Is possible to uninstall factory apps with root access, all we know that.
But, ADB have 'root' command that give root access to the terminal what you are in, so, in this case, factory apps can be uninstalled by androig debugger with root acces?
like:
adb root
adb uninstall XXX
?
Regards
I found a way, by http://www.josephcs.com/removing-system-stock-apps-android/
===="
No root? The ADB way!
If your phone has not been rooted, Android Debug Bridge (ADB) might do some help. Before you proceed, this is for advanced users! A little Unix knowledge is appreciable.
Download the Android SDK & extract it locally. Open command-prompt and point it to the /tools directory. Connect your phone to your computer with USB Debugging enabled on phone (Settings->Applications->Development and check USB Debugging).
Check if your device has been recognized
adb devices
If your device is listed, browse to system/app. System apps are stored in /system/app.
adb shell
cd system/app
ls
‘ls’ lists the files in the present directory. Identify the file-name of the app to be removed, and type
rm example.apk
where example.apk is the name of the file with its extension.
If you prefer to back it up to SD Card, you can move the file instead (which also removes from phone)
mv filename.apk /sdcard/appbackup
where ‘appbackup‘ is a directory.
Done! Repeat the steps until all the apks that you want removed are done. Optionally, restart your device.
"====
Related
So ive been trying to figure out how to push files onto my eris for like a week now and im not smart enough with computer to so it. Ive downloaded the mac ADB, and have a 2.2 emulator up and running. But when i plug my phone in i cant ever find it using terminal. Im pretty sure its just cause im using the wrong commands so if anyone knows them for a mac that would be awesome. Any info would help me, Thanks.
No emulator is involved. Find the adb executable, and cmd+c to copy it. Fire up terminal and cmd+v to paste it, then type a space, then "push" (without the quotes), then a space, then drag the file you want to copy onto the terminal window, then type the location on your phone you plan on pushing to (like /system/app/ for example). And that's it! But you should do an adb remount before pushing. Again, to do a remount, paste the adb file into terminal or drag it in, then type a space, then "remount" (without the quotes).
It's been a while since I did the initial install steps, but the main difference to the commands is having to use a dot and a slash before the command "./" to specify the command you want to run is in the directory you're working in. Other than that, the PC steps are the same.
For example, my files are in a sub-directory under my user profile: /Users/<user_name>/Phone/android-sdk-mac_86/tools/ which can also be typed as ~/<user_name>/Phone/android-sdk-mac_86/tools/
So, in Finder, I go to that directory and double click the android file. That starts terminal which also starts the Android app. I go back to Terminal, press Command+T to open a new tab in Terminal (just so I won't have a ton of windows open), change directory to ~/<user_name>/Phone/android-sdk-mac_86/tools/ then I run the adb command typed as ./adb
So, to re-cap step by step:
My adb files are located in ~/<user_name>/Phone/android-sdk-mac_86/tools/
Make sure your phone is connected in USB debugging mode
In Finder, go to the above directory and double click android
Switch back to Terminal, press Command+T to open a new tab and change directory to ~/<user_name>/Phone/android-sdk-mac_86/tools/
Type: ./adb remount
Type ./adb shell (or whatever adb commands you want to run)
I am having a hard time un-rooting my phone back to stock to return to at&t. I have followed this instruction:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1634087
But when I get to this part I am totally lost.
" Issue the following adb command. I SUGGEST YOU COPY AND PASTE IT, IF YOU TYPE IT WRONG YOU WILL HARD BRICK YOUR PHONE.
command: " adb shell dd if=/sdcard/recovery.img of=/dev/block/mmcblk0p22 "
I am not sure I installed ADB correctly following this instruction:
http://jaxov.com/2010/10/set-up-adb-on-windows-7-vista-xp-for-android-phones/
and this:
http://developer.android.com/sdk/installing/bundle.html
I can't afford to brick my phone and if I get caught by my wife.... OOOOO the horror.
Here's what I have,
1. the adb bundle in a folder here -C:\Android Development\
2. android Development contains - a. eclipse folder, b. sdk folder, c. a workspace folder for eclipse projects I added
3. I have the drivers for my phone installed (I think - Kies works)
4. I have the Recovery image on my sd card. (my external card won't mount)
5. Debugging enabled
6. SDK manager has been run and updated
I think I need to do some thing with the environment variables but I'm not sure what.
the instructions said:
"Navigate to My Computer (Icon)->Properties (Link)->Advanced System Settings (Link)->Advanced (Tab)->Environment Variables (Button)->System variables (Section)->Path (Variable)-> Edit (Button)-> Variable value. Enter the following value as shown in the screenshot.
C:\android-sdk-windows\tools "but my path is not the same. I didn't want to mess up my computer so I created a new variable named android path and added C:\Android Development\sdk\tools.
when I open the cmd line, the instructions here ( http://jaxov.com/2010/10/set-up-adb-on-windows-7-vista-xp-for-android-phones/ ) show the folder as C:\android-sdk-windows>adb devices and I have C;\Useres|Momma Bear (Yes it's her computer)
What do I do Next? Pleas help a noob Google let me down for hours.
Thanks to all who look and help. and +10 to all the devs and who ever gives me a working solution.
Just use dos commands to change to the directory with adb.exe , then run adb, then type " devices" and it should report your phone as android device. If not, PC did not correctly install driver. If yes, copy paste command.
But honestly, just return to stock, then delete superuser app. How will they check?
I've got a droid razr; rooted, stock rom
I broke the screen accidentally and now the screen isn't showing anything and touch isn't working.
I'd like to recover all the data off my device, but since it's locked, it won't budge. Drives won't mount when I plug it into my PC.
I've got a previous backup which is a little older, but i'm interested in backing up the actual databases (texts, call logs, etc) and system data too, along with my images and personal data.
Is there any way I can perform a whole backup while the system is locked like this?
I've already searched the forum for previous threads with similar issues, but I couldn't find one with a viable solution.
Any help is appreciated, thanks in advance.
Partial Update
Hey all-
I've partially solved my problem.
I was able to get ADB working miraculously. I downloaded the Motorola Device Manager and installed it, also downloaded the Android SDK/Java SDK;
Using the sdk manager i installed the google usb drivers (im not sure it helped any way, but just in case)
after that I ran through the process of adb
Code:
adb kill-server
adb start-server
**plug in device**
adb wait-for-device
adb get-serialno
From there I was able to use "adb shell" and navigate around the file system; used su, went to /data/system/ and did "mv gesture.key gesture.key.bak"
I then restarted my phone and did a repeat of wait-for-device, and get-serialno just to verify the phone was connecting properly.
I then browsed to my computer and amazingly, the drives mounted, my sdcard, and sdcard-ext as removable drives and I was able to view the contents.
-------
So now, I'm stuck here with a device that's NOT locked, I can view my files, and I can navigate the file system.
My end goal is to be able to copy everything from /data/ to /etc/ /system/ /root/ /sdcard*/ /vendor/ /xbin/ and any other system file that's not available through the mounted drives.
I'll keep this thread updated, and if anybody has any help or clue on how I'd do this, it'd be greatly appreciated.
So far I've tried variations on "adb pull" using / as a root dir; trying to find a way to use the shell to invoke scp, ssh, or some other file transfer, but I get no network connection. While in the adb shell and doing any file operations, I get an error stating that it's a read-only file system as well.
Fixed
I just wanted to let you all know that I've resolved my problem.
Let me state the issue again.
- Screen and touch broke.
- Device locked with pattern
- Rooted
- ICS - Stock Verizon ROM
- USB Mode was UMC, not PTP/MTP
- USB Debugging enabled
I used ADB to delete /data/system/gesture.key and rebooted, effectively removing the device lock, and allowing drives & data on my SD cards to show up in explorer after a reboot of the phone.
After futzing around for a bit, I realized the phone was tied to my Google account, and I remotely installed "Droid VNC Server" (app name org.onaips.vnc)
From there I found a way to activate the VNC server through the ADB command line
Source: android.stackexchange.com/a/31957
Code:
Application located in
/data/data/org.onaips.vnc/files
With a root shell, run this
chmod 766 /data/data/org.onaips.vnc/files/androidvncserver
Then you can execute the vnc server from the command line
/data/data/org.onaips.vnc/files/androidvncserver
Run this to forward the port
adb.exe forward tcp:5901 tcp:5901
On your VNC client, connect to localhost:5901
From there I was able to get access to my home screen and pulled the notification drop down and changed from USB Mass Storage to Camera/Media Mode
Rebooted the phone, started the vnc server again, connected to it and moved some files around to my SD Card
In another adb shell as root, I was able to copy files from /data/data/ (or anywhere else I wanted) and write them to anywhere on /sdcard-ext/
From there in another command shell, I ran adb pull /sdcard-ext/datafolderfile
=========================================================================
I believe this to be the overall gist of things, though I ran into hiccups along the way, while I was messing around, I changed some permissions which caused my su executable to break and only be allowed to run shortly after booting the phone; and also because of the broken screen, something would cause the phone to reboot every so often, breaking my connections, backups, file transfers, and etc
There's also a cool option in adb
Run
"adb backup" and it'll give you all the switches, you'll have to confirm the backup on your phone, so be sure to be running VNC and confirm it, but adb backup should be able to grab everything you need. Like I said it didn't work for me because my phone would reboot;
I hope everybody that sees this can benefit from it
Annafunny said:
So did you extract your data from your Razr with adb finally?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This thread is really old (4 years)... and the answer was provided.
To avoid further issues, closed.
Hi,
Did a search and someone said they were able to root with thecubed method on Mac via Terminal, but I've had no luck so far. Are there any other options for us Mac users?
Thanks
BTW I did see some instructions but it only applies to Verizon. I have the international version D802.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
use virtual machine and use windows?
I haven't found any easy way to do it, other that running bootcamp and windows on the mac..
You can do it via adb just fine on osx (I'm on snow leopard). You can check which commands to run by opening the Windows script as a text document. It's easy to follow what's going on and has sections for each device
xdabbeb said:
You can do it via adb just fine on osx (I'm on snow leopard). You can check which commands to run by opening the Windows script as a text document. It's easy to follow what's going on and has sections for each device
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I opened root.bat as a text file but as far as how to input the commands I'm not sure what to do as it seems to differs from the video. Sorry I'm not that familiar working with Terminal.
If you could help out that would be great.
Thanks
xdabbeb said:
You can do it via adb just fine on osx (I'm on snow leopard). You can check which commands to run by opening the Windows script as a text document. It's easy to follow what's going on and has sections for each device
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ahhhhh! You know Mavericks is free, right? UPGRADE THAT THING!
On another note... same issue w/ me. I ended up rooting it via my PC, but after that you can use Android File Transfer to manage files and load roms and stuff via OSX.
sell ur POS apple and get a pc...?
digitard said:
Ahhhhh! You know Mavericks is free, right? UPGRADE THAT THING!
On another note... same issue w/ me. I ended up rooting it via my PC, but after that you can use Android File Transfer to manage files and load roms and stuff via OSX.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ha! I haven't upgraded because I still feel snow leopard is the best. I don't like how they've integrated so much ios in the last two, and SL is lean/efficient.
If I have some time I'll write down the commands in a reply. Do you have adb already set up?
xdabbeb said:
Ha! I haven't upgraded because I still feel snow leopard is the best. I don't like how they've integrated so much ios in the last two, and SL is lean/efficient.
If I have some time I'll write down the commands in a reply. Do you have adb already set up?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes already have adb set up. Thanks for this. Really appreciate it.
No problem. What version of the G2 do you have?
---------- Post added at 11:49 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:48 PM ----------
Ignore that, I just saw you mentioned the international version
OK, here you go:
1) Go here here and here and thank them both for their work...and read their disclaimers about breaking your phone. The same applies here.
2) Download the attached archive and extract the contents into whatever folder you want...for the purposes of this I'll assume you did so to a directory called ~/D802_OSXroot. If you chose a different directory, modify the steps below accordingly. The archive I attached only contains the appropriate file for the international (D802) LG G2, and I used Chainfire's SuperSU instead of the older ChainsDD su binary and apk. While you're at it, go here and thank him.
3) Make sure USB Debugging is enabled on your phone in Settings>Developer Options
4) Connect your phone via usb cable. You'll get the popup asking what type of connection on your phone. Select Internet connection and then Ethernet when asked. You should see the debugging icon in the status bar of your phone
5) Open terminal on your mac
6) To verify that you are properly connected run the following command:
Code:
adb shell "ls -a /"
you should see the contents of the root of your phone...inlcuding a number of init files. If you do, proceed. If you don't, you have an adb/connection problem.
7) Execute the following in the terminal window to go to the directory where the archive has been extracted on your mac:
Code:
cd ~/D802_OSXroot
8) Execute the following to push the loki exploit file to your phone
Code:
adb push ./g2_security /sdcard/g2_security
9) Unplug your usb cable from the phone
10) On your phone go to Settings>Developer Options and disable USB Debugging
11) Re-enable USB Debugging
12) Plug in your USB cable (follow step 4)
13) Verify adb connectivity (follow step 6)
14) Go back to your terminal window, make sure you are still in the same directory with the files from the archive and execute the following commands in order:
Code:
adb shell "mount -o remount,rw /system"
Code:
adb push ./su /system/xbin/su
Code:
adb shell "chown 0.0 /system/xbin/su;chmod 06755 /system/xbin/su;sync;mount -o remount,ro /system"
Code:
adb install superuser.apk
15) Launch the SuperSU app on your phone. It will likely prompt you to update the su binary...let it do so and then reboot your phone. You should be rooted now.
Good luck!
xdabbeb said:
OK, here you go:
1) Go here here and here and thank them both for their work...and read their disclaimers about breaking your phone. The same applies here.
2) Download the attached archive and extract the contents into whatever folder you want...for the purposes of this I'll assume you did so to a directory called ~/D802_OSXroot. If you chose a different directory, modify the steps below accordingly. The archive I attached only contains the appropriate file for the international (D802) LG G2, and I used Chainfire's SuperSU instead of the older ChainsDD su binary and apk. While you're at it, go here and thank him.
3) Make sure USB Debugging is enabled on your phone in Settings>Developer Options
4) Connect your phone via usb cable. You'll get the popup asking what type of connection on your phone. Select Internet connection and then Ethernet when asked. You should see the debugging icon in the status bar of your phone
5) Open terminal on your mac
6) To verify that you are properly connected run the following command:
Code:
adb shell "ls -a /"
you should see the contents of the root of your phone...inlcuding a number of init files. If you do, proceed. If you don't, you have an adb/connection problem.
7) Execute the following in the terminal window to go to the directory where the archive has been extracted on your mac:
Code:
cd ~/D802_OSXroot
8) Execute the following to push the loki exploit file to your phone
Code:
adb push ./g2_security /sdcard/g2_security
9) Unplug your usb cable from the phone
10) On your phone go to Settings>Developer Options and disable USB Debugging
11) Re-enable USB Debugging
12) Plug in your USB cable (follow step 4)
13) Verify adb connectivity (follow step 6)
14) Go back to your terminal window, make sure you are still in the same directory with the files from the archive and execute the following commands in order:
Code:
adb shell "mount -o remount,rw /system"
Code:
adb push ./su /system/xbin/su
Code:
adb shell "chown 0.0 /system/xbin/su;chmod 06755 /system/xbin/su;sync;mount -o remount,ro /system"
Code:
adb install superuser.apk
15) Launch the SuperSU app on your phone. It will likely prompt you to update the su binary...let it do so and then reboot your phone. You should be rooted now.
Good luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Has anyone tried this method?
Sent from my LG-D802 using Tapatalk
xdabbeb said:
OK, here you go:
1) Go here here and here and thank them both for their work...and read their disclaimers about breaking your phone. The same applies here.
2) Download the attached archive and extract the contents into whatever folder you want...for the purposes of this I'll assume you did so to a directory called ~/D802_OSXroot. If you chose a different directory, modify the steps below accordingly. The archive I attached only contains the appropriate file for the international (D802) LG G2, and I used Chainfire's SuperSU instead of the older ChainsDD su binary and apk. While you're at it, go here and thank him.
3) Make sure USB Debugging is enabled on your phone in Settings>Developer Options
4) Connect your phone via usb cable. You'll get the popup asking what type of connection on your phone. Select Internet connection and then Ethernet when asked. You should see the debugging icon in the status bar of your phone
5) Open terminal on your mac
6) To verify that you are properly connected run the following command:
Code:
adb shell "ls -a /"
you should see the contents of the root of your phone...inlcuding a number of init files. If you do, proceed. If you don't, you have an adb/connection problem.
7) Execute the following in the terminal window to go to the directory where the archive has been extracted on your mac:
Code:
cd ~/D802_OSXroot
8) Execute the following to push the loki exploit file to your phone
Code:
adb push ./g2_security /sdcard/g2_security
9) Unplug your usb cable from the phone
10) On your phone go to Settings>Developer Options and disable USB Debugging
11) Re-enable USB Debugging
12) Plug in your USB cable (follow step 4)
13) Verify adb connectivity (follow step 6)
14) Go back to your terminal window, make sure you are still in the same directory with the files from the archive and execute the following commands in order:
Code:
adb shell "mount -o remount,rw /system"
Code:
adb push ./su /system/xbin/su
Code:
adb shell "chown 0.0 /system/xbin/su;chmod 06755 /system/xbin/su;sync;mount -o remount,ro /system"
Code:
adb install superuser.apk
15) Launch the SuperSU app on your phone. It will likely prompt you to update the su binary...let it do so and then reboot your phone. You should be rooted now.
Good luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for this. I'm having an issue at the first step. I have tested adb when I downloaded the SDK and if I direct the command ./adb devices to that specific folder it can read my phone, but just going into terminal and entering adb shell "ls -a /" al I get is -bash: adb: command not found
Also when I connect my phone to the mac I get options on the G2 but none are internet then ethernet. I get: Charge Phone, Media Sync, Tethering, LG Software, Send Images. The Mac does not ask me what connection I want.
ck37 said:
Thanks for this. I'm having an issue at the first step. I have tested adb when I downloaded the SDK and if I direct the command ./adb devices to that specific folder it can read my phone, but just going into terminal and entering adb shell "ls -a /" al I get is -bash: adb: command not found
Also when I connect my phone to the mac I get options on the G2 but none are internet then ethernet. I get: Charge Phone, Media Sync, Tethering, LG Software, Send Images. The Mac does not ask me what connection I want.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It sounds like the first issue may just be due to you not having adb set up properly. If you execute "echo $PATH" in terminal and don't see the android/tools and android/platform-tools directories there, that's the problem. You can either set your path variable to include those directories or just edit the commands I listed accordingly.
The second issue may be due to a difference in the D802 rom vs the VS980. The important thing is that USB Debugging is enabled and that you can access your phone via adb. The 802 may not prompt you in the same way, but if you fix your adb setup the commands will work the same. The rooting method listed (which is the same as thecubed method) is predicated on that working properly.
xdabbeb said:
It sounds like the first issue may just be due to you not having adb set up properly. If you execute "echo $PATH" in terminal and don't see the android/tools and android/platform-tools directories there, that's the problem. You can either set your path variable to include those directories or just edit the commands I listed accordingly.
The second issue may be due to a difference in the D802 rom vs the VS980. The important thing is that USB Debugging is enabled and that you can access your phone via adb. The 802 may not prompt you in the same way, but if you fix your adb setup the commands will work the same. The rooting method listed (which is the same as thecubed method) is predicated on that working properly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think I figured it out. What I did was transfer the ADB icon from my SDK folder into this one. From there I was able to get access to adb inside the D802 folder. I did have to enter the ./adb as opposed to adb though.
As for the LG I selected tethering as that seemed to be the option similar to the internet/ ethernet choice you mentioned.
All other commands worked accordingly.
Binaries updated for SuperUser as well. At this point how do I get into recovery to upload ROMS etc?
ck37 said:
I think I figured it out. What I did was transfer the ADB icon from my SDK folder into this one. From there I was able to get access to adb inside the D802 folder. I did have to enter the ./adb as opposed to adb though.
As for the LG I selected tethering as that seemed to be the option similar to the internet/ ethernet choice you mentioned.
All other commands worked accordingly.
Binaries updated for SuperUser as well. At this point how do I get into recovery to upload ROMS etc?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What I did was installed flashify from the market. This app allows you to backup and then flash a new recovery. Make sure you dl the right one for your device!
Sent from my LG-VS980 using Tapatalk
Hey all,
Found the pieces all around the internet, but I am am working on a ROM, and though I would share my steps to enable ADB running as Root, allowing us to adb push/pull /system/app.
1. Download adbd insecure from the Google Play Store, open and select run on Boot and the "insecure" checkbox.
2. Run adb kill-server on your computer.
3. Run adb root on your computer
4. Profit
You can now push/pull/chmod/mkdir in system directories! (However on /system for example, you still need to remount it RW through adb shell first.