[Q] Mounting help - Folio 100 General

How to mount more than 1 partition that are on sdcard(For example:
I have 2 partitions on my sdcard and I want to mount them)???
Actually, I need to know how android is naming partitions(For example:
I have 2 partitions on my sdcard(name is something like mmcblk0p1, right???)and name of one is N(one letter) or Android(more letters). Will partiton name be:
mmcblk0pN(I saw something like this) or mmcblk0pAndroid(silly)????)
I have some ideas about bringing ___________(guess)
Thank's in advice!!!!!!!!!!!

Anyone???
Sent from my IDEOS S7 Slim using XDA App

Come on guys, mblaser, anyone???

Is it possible that none of you know??? Any answer will be helpful.
Sent from my IDEOS S7 Slim using XDA App

Jon2555 said:
How to mount more than 1 partition that are on sdcard(For example:
I have 2 partitions on my sdcard and I want to mount them)???
Actually, I need to know how android is naming partitions(For example:
I have 2 partitions on my sdcard(name is something like mmcblk0p1, right???)and name of one is N(one letter) or Android(more letters). Will partiton name be:
mmcblk0pN(I saw something like this) or mmcblk0pAndroid(silly)????)
I have some ideas about bringing ___________(guess)
Thank's in advice!!!!!!!!!!![/QUOT]
But this differs from kernel/device.
/dev/mmcblk is starting point in most devices i'v seen of internal memory used as storage 0p0 - first partition of first block device - system, data, cache - allways the same partition number -but not external sdcard, external cards are handled by vold - /dev/block/vold:x:y - x is allways 179 - external sd, y has nithing to do with partitions
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Finally, thanks, today I saw something like that. I need for 2.6.32 kernel. Y is varing from 0 to 11, right? But how to locate partitions on sdcard???
Thank's for reply!!!
Sent from my GT-I5700 using Tapatalk

Jon2555 said:
Finally, thanks, today I saw something like that. I need for 2.6.32 kernel. Y is varing from 0 to 11, right? But how to locate partitions on sdcard???
Thank's for reply!!!
Sent from my GT-I5700 using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
While rebooting remove sdcard, after successful boot run logcat and insert sdcard vold:179:X will show recognised volumes - thats happend on android, on linux use tail -f /var/log/kernel - on linux any usb device is shown as aliased scsi device - sdd,sde,... - on folio 100 allways vold:179:8 is first partition.
Beware - vold is propritary even when it comes with stock build of android - this is true at last for samsung galaxy 7500, htc wildfire and my last android folio 100, their are allways copied from stock rom.
Hope this helps,
M32

I got it. Thank's a lot.
Sent from my IDEOS S7 Slim using XDA App
I tried with logcat and saw that staring point is /dev/block/vold/179:17(/dev/block/vold/179:17 is /dev/block/mmcblk1p1) but it won't mount it. Partitions are in ext format(ext3 and ext2). It should mount them without problems. With RootExplorer I searched folders a bit and find that mmcblk1p2, mmcblk1p3 and mmcblk1p4 also exist. Here is logcat(part that relate to vold):
D/Vold ( 980): Volume sdcard state changing 0 (No-Media) -> 2 (Pending)
D/Vold ( 980): Volume sdcard state changing 2 (Pending) -> 1 (Idle-Unmounted)
I/StorageNotification( 1161): Media {/mnt/sdcard/sdcard-disk0} state changed from {removed} -> {unmounted}
D/VoldCmdListener( 980): volume mount /mnt/sdcard/sdcard-disk0
I/Vold ( 980): /dev/block/vold/179:17 being considered for volume sdcard
W/logwrapper( 3190): Unable to background process (No such file or directory)
I//system/bin/fsck_msdos( 980): ** /dev/block/vold/179:17
I//system/bin/fsck_msdos( 980): Invalid signature in boot block: 0000
I/logwrapper( 980): /system/bin/fsck_msdos terminated by exit(2)
W/logwrapper( 3191): Unable to background process (No such file or directory)
D/Vold ( 980): Volume sdcard state changing 1 (Idle-Unmounted) -> 3 (Checking)
I//system/bin/e2fsck( 980): system: Superblock last mount time (Sat Sep 17 17:57:25 2011,
I//system/bin/e2fsck( 980): now = Thu Jan 1 01:14:42 2009) is in the future.
I//system/bin/e2fsck( 980): system: UNEXPECTED INCONSISTENCY; RUN fsck MANUALLY.
I//system/bin/e2fsck( 980): (i.e., without -a or -p options)
I/logwrapper( 980): /system/bin/e2fsck terminated by exit(4)
E/Vold ( 980): Filesystem check failed (unknown exit code 4)
E/Vold ( 980): /dev/block/vold/179:17 failed FS checks (I/O error)
D/Vold ( 980): Volume sdcard state changing 3 (Checking) -> 1 (Idle-Unmounted)
D/VoldCmdListener( 980): volume shared /mnt/sdcard ums
D/VoldCmdListener( 980): volume shared /mnt/sdcard/sdcard-disk0 ums
D/VoldCmdListener( 980): volume shared /mnt/sdcard/usb-disk0 ums
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
From this I can see that android tried to mount sdcard but with no luck. It stopped on filesystem check because (I think) it checked for sdcard(like one partition) filesystem and not for all partitions on sdcard.

Invalid signature in boot block - in many cases mounted device is broken, try format it and mount just under Linux - few weeks ago I've bought 8gb Lexar SD which was usable only in my laptop, any other device says broken SD. Now I'm on 32gb SD from scandisc and everything is working without problems. So try this card outside android - just for tests
---------- Post added at 05:07 PM ---------- Previous post was at 04:52 PM ----------
m32 said:
Invalid signature in boot block - in many cases mounted device is broken, try format it and mount just under Linux - few weeks ago I've bought 8gb Lexar SD which was usable only in my laptop, any other device says broken SD. Now I'm on 32gb SD from scandisc and everything is working without problems. So try this card outside android - just for tests
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Vold assumes msdos on usb0/sd0 cards - then this is not this case, check .rc files in root directory and.files in /system/etc , /system/init.d for automatic mount - special case is /system/etc/vold.fstab.
How is this card partitioned? Is this SD or USB card? I can partition my cards alike.

All partitions are in ext (2,3)format and they're mounted well on Ubuntu 11.4 and I think that I got his. I'll post if something went wrong.

I came to booting process and nothing
I tried with only one partition now, it have to be /dev/block/mmcblk1p1 but it stopped on 'Android'. That means that system isn't found. I read that something like sleep(5) have to be added before something(I forgot)???

Jon2555 said:
I came to booting process and nothing
I tried with only one partition now, it have to be /dev/block/mmcblk1p1 but it stopped on 'Android'. That means that system isn't found. I read that something like sleep(5) have to be added before something(I forgot)???
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have formatted my sd exactly as Yours sd is formatted - /dev/block/mmcblk1=SD, /dev/block/mmcblk1p[1,2] - is a partition ext2,ext3 - both can mount under shell but not by gui where it says unknown/unformatted partition.
Command line(s) to mount:
mkdir /mnt/sdcard/p1
mount /dev/block/mmcblk1p1 /mnt/sdcard/p1
mkdir /mnt/sdcard/p2
mount /dev/block/mmcblk1p2 /mnt/sdcard/p2
Without any error.
Cyanogen has special scripts stored in /etc/init.d to do it autmagically just after system boot.

I tried on CM with no luck from terminal

Jon2555 said:
I tried on CM with no luck from terminal
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Without shell logs (responses) nobody can help You.
Vold uses only "usable" partitions (fat32 perhaps), raw mount makes what You want or will say anything about mountpoint or device beaing mounted or commandline arguments - at lastwill say why mounting was unsucsesfull.
In my case "fdisk /dev/block/mmcblk1" "p - print partion table" (sd with only ext2 and ext3 partition) shows some warnings about unaligned partitions, but that can be ignored and nothing else, mouting works.
Another sd card - lexar 4gb sdhc class 10 - this card is unreadable by any device i have with sd slot: hp ipaq, canon scXXX (photo) or betelgeuse, but works without problems on my laptop.
Hope this helps,
m32

It's class MicroSDHC 16gb class 4 and I tried with 2.6.32 kernel-Stock rom
I'll play a little bit with it when I have time

Related

ext4 SD mount data not persistent across reboot

Hi,
Got this Desire Bravo with low internal memory so thought I should mount the app and data dirs to a ext4 partition on my SD card instead so I can install a lot of apps.
Followed this howto:
newton dot cx/~peter/2012/12/how-to-increase-app-space-with-a-partitioned-sd-card-on-an-htc-nexus-one-running-android-2-3-6-on-linux/
I found that my ext4 partition is mounted at boot time.
mount command gives the below:
/dev/block/mmcblk0p2 /mnt/sd-ext ext4 rw,nosuid,nodev,noatime,barrier=1,data=ordered 0 0
I can copy the data to the ext4 partition without any problem using "cp -rlp /data/app /mnt/sd-ext/data" and "cp -rlp /data/data /mnt/sd-ext/data" .
I can see the data when doing a "ls /mnt/sd-ext/" - looks ok.
But after reboot the data is just gone - just dont get it. Grateful for any help for troubleshooting this.
Running ROM CM10.1_VJ_4.2.2_V6.3_May24 .
Thanks...
EDIT: installed S2E app (Simple2Ext) instead, which didnt work well, so tried Mount2SD instead and appears to be working OK.

Transferring Files Between SD Cards

I wanted to have the fast SD Card, just to make the overall performance of my phone just a little better, and since my phone model (LG Optimus F7 everything has to be linked to SD card because the "external sd card" is a partition of the built in internal giving 1.27 gig of space - On a current gen phone! Jellybean!)
So I have a SanDisk Ultra 32 gig chip - active chip - partioned into 2 partitions - 1 Fat 32 and 1 ext4
The new card is a Micro Center Circle(10) HC 32 gig chip - partitioned into 2 partitions - 1 fat 32, and 1 ext 4
I have a multi-card reader for my laptop, when I try my main chip the fat32 partition can only have the files copied off, and the ext4 partition won't mount. So I can't just copy the files because any files on second mount are inaccessable. (I just thought while typing this I could makesure partition 1 is bigger than 2, use built in file manager copy all of partition 2 onto 1 on sd card, copy onto computer).
Anyway, I'll try that, but I was wondering if I transfered as much material, then made a back up of my rom, factory reset, re-installed backed up rom but with other sd card in, wouldn't the rom put the files on the sd card where they were? It won't know I switched?
Running Ubuntu Linux -
Errors I get from Terminal, etc below
Code:
####ERROR######
Error mounting /dev/sdb2 at /media/xieon/71937e1e-588a-4e44-a435-9c6485d066c3: Command-line `mount -t "ext4" -o "uhelper=udisks2,nodev,nosuid" "/dev/sdb2" "/media/xieon/71937e1e-588a-4e44-a435-9c6485d066c3"' exited with non-zero exit status 32: mount: block device /dev/sdb2 is write-protected, mounting read-only
mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/sdb2,
missing codepage or helper program, or other error
In some cases useful info is found in syslog - try
dmesg | tail or so
#####ERROR#####

Unable to access SD card 3rd partition

My SD card is partionned as follow :
mmcblk1p1 vfat , mmcblk1p2 ext2, mmcblk1p3 vfat. P1 is mounted by original system, p2 is mounted by link2sd and I made a script to mount p3 when needed .
Problem : p3 mountage is ok in the terminal I ran the script however I can not access the directory from other terminals or ES explorer ( where I intend to use it ).
Android version 4.3 (apparently same technic seems to works on 4.2.
2)
Any help appreciated

[HOW TO] BOOT FROM SD CARD [SUCCESSFULLY] on QMobile Z8 with BRICKED/DEAD eMMC

I'm a mechanical engineer, not an IT guy. I can fix machines, perhaps, but not bricked phones. So try anything at your own extreme risk. This is NOT a step by step guide.
DEVICE:
QMobile Z8, same as Wikio Ridge 4G, (MSM8916).
Running Android 5.0.2, SuperSU rooted.
Kernel v 3.10.49
Thanks to @ASAZING for TWRP 3.0.2-0
PROBLEM:
So the screen started blinking and locking / unlocking automatically like UI resetting. And there was no SIM. At first I thought it's launcher or SuperSU causing problem. But it got worse over days. So I decided a factory flash since I didn't have untouched flashable zip.
Flashed firmware using QFIL but no success. Rebooted to recovery and TWRP was still there.
/data partition was locked and TWRP doesn't support decryption. So I did a factory reset and the message came: /data not mounted. Invalid Argument
Formatted /data from "Repair or Change Filesystem" option in TWRP and as a result /data and /cache both couldn't be mounted.
Formatted /cache, and /system too not mounted.
Manually formatted using 'make_ext4' and tried 'fastboot format:ext4 userdata' as well. Both succeeded apparently but mount still failed.
Run 'e2fsck' and that showed: "Bad magic number in super block" and "The superblock could not be read."
Run 'mke2fs -n' for alternate super blocks, run again 'e2fsck' but no success. Images are attached.
'sgdisk --verify' gives this error log:
Code:
sgdisk --verify mmcblk0p1
[COLOR="Red"]***************************************************************
Found invalid GPT and valid MBR; converting MBR to GPT format in memory.
***************************************************************
Exact type match not found for type code 7200; assigning type code for 'Linux filesystem'
Exact type match not found for type code 6500; assigning type code for 'Linux filesystem'
Exact type match not found for type code 7900; assigning type code for 'Linux filesystem'
Exact type match not found for type code 0D00; assigning type code for 'Linux filesystem'
Warning! Main partition table overlaps the first partition by 34 blocks!
You will need to delete this partition or resize it in another utility.
Warning! Secondary partition table overlaps the last partition by 3805778618 blocks!
You will need to delete this partition or resize it in another utility.
Problem: partitions 2 and 1 overlap:
Partition 2: 168689522 to 2104717761
Partition 1: 778135908 to 1919645538
Problem: partitions 3 and 1 overlap:
Partition 3: 1869881465 to 3805909656
Partition 1: 778135908 to 1919645538
Problem: partitions 3 and 2 overlap:
Partition 3: 1869881465 to 3805909656
Partition 2: 168689522 to 2104717761
Problem: partition 1 is too big for the disk.
Problem: partition 2 is too big for the disk.
Problem: partition 3 is too big for the disk.
Problem: partition 4 is too big for the disk.
Warning! Main partition table overlaps the first partition by 34 blocks!
You will need to delete this partition or resize it in another utility.
Warning! Secondary partition table overlaps the last partition by 3805778618 blocks!
You will need to delete this partition or resize it in another utility.
Identified 9 problems![/COLOR]
==========================
sgdisk --verify mmcblk0p16
[COLOR="red"]Creating new GPT entries.
Problem: GPT claims the disk is larger than it is! (Claimed last usable sector is 18446744073709551584, but backup header is at 1 and disk size is 2 sectors.
The 'e' option on the experts' menu will probably fix this problem
Identified 1 problems!
[/COLOR]
==========================
sgdisk --verify mmcblk0p17
[COLOR="red"]Creating new GPT entries.
Problem: GPT claims the disk is larger than it is! (Claimed last usable sector is 18446744073709551598, but backup header is at 15 and disk size is 16 sectors.
The 'e' option on the experts' menu will probably fix this problem
Identified 1 problems![/COLOR]
==========================
sgdisk --verify mmcblk0p22
[COLOR="red"]Creating new GPT entries.
Problem: GPT claims the disk is larger than it is! (Claimed last usable sector is 18446744073709551614, but backup header is at 31 and disk size is 32 sectors.
The 'e' option on the experts' menu will probably fix this problem
Identified 1 problems![/COLOR]
'parted rm' and 'fastboot erase' didn't work either. Partition was still there.
Then I tried to flash stock recovery through TWRP. And recovery too gone.
Now, device boots directly to bootloader (fastboot mode) and is halted there. Have to 'fastboot boot recovery.img' or 'fastboot boot boot.img' each time.
Download Mode (QDLoader 9008) is also accessible.
FLASHING FACTORY FIRMWARE:
Now left only with fastboot and EDL, tried once again QFIL flasher, Wiko official flasher, QDownloader. Log says: "Read back verify failed at sector ...." for partitions misc, system, cache, persist, recovery, userdata (6 partitions) and 2 partition table *.bins
Hence proved, eMMC is malfunctioning and device now can't boot on its own due to no partition table.
Tried 'sgdisk --backup' and 'sgdisk --load-backup' options for partition table. It gives error: "Warning! Current disk size doesn't match that of backup." and "Problem: Partition 28 ends before it begins." etc.
'fastboot flash partition *.bin' also failed with error: "remote: failed to write partition".
'dd if=gpt_main0.bin of=/dev/block/mmcblk0' apparently succeeded but comparing octal dump ('od') files of 34 sectors at start shows no difference, means file is not written to eMMC.
SOLUTION SUMMARY:
Partition SD card according to already existing partition table on internal eMMC.
Flash partition images from factory firmware to newly created partitions.
Modify kernel (boot.img) and recovery to boot from sd card instead of internal memory.
Boot kernel or recovery through fastboot.
SECTION 1
PARTITION SD CARD:
Here comes Google. Following the footsteps of @lexelby at this, I created gpt (parted command) on 16GB C-10 sd card using Ubuntu virtual machine.
Created first partition for external_sd card and 6 more of same size as original ones (size checked by parted and from rawprogram_unsparse.xml). Filesystems: system, userdata, cache & persist of ext4 while misc, recovery of linux-swap (though 'dd' will overwrite them).
Then I unsparsed userdata, system and cache images from factory firmware (on Windows used packsparseimg.exe binary). Sparsed images can only be flashed through fastboot?
Copied 5 prtitions images: userdata, system, cache, persist and misc using dd command to /dev/block/mmcblk1p*.
MODIFYING BOOT & RECOVERY:
Now coming to the changes in mount paths of boot and recovery (fstab and init.*.rc).
Extracted boot.img and then ramdisk using "Image Studio for Android". 'unpackbootimg' and 'abootimg' don't extract all files on Ubuntu. 'mkbootimg' makes smaller boot.img file without boot.img-dtb. Perhaps I'm doing it wrong.
Anyway, then did 'grep dev/block' on all extracted files. Results are attached for reference.
Made changes in "fstab.qcom" and "init.target.rc". For details on changes made, please read on RE-MODIFYING BOOT & RECOVERY.
Repacked boot.img
Similarly extracted recovery.img, did 'grep dev/block' on all extracted files. And made changes in "recovery.fstab".
Repacked recovery.img
COPYING IMAGES TO PARTITIONS AND BOOTING:
'fastboot flash boot boot.img' and 'dd if=recovery.img of=dev/block/mmcblk1p*' (though useless, have to boot from fastboot)
Rebooted to recovery by 'fastboot boot recovery.img'
userdata, persist and cache couldn't be mounted in TWRP. Tried 'mount -t ext4 -o loop *.img' on Ubuntu but there too not mounted. Googled and using commands 'file', 'fdisk', 'sfdisk', 'e2fsck' and finally 'resize2fs -f /*.img' resolved the problem "bad geometry: block count xxx exceeds size of device...".
Also unsparsed userdata too large to handle and only a few MBs data inside, that too useless. Therefore, did 'make_ext4fs' on cache & userdata.
Now booted kernel by 'fastboot boot boot.img'
And.......... it boots. But very very slow (due to slow write speed of sd card obviously). Took almost half an hour at first boot.
UNRESOLVED PROBLEMS:
There is no sound. Because of /persist not mounted? And still no SIM, means radio firmware isn't readable from eMMC or this too due to /persist absent? After all that contains drivers. And also Wi-Fi and bluetooth not working.
SECTION 2
RE-PARTITION SD CARD:
So re-created gpt on sd card (using parted and fdisk) and in a hope to utilize all necessary partitions, 100% replicated all partitions (except larger userdata) including space required at start and end of eMMC for partition table. Partition tables of both mmcblk0 and mmvblk1 are attached.
RE-MODIFYING BOOT & RECOVERY:
Made following changes in boot.img:
DEVICE BOOTS ALSO WITHOUT MAKING ANY CHANGES TO BOOT.IMG.
I don't know why but 'bootdevice' is automagiacally changed from 7824900.sdhci (eMMC) to 7864900.sdhci (external SD card). It seems there is some auto-detection mechanism.
Code:
########## ./ramdisk/fstab.qcom ##########
#/dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/system /system ext4 ro,barrier=1,discard wait
#/dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/userdata /data ext4 nosuid,nodev,barrier=1,noauto_da_alloc,discard wait,check,encryptable=footer
#CHANGED TO
/dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p24[/B] /system ext4 ro,barrier=1,discard wait
/dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p32[/B] /data ext4 nosuid,nodev,barrier=1,noauto_da_alloc,discard wait,check,encryptable=footer
#/devices/soc.0/7864900.sdhci/mmc_host /storage/sdcard1 vfat nosuid,nodev wait,voldmanaged=sdcard1:auto,noemulatedsd
#[B]disabled[/B]
Code:
########## ./ramdisk/init.target.rc ##########
on fs
mount_all fstab.qcom
#wait /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/cache
#mount ext4 /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/cache /cache nosuid nodev barrier=1
#CHANGED TO
wait /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p26[/B]
mount ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p26[/B] /cache nosuid nodev barrier=1
#wait /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/persist
#mount ext4 /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/persist /persist nosuid nodev barrier=1
#CHANGED TO
wait /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p25[/B]
mount ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p25[/B] /persist nosuid nodev barrier=1
#wait /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/modem
#mount vfat /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/modem /firmware ro context=u:object_r:firmware_file:s0,shortname=lower,uid=1000,gid=1000,dmask=227,fmask=337
#CHANGED TO
wait /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p1[/B]
mount vfat /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p1[/B] /firmware ro context=u:object_r:firmware_file:s0,shortname=lower,uid=1000,gid=1000,dmask=227,fmask=337
on charger
#wait /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/system
#mount ext4 /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/system /system ro barrier=1
#CHANGED TO
wait /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p24[/B]
mount ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p24[/B] /system ro barrier=1
Code:
########## ./split_img/boot.img-cmdline ##########
#console=ttyHSL0,115200,n8 androidboot.console=ttyHSL0 androidboot.hardware=qcom user_debug=30 msm_rtb.filter=0x3F ehci-hcd.park=3 androidboot.bootdevice=7824900.sdhci lpm_levels.sleep_disabled=1
#CHANGED TO
console=ttyHSL0,115200,n8 androidboot.console=ttyHSL0 androidboot.hardware=qcom user_debug=30 msm_rtb.filter=0x3F ehci-hcd.park=3 [B]androidboot.bootdevice=7864900.sdhci[/B] lpm_levels.sleep_disabled=1
And following changes in recovery.img:
Code:
########## ./ramdisk/etc/recovery.fstab ##########
#/cache ext4 /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/cache flags=display=Cache
#/system ext4 /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/system flags=display=System
#/data ext4 /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/userdata flags=encryptable=footer;length=-16384
#/persist ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk0p25 flags=backup=1;display=Persist
#/boot emmc /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/boot flags=display=Boot
#/recovery emmc /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/recovery flags=backup=1;display=Recovery
#/misc emmc /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/misc /misc flags=backup=1;display=Misc
#/firmware vfat /dev/block/mmcblk0p1 flags=backup=1;display=Modem
#/splash emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p18 flags=backup=1;display=Splash
#/fsg emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p20 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
#/aboot emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p4 flags=backup=1;display=Aboot
#/abootbak emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p5 flags=subpartitionof=/aboot;backup=1
#/hyp emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p10 flags=backup=1;display=Firmware-update
#/sbl1 emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p2 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/rpm emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p6 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/tz emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p8 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/hypbak emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p11 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/sbl1bak emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p3 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/rpmbak emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p7 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/tzbak emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p9 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
#/modemst1 emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p13 flags=backup=1;display=EFS
#/modemst2 emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p14 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/modemst1
#/oem emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p30 flags=backup=1;display=OEM
#/DDR emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p20 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
#/fsc emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p16 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
#/ssd emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p17 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
#/pad emmc /dev/block/mmcblk0p12 flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
#CHANGED TO
/cache ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p26[/B] flags=display=Cache
/system ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p24[/B] flags=display=System
/data ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p32[/B] flags=encryptable=footer;length=-16384
/persist ext4 /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p25[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Persist
/boot emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p23[/B] flags=display=Boot
/recovery emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p27[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Recovery
/misc emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p15[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Misc
/firmware vfat /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p1[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Modem
/splash emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p18[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Splash
/fsg emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p21[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
/aboot emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p4[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Aboot
/abootbak emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p5[/B] flags=subpartitionof=/aboot;backup=1
/hyp emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p10[/B] flags=backup=1;display=Firmware-update
/sbl1 emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p2[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/rpm emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p6[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/tz emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p8[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/hypbak emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p11[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/sbl1bak emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p3[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/rpmbak emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p7[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/tzbak emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p9[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/hyp
/modemst1 emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p13[/B] flags=backup=1;display=EFS
/modemst2 emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p14[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/modemst1
/oem emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p30[/B] flags=backup=1;display=OEM
/DDR emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p20[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
/fsc emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p16[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
/ssd emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p17[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
/pad emmc /dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p12[/B] flags=backup=1;subpartitionof=/oem
#/external_sd auto /dev/block/mmcblk1p1 /dev/block/mmcblk1 flags=display="MicroSD Card";storage;wipeingui;removable
#CHANGED TO
# None. [B]External sd disabled[/B].
Code:
########## ./ramdisk/uneventd.rc ##########
#/dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/config 0660 system system
#CHANGED TO
/dev/block/[B]mmcblk1p29[/B] 0660 system system
Code:
########## ./split_img/recovery.img-cmdline ##########
#console=ttyHSL0,115200,n8 androidboot.console=ttyHSL0 androidboot.hardware=qcom user_debug=30 msm_rtb.filter=0x3F ehci-hcd.park=3 androidboot.bootdevice=7824900.sdhci lpm_levels.sleep_disabled=1 androidboot.selinux=permissive
#CHANGED TO
console=ttyHSL0,115200,n8 androidboot.console=ttyHSL0 androidboot.hardware=qcom user_debug=30 msm_rtb.filter=0x3F ehci-hcd.park=3 [B]androidboot.bootdevice=7864900.sdhci[/B] lpm_levels.sleep_disabled=1 androidboot.selinux=permissive
Repacked boot.img and recovery.img.
RE-COPYING IMAGES TO PARTITIONS AND BOOTING:
Copied (dd) all available (15) images to (20) partitions on sd card.
Copied (dd) the 10 images not found in factory firmware from mmcblk0 to mmcblk1. (Not sure if successful).
2 partitions (/data and /cache) already formatted in ext4.
'fastboot boot recovery.img'. All partitions are mounted now. No horrible error lines.
'fastboot boot boot.img'
ROM booted successfully WITH sounds, SIM, Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. All seems working well so far.
SECTION 3
Continued on post 3...
hello hi
i have xiaomi redmi 2 chinesse version with same problem with your device. stuck logo, only still can access recovery TWRP via fastboot boot trwp.img.
twrp cant wipe, cant format, internal storage 0mb, "failed argument ".cant flash stock rom with flash tools "failed write partition", . try terminal parted rm not solve. try to many google same issue not solve. i think emmc or hardware issue
i never using linux and linux command so
please help me.make step by step guide , boot from sdcard .
- make partition sd card to be like emmc partition block
- can i using windows os or using small linux distro
- how to modif image stock rom ,kernel ,and flashing to sdcard
- how to boot from sdcard
many thank you
Continued from OP...
SECTION 3
QUERIES:
UNCERTAIN PARTITIONS
But there are no images available for these 10 partitions in factory firmware:
pad, modemst1, modemst2, fsc, ssd, DDR, keystore, config, oem & devinfo.
These seem to be very essential for OS, also containing IMEI if I'm not mistaken? I'm not sure of their contents. How system working without them? All are useless?
HOW TO COMPLETELY BOOT FROM SD CARD
In boot.img, "fstab.qcom" contains mount paths for system & userdata. While "init.target.rc" contains only mount paths for cache, persist and modem. In total 5 partitions which are mounted (checked by 'mount').
Code:
[email protected]:/ $ mount | grep mmcblk1
/dev/block/mmcblk1p24 /system ext4 rw,seclabel,relatime,discard,data=ordered 0 0
/dev/block/mmcblk1p32 /data ext4 rw,seclabel,nosuid,nodev,relatime,discard,noauto_da_alloc 0 0
/dev/block/mmcblk1p26 /cache ext4 rw,seclabel,nosuid,nodev,relatime 0 0
/dev/block/mmcblk1p25 /persist ext4 rw,seclabel,nosuid,nodev,relatime,data=ordered 0 0
/dev/block/mmcblk1p1 /firmware vfat ro,context=u:object_r:firmware_file:s0,relatime,uid=1000,gid=1000,fmask=0337,dmask=0227,codepage=437,iocharset=iso8859-1,shortname=lower,errors=remount-ro 0 0
[email protected]:/ $
So the primary question is:
How to change mount source of other partitions from mmcblk0 to mmcblk1? Or how to force OS to read the essentially required partitions from mmcblk1 instead of mmcblk0?
Need to modify any other files in ramdisk or kernel-zimage or in /system or to modify init.d scripts or create new scripts? Any help?
Other than 10 partitions mentioned above, these "not mounted" partitions also include modem, sbl1, aboot, rpm, tz and hyp and fsg. Modem contains bootable code of MBR and following 5 are also executable binaries. I think these are all part of bootloader i.e. loading in initial booting process and not required by OS. But what about the fsg and ten others? Where are those used? Here is a partition detail.
Another primary issue is:
I think it's almost impossible to make Boot ROM (CPU embedded) hand over charge to bootloader at "mmcblk1". "mmcblk0" must be hardcoded in Boot ROM.
So, how to make bootloader load "kernel" and "rootfs" from mmcblk1p* instead of mmcblk0p*? Like there are switches in testing devices to optionally boot from different memories. Can we modify "aboot" (the little kernel) or "emmc_appsboot.mbn" ELF binary for this purpose? It must be complicated as bootloaders are signed by vendor (Qualcomm) and involve low-level programming as discussed here. Right?
Or in other words, how to force bootloader to read partition table from dev/mmcblk1 instead of dev/mmcblk0?
If we can't do this, system doesn't know how to boot in the absence of eMMC. That would have to be done through fastboot everytime we need to. Because boot chain will be stuck at bootloader.
Multi-booting solutions are also dependent on a fully working /boot partition on eMMC because they (one way or the other) re-flash/replace modified boot image every time a ROM is to be switched. EFIDroid is a secondary bootloader but that too replaces /boot and/or /recovery.
I have gone through this, this, this and this. But they only address partial booting from sd card e.g. dual booting in which only /system, /data and /cache are involved. None has discussed complete boot from sd. Is it really impossible? This link gives a little hope but it points to a ready made solution (bootloader) which boots kernel from SD card. But it gives no explanation how.
I have also come across a few threads discussing Samsung (and HTC too) booting from SD Card as a fix to QHSUSB_DLOAD mode or bricked-bootloaader state. They extracted "debrick" file from a working phone and flashed that to the start of SD Card. Debrick file seems to be a single bootloader file containing all bootloaders in it as explained here and here. So after flashing the bootloader(s) with its accompanying partitions to SD Card, when device was powered on, it automatically booted from SD Card. If it's that simple for all devices with Qualcomm SoC, the only thing I have to do is :laugh:
Code:
[COLOR="Red"]dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/block/mmcblk0 bs=1m count=200[/COLOR]
Any suggestions? I believe this must be possible as they are discussing here.
Edit: Related quote from [GUIDE][9008][EDL|QDL][QUALCOMM ONLY] Unbrick via external sdcard (no QFIL!):
On eMMC devices, the boot path is /dev/block/mmcblk0. If you have a 9008 brick, the SD card is seen as /dev/block/mmcblk0 so the phone will boot from it on an eMMC device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Some secondary questions:
HOW ARE PARTITIONS IDENTIFIED BY BOOT-ROM WITHOUT PARTITION TABLE ON eMMC
If there is no readable partition table on a bricked eMMC, how Boot ROM (primary bootloader on SoC) switches control to secondary bootloader or bootable modem partition or other partitions used by processors? Means how SoC / Processors locate modem, sbl, rpm, tz or aboot (the little kernel's offspring) on eMMC? Also, why 'parted /dev/block/mmcblk0 p' and 'sgdisk --print /dev/block/mmcblk0'show partitions if there is no table?
Though parted-2.2 shows warning:
Code:
[COLOR="Red"]Error: Both the primary and backup GPT tables are corrupt. Try making a fresh
table, and using Parted's rescue feature to recover partitions.[/COLOR]
Or I'm thinking in wrong direction? This link discusses the issues but I'm not clear how it works.
Once the a device is powered on it starts code from a know location (ROM) and looks for the first stage bootloader in a specific block.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How is this "specific block" located by cpu ROM?
It's talking about some "low-level" and "high-level" partition tables. How they differ? How can we manipulate the former?
And finally...
HOW TO SPEED UP SD CARD
Other than using a UHS-III or the most recent and expensive App Performance Class (A1) sd card, what changes we can make to kernel to boost read/write speed? Otherwise, it's almost useless with too slow speed, frequent ANRs, hangs and laggings.
Default I/O scheduler being used on QMobile Z8 is cfq with default tune-able settings. I think it's one of best schedulers for higher throughput. Na? Try other? Details here:
Code:
[email protected]:/ # cat /sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/scheduler
noop deadline row [cfq]
[email protected]:/ # for fyle in $(find /sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/ -type f); do echo $fyle; cat $fyle; done;
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/fifo_expire_async
50
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/group_idle
0
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/quantum
20
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/slice_async
40
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/slice_idle
10
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/slice_sync
100
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/low_latency
0
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/fifo_expire_sync
50
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/back_seek_max
16384
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/target_latency
300
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/back_seek_penalty
2
/sys/block/mmcblk0/queue/iosched/slice_async_rq
2
[email protected]:/ # cat /sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/scheduler
noop deadline row [cfq]
[email protected]:/ # for fyle in $(find /sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/ -type f); do echo $fyle; cat $fyle; done;
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/fifo_expire_async
50
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/group_idle
0
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/quantum
20
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/slice_async
40
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/slice_idle
10
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/slice_sync
100
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/low_latency
0
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/fifo_expire_sync
50
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/back_seek_max
16384
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/target_latency
300
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/back_seek_penalty
2
/sys/block/mmcblk1/queue/iosched/slice_async_rq
2
[email protected]:/ #
Tried different cache values (read_ahead_kb) from 64 to 4048. Makes no difference apparently.
Also disabled jounalling using 'tune2fs -O ^has_journal' and e2fsck checks using 'tune2fs -c -1'.
Changed mount options to for /data and /cache:
Code:
[email protected]:/ # mount | grep -E "/cache|/data"
/dev/block/mmcblk1p32 /data ext4 rw,seclabel,[B]noatime,discard,nobarrier,noauto_da_alloc,commit=60[/B] 0 0
/dev/block/mmcblk1p26 /cache ext4 rw,seclabel,noatime,discard,nobarrier,noauto_da_alloc,commit=60 0 0
[email protected]:/ #
Seems useless so far. Any ideas? Or it's a hardware limitation of device?
Is there a way to get rid of FUSE and use ext4 in true sense for whole /data (only possible if someone is willing to quit using MTP), though it doesn't matter much for Android's internal operations? But it's a real pain for I/O operations on external media.
Edit: Speed much improved by using a more certain branded SD Card; Sandisk C-10.
@yoAeroA00 Sir need your special attention for kernel part. You have a good history with kernel tweaking and multibooting.
I try to manual flash commands, one by one read from flash_all.bat. everything is okay finish, except file "gpt_both0.bin" and "sec.dat"
jeksparo said:
I try to manual flash commands, one by one read from flash_all.bat. everything is okay finish, except file "gpt_both0.bin" and "sec.dat"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If flasher is unable to flash partitions, then flashing manually won't make any difference. "gpt_both0.bin" contains partition tables; main and backup. First sector is protective mbr for legacy partitioning tools and next 33 sectors contain gpt partition table. A backup of partition table is stores on last 33 sectors of disk or emmc in our case. Total 67 sectors make 33.5 KiB size which is same as that of gpt_both0.bin. Let me have a look at partition table for further clarity. Run these from twrp to save your partition table.
Code:
sgdisk -p /dev/block/mmcblk0 > pt1
parted /dev/block/mmcblk0 p free > pt2
cant compile sgdisk -p /dev/block/mmcblk0 > pt1 invalid option --p
and parted /dev/block/mmcblk0 > pt2 blank line after entering
my device shell dont have parted command, so i run parted from sd card.
how to created gpt on sdcard using parted and fdisk, if my parted command in sdcard too, it is possible?
jeksparo said:
cant compile sgdisk -p /dev/block/mmcblk0 > pt1 invalid option --p
and parted /dev/block/mmcblk0 > pt2 blank line after entering
my device shell dont have parted command, so i run parted from sd card.
how to created gpt on sdcard using parted and fdisk, if my parted command in sdcard too, it is possible?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For sgdisk use --print as help shown in your screenshot.
Code:
sgdisk --print /dev/block/mmcblk0 > /part_table
"> /partition_table" is to save the output in root directory so that you can copy paste it. Otherwise you can also take screenshots in TWRP with PWR + VOL- combination.
'parted' doesn't come bundled with TWRP. You can use the binary from your SD card but you need to copy it somewhere else like '/sbin' if you want to partition you SD card. 'fdisk' can't create GPT, it's legacy tool for MBR partition scheme. You need to use 'parted', 'gdisk' or 'sgdisk' etc. to create partitions. Binaries for Android are with limited functionality. That's why Linux is preferred, but not necessary. Also the copying of partition images will be easy on Linux, though very slow if you connect card reader in virtual machine.
These partitions on your device contain filesystem and will be mounted in ROM
modem vfat
system ext4
cache ext4
persist ext4
userdata ext4
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Boot and recovery partitions can also be used if your partition table isn't too corrupt to recognize them. Otherwise you'll have to use fastboot on every boot like me.
Simple is to duplicate the whole internal partition table on SD card because rest of the partitions don't occupy much space. It makes partition numbering easy.
But before creating partitions, you need to know exact boundaries in bytes:
Code:
parted /dev/block/mmcblk0
(parted) u b
(parted) p free
(parted) q
please hellp me
Hiii . i have wiko ridge 4g and i have the same problem as you it stuck on wiko logo and when i try to flash it with stock rom from wiko site nothing hapend and i tried to flash it using Qfil in the log i see "Read back verify failed at sector" the same problem as you sooooo please make step by step guid
i can boot to download mode . when i try to boot to recovery it boot to fastboot mode automaticly .....plz help me..... -sorry for my english-
_6ix._.9ine said:
Hiii . i have wiko ridge 4g and i have the same problem as you it stuck on wiko logo and when i try to flash it with stock rom from wiko site nothing hapend and i tried to flash it using Qfil in the log i see "Read back verify failed at sector" the same problem as you sooooo please make step by step guid
i can boot to download mode . when i try to boot to recovery it boot to fastboot mode automaticly .....plz help me..... -sorry for my english-
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On what part you need help? It's all about partitioning an sd card and copying data to it. Then unpack, modify and re-pack boot.img
plllllz help me
mirfatif said:
On what part you need help? It's all about partitioning an sd card and copying data to it. Then unpack, modify and re-pack boot.img
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i've been trying to understand what u wrote for the last 7 days and i couldn't understand shiiiit :crying:
i don't know anything about this shiiiit :crying: i'm so sad plz make video and upload it on youtube and show me step by step how did u boot from sd card plllllllllllllllllz _sorry for my english_
MODIFYING BOOT & RECOVERY:
Now coming to the changes in mount paths of boot and recovery (fstab and init.*.rc).
Extracted boot.img and then ramdisk using "Image Studio for Android". 'unpackbootimg' and 'abootimg' don't extract all files on Ubuntu. 'mkbootimg' makes smaller boot.img file without boot.img-dtb. Perhaps I'm doing it wrong.
Anyway, then did 'grep dev/block' on all extracted files. Results are attached for reference.
Made changes in "fstab.qcom" and "init.target.rc". For details on changes made, please read on RE-MODIFYING BOOT & RECOVERY.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In that part I used the "ABOOTIMG". To work, do the following:
Code:
$ sudo abootimg -x boot.img ramdisk ramdisk kernel kernel
or
Code:
#abootimg -x boot.img ramdisk ramdisk kernel kernel
You will find 3 files. The "RAMDISK" comes packaged in "GZIP". Unzip it and enter the folder that will be created. Inside this folder you will have the files to edit as the post follows.
By the way, congratulations for the initiative!
Turkish
Nothing is understood when it is translated. Can a British English translate this to me?
Thanks you very much for your great story and for a lot of informations!
Peace & Respect
mirfatif,
thanks for this interesting and promising information!
I'd like, though, get an additional explanation: you use "fastboot" to handle your smartphone. Does it mean,
that it was bootable when you've started all this stuff with booting from SD-card?
I'm asking because I'm trying to boot my samsung galaxy GT-N7100 from sd-card with completely dead emmc.
igorbounov said:
you use "fastboot" to handle your smartphone. Does it mean,
that it was bootable when you've started all this stuff with booting from SD-card?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My phone doesn't have "completely" dead eMMC. Booting process works up to bootloader (aboot) and it's related partitions. So fastboot works (as it's managed by bootloader). But after that, bootloader can't load boot image (kernel) from boot partition. Neither recovery partition is readable. Thus I have to do it manually using fastboot. And the remaining OS related partitions are read from SD card.
mirfatif said:
My phone doesn't have "completely" dead eMMC..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Now I get the idea... Nevertheless it looks like now I should stop attempts recovering smartphone because while trying I've turned
(somehow) my available 64Gb Samsung SD-card to a write-protected state (while partitioning). So my further experiments seem
not worth it - now it looks like buying a new Galaxy Note with a new SD-card is more cost-effective.
igorbounov said:
I've turned
(somehow) my available 64Gb Samsung SD-card to a write-protected state (while partitioning).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you unable to create a new partition table using parted/fdisk/gdisk?
mirfatif said:
Are you unable to create a new partition table using parted/fdisk/gdisk?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, I've used everything - even Windows-oriented utilities for low level formatting. All of them complain that
this SD card is write-protected. It has stuck in a strange state - a gpt table created, but no partitions.
And some programs (sfdisk or sgdisk, and even diskpart from Windows) find there some inconsistences.
Perhaps the inner electronics thinks that this errors correspond to a worn state - and sets this read-only attribute.
When I partitioned this sd-card, I've first created the new gpt table, then for a long time speculated about which
partition of what type and size should be created. In this process I've opened two or maybe more parted and
gparted sessions, and then I've saved partitions from one session, then maybe from other... and now this
memory card is in read-only state. Perhaps it has decided that this is the most safe way.
igorbounov said:
No, I've used everything - even Windows-oriented utilities for low level formatting....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How did you connect SD card to PC? I mean USB card reader, SD card slot etc. Sometimes card reader drivers are causing the problems. Are you using Linux / Windows natively or on a VM? Did you try creating partition table on Android phone? Usually phones can handle SD cards better. Try card slot or OTG, in TWRP or from ROM, using arm or aarch64 binaries of parted, fdisk and gdisk. Command line tools are preferable for troubleshooting than GUI tools.
mirfatif said:
How did you connect SD card to PC? I mean USB card reader, ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've used a chip USB card reader. Linux and Windows natively and Windows in a VM (QEMU/KVM). I haven't yet found some other volunteer with Android phone to put my SD card there. My old faithfull Nokia 6131 just don't see this card (and shouldn't, there are no partitions and Nokia 6131 cannot handle sd cards of such size). Yesterday I've used an old card reader, that is built in my daughter's PC, I've used for that purpose a special SD casing for microSD - Windows disk management confirmed that this SD card is read-only.
May be some embedded device could help in this situation - some AVR- or STM32-based device via SPI (than it doesn't matter wether there is some protection or no).

Mounting F2FS SDCard

Hi, i formatted my sdcard to f2fs and it can be mounted on custom rom i previously use, PixelExtended by changing <type> from vfat to auto in fstab.qcom. Yesterday, i moved to AOSP Kraken and did the same modification to fstab.qcom but sdcard still can't be mounted (unsupported). Is there anything i can do to make my current rom able to mount f2fs sdcard? Maybe like replacing the files or anything using the files from previous rom that is responsible to mounting sdcard?
NB : My device is Redmi Note 9 Pro (joyeuse). Im using same custom kernel in both rom
I have same problem here
Spicy_WinG said:
Hi, i formatted my sdcard to f2fs and it can be mounted on custom rom i previously use, PixelExtended by changing <type> from vfat to auto in fstab.qcom. Yesterday, i moved to AOSP Kraken and did the same modification to fstab.qcom but sdcard still can't be mounted (unsupported). Is there anything i can do to make my current rom able to mount f2fs sdcard? Maybe like replacing the files or anything using the files from previous rom that is responsible to mounting sdcard?
NB : My device is Redmi Note 9 Pro (joyeuse). Im using same custom kernel in both rom
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@namhoang235
Its possible to mount f2fs/ext4 microSD / usb-otg on android.
i use f2fs since 2017 for microSD on Android.
u need to be rooted, and, a your need to have kernel f2fs-support.
if you can format /data as f2fs and mount it.
then, youtl already have f2fs support.
else you can use any custom kernel with f2fs support.
as (on 2018) for my asus x00td device, i requested @Sakhtlonda69 to add f2fs support in his custom kernel build.
(and, he did it!)
----
these are few values , which u need to know, to execute the below commands
# YOUR_DEVICE_NUMBER = the exact partition which is your memory card's 1st partition.
# If you have a device with UFS storage (not eMMC), then, microSD will be most likely at "mmcblk0p1"
# If you have a device with eMMC Storage (not UFS), then, microSD will be most likely at "mmcblk1p1"
# If you still can't understand what I'm saying,
# Make sure your memory card is inserted,
# then,
# just go to /dev/block from any rooted file manager
# search "mmcblk1" there.
# if it only shows these 2 files: mmcblk1 and mmcblk1p1
# then, "YOUR_DEVICE_NUMBER" is "mmcblk1p1"
but, if you can't find anything with "mmcblk1"
#then, search "mmcblk0" there.
# if it only shows these 2 files: mmcblk0 and mmcblk0p1
# then, "YOUR_DEVICE_NUMBER" is "mmcblk0p1"
so, "YOUR_DEVICE_NUMBER" is actually either "mmcblk0p1" or "mmcblk1p1"
WARNING: (If you format any wrong system's internal storages partition, your device will most likely be bricked!)
Understand?
---
#---Format your microSD part with f2fs---#
simply unmount the memory card from Settings > Storage.
then, launch Terminal Emulator/ Termux App
(make sure you have root)
enter below 2 commands one by one:
su
make_f2fs -f /dev/block/YOUR_DEVICE_NUMBER
#---Formated successfully---#
-----
Now reboot your device
After reboot your device show a notification that your Memory Card is corrupted!
(because most of the android system can't mount anything except fat/exFAT for Memory Card - it's normal)
---
to mount the microSD (Memory Card),
Launch Terminal/Termux: and, enter below lines one by one:
(YOU NEED TO ENTER THESE LINES EVERY TIME AFTER YOU REBOOT YOUR DEVICE)
su
mkdir -p /mnt/extsd
mkdir -p /sdcard/_MemoryCard_
# Mount f2fs-microSD at /mnt/extsd
mount -t f2fs -o rw,nosuid,nodev,noatime,noexec,discard,fsync_mode=nobarrier /dev/block/platform/soc/*.sdhci/mmcblk*p1 /mnt/extsd
# Bind using sdcardfs f2fs-microSD from /mnt/extsd to /sdcard/_MemoryCard_
mount -t sdcardfs -o rw,nosuid,nodev,noatime,noexec,fsuid=1023,fsgid=1023,gid=9997,mask=2 /mnt/microSD /mnt/runtime/default/emulated/0/_MemoryCard_
----
Now,
microSD is mounted under Internal Storage's _MemoryCard_ folder.
---------
(Extra things)
If you dont want to show Memory Card Corrupted (annoying) Notification on each boot,
simply edit your /vendor/etc/fstab* file.
(it will be under : /vendor/etc/fstab.qcom or /vendor/etc/fstab.default or /vendor/etc/fstab.emmc)
(if you have more that one fstab, edit all)
Edit fstab* :
Find the line contains
"/devices/platform/soc/ ......... /mmc_host*"
add a "#" at the starting of that line (without quotation marks)
and save that file.
Reboot your device.
Now, It won't show any corruption device notification.

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