Now try to pair the device again