41 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
41 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: "Sharing Same Bluetooth device on Windows/Linux dual-boot"
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date: 2023-10-14
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lastmod: 2023-10-14
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categories: ["Tutorial"]
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tags: ["linux","windows","bluetooth"]
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contentCopyright: true
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hideHeaderAndFooter: false
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---
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This is a guide written on how to share the same Bluetooth device(s) across Windows and Linux without having to uniquely pair each.
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<!--more-->
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## Steps
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1. Pair your Bluetooth device(s) with Linux **first**
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2. Reboot into Windows, then re-pair the devices with Windows
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3. Run `regedit` **as Administrator**
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4. Navigate to:
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```text
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HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\BTHPORT\Parameters\Keys
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```
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If you **do not see any Keys under the tree** then you need to open `regedit` as a system-account user. One way to do this is using the PsExec by [downloading it from Microsoft Sysinternals](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/psexec). Once it is downloaded, you will need to run a command-prompt **as Administrator** and navigate to the location `PsExec` is unzipped and run `PsExec.exe -s -i regedit`. The Bluetooth keys should now be visible.
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5. Right-click on `Keys` in the left-hand pane and select `Export`. During the dialog change `Save as type` to `Text files` and that the `Export range` is set to `Selected branch`. Store this somewhere **accessible by both Windows and Linux** -- if a shared drive is unavailable, use a USB drive or cloud-storage.
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6. Reboot to Linux
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7. In a root (e.g. `sudo su`) terminal navigate to `/var/lib/bluetooth` then to the MAC address of your host-system (_there should only be a single sub-directory under `/var/lib/bluetooth`_)
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8. Find the relevant Bluetooth device(s) by MAC address to share and enter the equally named MAC address directory of the client device.
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9. Open the `info` file, with root privileges, in the text editor of your choice.
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10. In another tab/window, using either a text viewer or editor, open the **previously exported Windows registry text file for the device**
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11. From the **Windows** file, copy the Bluetooth Key. Example:
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```text
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00000000 31 c0 08 fa 4f 7b d2 4c - 6f e1 7d ba 32 29 a9 a7 1À.ïO{ÒLoá}ºQ)©§
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```
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_From the above copy `31 c0 .... a9 a7`_
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12. Paste the key from the previous step into the `Key=` portion of the **Linux** Bluetooth `info` file. Make sure to **remove all spaces, hyphens, and change all characters to upper-case (all-caps)**.
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13. Save the `info` file with the changes to complete device sharing. Repeat for any other Bluetooth devices to share.
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