[Q] APK Manager 4.9 / LOG = Lost was unexpected at this time - Android Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

]This is my first post as an XDA member. I apologize in advance for any thing I may miss in communication. I also appreciate every thing about this website and the people in it, being that now there are endless opportunities paved for modifying my cell phone.
I install java and jdk, also the adt bundle, and apk manager and had everything up and running perfectly. I even went through and changed the logo of an app, and the name of the app through the projects folder, after decompiling apk. then successfully recompiled the app, signed it, put it on my phone and it runs great.
However, I tried to decompile an another apk at a later time, and it errored. Then afterward the apk manager no longer worked properly. It will open up, I can select option 22, then select whatever I have put in the modded folder, but whenever I try to decompile or extract the apk, the apk manger automatically closes. I have tried uninstalling all java, and adt bundle and apk manager, and going through and redo all the pat variales. Still same result.
Here is the log:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------java version "1.7.0_10"
Java(TM) SE Runtime Environment (build 1.7.0_10-b18)
Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM (build 23.6-b04, mixed mode)
Lost was unexpected at this time.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Here are my variables:
Variable Name: Variable Value:
ADB C:\AndroidSDK\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64\sdk\platform-tools\adb
Path ;C:\Program Files\Java\jre7\bin
;C:\Program Files\Java\jdk1.7.0_10\bin
;C:\AndroidSDK
;C:\AndroidSDK\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64\sdk\platform- tools
;C:\AndroidSDK\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64\adt-bundle-windows-x86_64\sdk\tools
;C:\Program Files (x86)\Java\jre7\bin
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________
My brain is racked, I have searched everywhere and no solution revealed to me, hence the post. Thank you in advance.

Update your apktool to the latest version and try again.
Sent from myushi

I updated to apk manager 5.0.2 and still get the same result. Thank you for taking interest.

Related

Is it possible to use baksmali on the device

Basically I want to be able to decompile apks. And jar files directly on my phone. Can I do that?
Yes, you can. At least, for the most part. The main constraining factor is the small amount of memory available on the device.
1. run the dx util on baksmali.jar, to produce a classes.dex file
2. add the classes.dex file to a new jar (or you can just add it to baksmali.jar)
3. push the jar containing classes.dex to the device somewhere (let's say /data/local/baksmali.jar)
4. dalvikvm -classpath /data/local/baksmali.jar org.jf.baksmali.baksmali <normal baksmali options>
5. bonus points if you then proceded to run baksmali on baksmali.jar (and then the universe implodes)
note: I just tried this with the latest version of baksmali, and there's some weird issue with the baksmali jar file, where it contains duplicate entries of every class file, which causes dx to choke on it. I'll see if I can get that fixed soon, and get a new build out. In the meantime, you can probably find an older version without that problem.
Sweet, thanks for your input. I was out last night and I had this idea for an edit to make, only to become sad because I didn't have access to a computer.
This will help me out a lot.
JesusFreke said:
Yes, you can. At least, for the most part. The main constraining factor is the small amount of memory available on the device.
1. run the dx util on baksmali.jar, to produce a classes.dex file
2. add the classes.dex file to a new jar (or you can just add it to baksmali.jar)
3. push the jar containing classes.dex to the device somewhere (let's say /data/local/baksmali.jar)
4. dalvikvm -classpath /data/local/baksmali.jar org.jf.baksmali.baksmali <normal baksmali options>
5. bonus points if you then proceded to run baksmali on baksmali.jar (and then the universe implodes)
note: I just tried this with the latest version of baksmali, and there's some weird issue with the baksmali jar file, where it contains duplicate entries of every class file, which causes dx to choke on it. I'll see if I can get that fixed soon, and get a new build out. In the meantime, you can probably find an older version without that problem.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The problem seems to be within the buildprocess as the generated classes for baksmali and smali are added twice to the *-dev-jar-with-dependencies.jar. As I'm not familar with maven I didn't fixed the source of the error but I managed to get it working.
I attached a small pythonscript which is able to remove the dublicated files within the jar. Just run it over the file and get a fixed version which is processable by dx.
The script:
Code:
#!/usr/bin/python
import sys
from zipfile import *
if len(sys.argv) != 3:
print("Usage: %s input.jar output.jar" % sys.argv[0]);
sys.exit(-1)
input = ZipFile(sys.argv[1], "r")
output = ZipFile(sys.argv[2], "w")
seen = []
for file in input.namelist():
if file not in seen:
output.writestr(file, input.read(file))
seen.append(file)
else:
print("dub found: %s" % file)
input.close()
output.close()
sorry ...
Wrong place
JesusFreke said:
Yes, you can. At least, for the most part. The main constraining factor is the small amount of memory available on the device.
1. run the dx util on baksmali.jar, to produce a classes.dex file
2. add the classes.dex file to a new jar (or you can just add it to baksmali.jar)
3. push the jar containing classes.dex to the device somewhere (let's say /data/local/baksmali.jar)
4. dalvikvm -classpath /data/local/baksmali.jar org.jf.baksmali.baksmali <normal baksmali options>
5. bonus points if you then proceded to run baksmali on baksmali.jar (and then the universe implodes)
note: I just tried this with the latest version of baksmali, and there's some weird issue with the baksmali jar file, where it contains duplicate entries of every class file, which causes dx to choke on it. I'll see if I can get that fixed soon, and get a new build out. In the meantime, you can probably find an older version without that problem.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I realize this is a very old thread, but it is exactly what I am looking for However, it seems there are Java 8 features in smali/baksmali now and dx does not work. Is there a workaround for this or any other way to run smali/baksmali from terminal on Android? Thanks!
The older versions of smali may still work for you. Or what I've done is use Termux and download the jdk for arm64 and used the ndk to compile smali on my device.
Delgoth said:
The older versions of smali may still work for you. Or what I've done is use Termux and download the jdk for arm64 and used the ndk to compile smali on my device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the reply
However, I am not trying to compile smali on my device. I am trying to run the latest smali/baksmali on my device in Termux. Unfortunately, the older versions will not work for my needs. If you can help I would really appreciate it
But compiling the latest build of small on the device will allow you to use the latest build of smali.

[Q] fm radio specs - is it HD digital ready?

Does anyone have information or know the capabilities of the FM radio IC built in the HTC EVO series, do they use the same chip for all models, and are we exploiting all of its capabilities, like HD radio, etc. I see someone already has a hack for the HTC fm player that allows it to tune without an antenna/headphones. Nice, but I want more! if you have any info, i'll take whatever! Thanks!
Great forum on how to reverse engineer the HTC radio.apk
Follow here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=725870
TUTORIAL: Reverse engineering HTC FM Radio for noobs (on EVO 4G)
Okay, I'm writing this because I want to help any other newbies trying to learn how to reverse engineer. The technical details involved in this are extremely daunting, so the purpose of this tutorial is to first explain in layman terms exactly what you're trying to accomplish and what to expect. Then we'll go over the details. That way you're not completely blind going into this. I'm fairly new to the scene, so I'm not as knowledgeable as everyone else. If you see any errors in my post, let me know so I can change. I'm going to assume you know a little bit of Java, can find your way around a computer, and know nothing about Android. The techniques used should work with other Android phones. For this tutorial I'm using Windows 7, Cygwin, and my stock (not rooted) EVO 4G mobile phone.
The FM tuner for the Evo is run by a Broadcom chip: BCM4329. This chip is pretty amazing in that it does wireless, bluetooth, and it has an FM receiver/transmitter. We're interested in the FM receiver / transmitter.
Now, all android phones are based on a Linux kernel. Basically they're Linux running computers. The Android operating system is then installed onto the linux system. Every app is then run off of Android.
Android is based on Java but it is not a Java system. It uses a virtual machine called Dalvik. Google did this to get around licensing issues with Sun Microsystems. So they pretty much invented their own machine language (called byte code) for the Java language. This makes things complicated for the reverse engineer because from what I've read, once Java is converted into this machine language or byte code, it can't be converted back.
So let's rehash.
If you were programming strictly in Java, you would see these extensions:
Java source code = .java
Compiled Java source code = Java byte code = .class
Compressed file to package your program = .jar (Java Archive)
But since you're programming in Android and Dalvik, you will see these:
Java source code = .java
Compiled Java source code = Dalvik byte code = .dex
Compressed file to package your program = .apk
(I haven't mentioned this, but HTC further Optimizes their .dex code)
Optimized Dalvik byte code = .odex
I'm writing all of these down because it's very easy to get confused with all of the extensions. (for me at least!). remember how I said once you go dex, you can't go back to java? That's where JesusFreke comes in. He's a senior member of XDA, and he created "baksmali" and "smali", two programs that can convert the Dalvik code back into a human readable format. These files have extensions of .smali
Decompiled Dalvik byte code = .smali
But what can you do with .smali files? That's where this other senior member, brut.all comes in: He developed apktool. apktool takes JesusFreke's work to the next level. This program in conjunction with NetBeans, actually lets you trace through any program using the .smali code taken from JesusFreke's programs!
apktool does this by converting those .smali files into "fake" .java files that can be used by the NetBeans (program that compiles and makes java programs) IDE. I say "fake" because apktool embeds the .smali code into java files as comments. However, once you attach a debugger to NetBeans, you'll see that the debugger will follow line by line every execution statement found in the smali code!
So...... you can take the program you want, plug it into Net Beans using a debugger (using the default ddms command provided by Android SDK), and you can trace everything you do in the program. I have it connected to my phone, so whenever I push a button while running my HTC FMRadio app or unplug my headphones,I see the corresponding response to the HTCFMRadio code I have loaded in NetBeans. I can now see in real-time how the program operates from my own interactions... JAM.
Technical Aspects: How to get from ground zero to tracing HTCFMRadio?
1.) Download Android SDK - Go to google development site and follow instructions: Make sure to download the latest Java JDK. Once that is installed, download NetBeans 6.8. Unfortunately, smali debugging does not work with the lastest versions of NetBeans.
Download the "Java SE" version for minimal space
http://netbeans.org/downloads/6.8/index.html
You can follow the rest of Google walkthrough and download Eclipse and ADT plugin, but it's not pertinent to this. You're going to be using adb and ddms from the android SDK extensively, so make sure the path for </android SDK/tools> is included in the PATH variable in your ENVIRONMENT SETTINGS. To get here, right click My computer, click properties, Advanced Settings, ENVIRONMENT SETTINGS.
2.) Search for 7z and download it. It is an awesome and free compression tool that will be extremely useful. It can be used to "unzip" .jar, .apk, and other compressed formats.
3.) Get the Radio app. You can do this by going to "shipped-roms" website, downloading the latest Supersonic image, and following the directions in the unlockr tutorial for HTC kitchens at the unlockr website... (once you have extracted the files from the image, you can look in the system/app and system/framework directories to get the files listed below) or:
you can pull the following files from your phone:
Using the command prompt type (and with phone plugged in, and with USB debugging enabled on phone):
adb pull /system/app/HtcFMRadio.odex
adb pull /system/app/HtcFMRadio.apk
adb pull /system/framework ./framework
This will put HtcFMRadio.odex and HtcFMRadio.apk in the current directory and create a framework directory with more files. A couple of the files in the framework are needed for the HtcFMRadio app, but for simplicity, we're just going to pull the whole directory.
Now that we have the files, we have to make a few changes to make the app installable and to be viewable by the debugger. To do this we have to decompile the .odex format into a human readable format we can edit. That brings us to:
3.) Download baksmali and smali from Project Hosting on Google Code (google search smali).
Usually an Android application is made up of one file, an apk file. Inside the apk file is an AndroidManifest.xml file, a classes.dex file (compiled Java code for the program), and other folders. The other folders contain either graphics or other .xml files that tell the program how it should look to the user. We don't have to worry about those for now. This is important because APKTOOL only opens programs set up this way. But wait up? We didn't download one .apk file, we downloaded an .apk file and an .odex file! What gives? Well, if you right click the apk file and open it (using 7z), you'll see that it's missing the classes.dex file. The dex file for the app is actually the HtcFMRadio.odex file we downloaded. So, to make this system app more like a nominal app, we have to find a way to convert the HtcFMRadio.odex to a classes.dex file. That's easy with baksmali and smali!
Once you download goto command prompt and type:
java -jar baksmali-<version>.jar -d framework -x HtcFMRadio.odex
(Remember to match baksmali-<version>.jar with the filename of baksmali you downloaded)
If done correctly, you should see a newly created \out directory
This creates an out\com\htc\fm directory with many .smali files.
Now let's reverse the process and put it back as a dex file. Type at command prompt:
java -jar smali-<version>.jar out -o classes.dex
If done correctly you'll see a newly created classes.dex.
now, right click on HtcFMRadio.apk (select 7z and open). Drag classes.dex into the file. Say yes to the prompt. Now you have a normal apk file APKTOOL can read!
4.) Download APKTOOL from Project Hosting on Google Code and the helper apps for your OS. (If you're extracting files for windows OS you should have apktool.bat and aapt.exe). Extract (again using 7z, don't you love this program?) apktool.jar (keep it as a jar file, don't extract the stuff inside of it), apktool.bat, and aapt.exe to the directory you're working on. To make things neat, you can also delete HtcFMRadio.odex (you don't need it anymore) and classes.dex (make sure you put it in the HtcFMRadio.apk file first!)
If this is the first time you're using apktool, then you have to install the htc framework so apktool can baksmali the Radio app. You only have to do this once:
apktool if ./framework/com.htc.resources.apk
Alright, at the command prompt:
apktool d -d HtcFMRadio.apk
This extracts the contents of HtcFMRadio.apk and places them in the HtcFMRadio directory. However, there are two major differences between this content and the content created in step 3. If you go into the smali directory you'll see that instead of .smali files, you'll see .java files. And if you go back and edit the AndroidManifest.xml file, you will also see that it's in text! Android applications convert their xml files to binary format. Now that APKTOOL has converted everything to an IDE friendly format, we can use NetBeans to edit everything. The first thing we're going to do is edit AndroidManifest.xml (using notepad) and add the following:
android:debuggable="true" to the Application tag.
IT should now look like this:
<application android:theme="@android:style/Theme.Black.NoTitleBar" android:label="@string/fm_app_name" android:icon="@drawable/fm_radio" android:taskAffinity="android.task.fmradio" android:description="@string/htc_corp" android:allowTaskReparenting="true" android:debuggable="true">
This permission lets the debugger watch the program while it's running on the phone.
We are going to run into two problems if we try to install this program. One is that Android doesn't let you install more than one copy of a system app. The second issue is that if we change the signature of our system app, then we'll have to change the signatures of our other system apps as well! Ahh.... So, to get around that, we're going to trick Android into thinking we have a completely new program. We're going to do that by renaming the com.htc.fm class to com.htc.modradio class. Next step:
5.) Cygwin (or Linux virtual machine)
The easiest way that I can think of to replace strings in multiple files is by using linux. You can most definitely do it in WIndows, but I dont know how. If you let me know how, I can put it in this tutorial.
(update: you can use Notepad++ to easily find/replace strings in multiple files for Windows. You still, however, want to download Cygwin if you're going to develop with Android-NDK.)
For now, just search for Cygwin (Cygwin is a program that lets you run Linux commands from a command prompt using your Windows directories), and install it. Make sure to have the Perl option selected. You'll need Perl to make the following commands work.
Once you get Cygwin up and running
cd <to your HtcFMRadio directory>
in my case it's
cd /cygdrive/c/Users/Jerry/Desktop/HtcFMRadio
now type the following commands in this order:
this command changes all occurances of htc/fm to htc/modradio in your xml and .java files.
find ./ -type f | xargs perl -pi -e 's/htc\/fm/htc\/modradio/g'
this command changes all occurances of htc.fm to htc.modradio
find ./ -type f | xargs perl -pi -e 's/htc.fm/htc.modradio/g'
If you don't follow this order, your source code will get messed up.
If using cygwin, a bunch of .bak files will be created. Using windows search, find all .bak files in your HtcFMRadio directory, then select them all and delete them (Make sure they are only files with .bak!)
Now just rename the fm directory to modradio. It is located in HtcFMRadio/smali/com/htc
Now go to your windows command prompt and type:
apktool b -d .\HtcFMRadio modradio.apk
Now sign and install modradio.apk on your phone.
adb install modradio.apk
If you have never signed before, then you need to use keytool and jarsigner. These two files are in your JDK directory, so make sure you include your JDK directory in the PATH variable of your ENVIRONMENT SETTINGS. (To get here, right click on My Computer, click Properties, Advanced Settings, Environment Variables. Once you make change, open up a new COMMAND prompt to see changes).
cd to the directory which has modradio.apk
now type:
keytool -genkeypair
Answer all questions, then use the same password for all password prompts.
Next type:
jarsigner -verbose modradio.apk mykey
Type in the password you created in the above step. Your apk should now be signed.
Next install:
adb install modradio.apk
Success!
6.) Testing the app on phone
Go to your phone and you'll now see a new FMRadio icon next to your first. Click on it and watch it open. It should now be able to play music. Keep it open.
7.) Using Netbeans
Go into HtcFMRadio and delete the build directory created by APKTOOL.
Now open up Net Beans and click on File, New Project, Select Java Project with Existing Sources, click on Next
Select HtcFMRadio directory for Project Folder, rename Project Name to whatever you want. Let's type in ModRadio. click on Next
Next to "Source Package Folders" click on "Add Folder" and select the smali directory.
Click Finish. For a quick tutorial by Brut.all, search APKTOOL in youtube and click on: Apktool Demo 2 - Smali improvements
Right click on Libraries. Click on "Add Jar / Folder". You want to add Android.Jar. Since I have Android 2.1 loaded I went to /platforms/android-7 located in my android SDK directory.
Your project is now ready for editting!
8.) Running the Debugger to trace through program.
Next go back to Windows command prompt and type ddms. This runs the Dalvik Debug Monitor. A window should open up. In the left hand side you should see com.htc.modradio. That's our app! To the right you're going to see 2 numbers, you're interested in the one to the right, 4 cells away from com.htc.modradio. This number is a port number, and you're going to use it to communicate with NetBeans. (In my case it is 8603)
Go back to NetBeans and click on Debug, Attach Debugger.
In the host field type: localhost
In the Port field: type in the second number you saw. (8603)
If everything is working you'll see a bug appear next to com.htc.modradio in the Dalvik Debug Monitor. Look at the bottom bar of NetBeans for feedback. If you get errors make sure the numbers match, or try port 8700 and make sure you select com.htc.modradio in the Dalvik Debug Monitor. Port 8700 is the default port used for whatever program you select in Dalvik Debug Monitor.
9.) Setting a breakpoint
I'm making this a seperate step because it is completely arbitrary. When creating a break point be sure to follow this rule:
You must select line with some instruction, you can't set breakpoint on lines starting with ".", ":" or "#".
Rather than looking for a spot to breakpoint, though, I'll tell you where to put one so you can quickly see how the debugger traces through the code. You aren't "REQUIRED" to do the next step, but if you want to trace you have to put a breakpoint somewhere.
In Net Beans click on the Project tab, click on Source Packages, com.htc.modradio, and then doubleclick on BroadcomFMTuner.java
We're going to insert a breakpoint. Scroll down to line 3226 and on your keyboard press: CTRL-SHIFT-F8, select line in dropdown box and hit ok. (To keep it simple, I usually look for "invoke" instructions to set breakpoints at)
Now go to your phone and click on the physical "back" button on your phone. This will clear the radio,(you should still be able to listen to music). Drag your status bar down. You should see a radio icon. Click on it again. The radio backgroudn will appear, but you wont' see any text or anything. Now go back to your netbeans application. You should now see debug options highlighted! Click on Step Over (F8) to step through!​
Great work on other HTC phones, not sure it applies here...
Sounds like HTC uses an all in one bluetooth/fm radio chipset... possibly broadcom, this fella has gotten somewhere!
follow here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=497977
APP:17FEB10:RDS FM Radio R&D: Get radio text, Alt Freqency, free TMC etc
Microsoft hasn't defined a tuner API for Windows Mobile platform (yet) and manufactures such as HTC do not publish their API for FM radio.
GFMAPI is an FM Radio interface that designed to be used on different models of Windows Mobile devices.
It makes all FM RDS based applications such as Radio players, Radio Alarm, TMC navigation works on different devices.
What's new?
Download EtenTest and GFMAPI 1.0.
Currently it works with M900 and M800, tested with PowerRadio and hyperGPS.
This is for Eten/Acer devices only.
End-User and application developers (Downloads)
User should try to use the GFMAPI in the application package because it may need to signed with privileged certificate and version of interface may be different.
App Developers can find FMAPI.h and a test application APITest in the GFMAPI for HTC devices 1.6. Source code is included to help your development.
The interface is defined in C language with sample code.
Thank for NetRipper made a .Net CF library for GFMAPI.
Note: the latest FMAPI.h is in GFMAK and the GFMAPI will be updated. They only has minor differences.
Supported Devices
* BRF6350 Chipset:
HTC Diamond, HTC Raphael (not CDMA), HTC Blackstone, HTC Polaris, HTC Topaz, SE Xperia X1
NOTE: if your X1 has new media panel that integrated with FM Radio function, you may have to disable this panel (I don't know how).
Download GFMAPI for HTC devices 1.6
* BCM432x Chipset:
HTC Rhodium, HTC Leo, HTC Mega
Supports radio functions if renaming FMSDKWrapper.dll to FMS_API.dll with the above driver. RDS data cannot be received.
We are working on this device. Related thread: FM Transmitter on HD2
* SI470X Chipset:
HTC Artemis: NOT supported.
Samsung Omnia: Samsung i9x0 Omnia
Samsung Omnia II: GFMAPI.dll for Omnia II and its Cab format This is an excellent work done by phjz.
Eten/Glofiish/Acer M800/M900/V900/X900/X650/S200: see "what's new". Please help me test it.
Device adaption developers
Generic FMAPI Adaption Kit will help you implement the driver for your device. Use APITest in the GFMAPI to test your driver.
Please read readme.txt in the package. Feel free to ask me if you need help.
If you have a device that is not supported by GFMAPI
I currently only have a HTC Raphael so I need your help to get your device supported.
First of all, you should Search in this Thread to check anybody posted it before.
Extract FM radio related files and upload to the forum.
Note: You cannot simply copy files from/to device. You need dump the ROM then extract files from the ROM. Search this forum to find how.
If you have good VC++ and IDA pro with ARM skills, please join us to discover FM Tuner API on those devices then make RDS application working on your device.
* HTC Rhodium/TP2, HTC Leo/HD2, HTC Mega/Touch2:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/show...&postcount=783
http://forum.xda-developers.com/show...&postcount=813
http://forum.xda-developers.com/show...&postcount=794
Rhodium Test
Current status: 6Fg8 identified that raw RDS data is in the Broadcomm BTTray process, not in the FmRadioSDK.DLL. Still not trace it down to function/module level.
* Artemis:
Artemis Test
Far far away from any progress and not many users.
BBCBBA uploaded FM radio related file for Gigabyte GSmart S1200. This device supports RDS by using deviceIoControl directly communicating with the driver. I can see it is possible to make a GFMAPI driver just need a lot of effort.
Applications based on GFMAPI
* FM TMC driver for navigation: Beember's HyperGPS.
* A powerful RDS FM Radio application: 6Fg8's Power Radio
This project focuses on RDS API now. TMC related topic has been moved to the TMC thread because it is too attractive and posts will flood the thread.
Origin research project
Many people ask questions related to FM radio in the forum have been solved by this project:
* Does FM Radio supports RDS text and traffic information?
* Does FM Radio supports more than 20 saved channels and give a friendly alias, such as "BB Radio 4" rather than 920.2MHz ?
* Does FM Radio supports automatically or manually change frequency when signal getting pool during traveling?
* Does FM Radio support RDS-TMC traffic information for navigation system?
The answer is yes. The Bluetooth/FM radio chip BRF6350 on your phone is very powerful but HTC FM radio only provides basic functionality.
Unfortunately HTC doesn't publish FM Service API to us.
So I disassembled FM player by using IDA pro and know usages of FMS api.
After a week sleepless night, I wrote my FM radio tool, xFMRadio, utilizes most functions provided by FMS API, provides RDS and other data for further research.
With help from this thread, we have exposed most secret of FM and RDS system on HTC devices and we can make useful applications now.
This application is written for research so that UI is not nice. It only works on BRF6350 based HTC devices.
Download xFM Radio v0.4
If doesn't have sound on your device, try xFM Radio v0.4B, which removed audio volume initialization.
Brief user guide for xFMRadio
Default settings: Audio Source: 1 (earphone), RDS =1, Verbose =1, AF = 1. ( but I don't know if automatic AF is working. have to verify during long distance traveling.)
Verbose: 0 -no log; 1 - status only; 2 - TMC raw data; 3 - all types of log
Row 1: Input argument. Set Frequency in KHz, AF list: alternative frequencies for the current station.
Row 2: Frequency, station name, Band: World/Japan - use this to listen police station etc
Row 3: Signal Strength, Stereo/Mono, UTC Date/Time (update once per min if supported)
Row 4: -100KHz, Previous Channel, Next Channel, +100Hz, Mute, Mono/Stereo
Row 5: Headset/Speaker, De-emphasis, Stereo blend
Row 6: Radio Text
Row 7: status such as Music/Speech, TP, TA, PTY, TMC etc
Check if the channel support TMC: ROW 7 should display [TMC]. You can see TMC data by setting the top left input box to 2, and click on Menu->Verbose.
The current xFMRadio v0.4 does not display RDS raw data anymore.
You can use Save log menu to save log data.
FMS API version is displayed in the About dialog. Mine is 1.2.
xFMRadio 1.4 Debug...​
it does not support HD radio.
Solved...
Fair enough... I was getting that impression anyhow, especially with the lack of responses. One could only dream that with all the digital aspects of modern comunication (bluetooth, cell, etc), that they would throw in HD digital FM along side it... but as I can see, this only fits in well with every other aspect of modern lackluster industrial corporate innovation. Peace out!

[Q] Problem with SDK Manager - nothing works...

(Windows 7 64-bit Home Premium)
So I've been playing around with LibGDX, and it's been really nice...so I go to export my app to android for the first time just to make sure everything's running smoothly so far...and I get an error at compile time:
Unknown error: Unable to build: the file dx.jar was not loaded from the SDK folder!
So I Googled, and every solution to the problem I can find involves using the Android SDK Manager, or copying some files from one directory to another that I don't have in the first place. So I decide to go the SDK Manager route, except my SDK manager shows a command-line box for a second (no console output), then crashes.
So I Googled this, and I get nothing but people telling me to both mess with Android.bat and make sure I have the right environment variables set. So here I am, about an hour later, and I've got all my environment variables set that I could possibly need: JAVA_HOME points to my java sdk folder
Path points to both my JRE and my JDK binary folder, as well as C:\Windows\System32
ANDROID_SDK_HOME points to my Android SDK folder
ANDROID_SWT points to my android folder's tools\lib\x86-64 folder, which clearly has the swt.jar, but whenever I try running android.bat I still get:
'xcopy' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file (which should have been fixed when I added system32 to the path variable)
ERROR: SWT folder <my swt path> does not exist (even though it does)
Please set ANDROID_SWT to point to the folder containing swt.jar for your platform (it does!)
edit: just completely uninstalled then redownloaded the sdk, same errors... :crying:

[Q] Is APK signature verification extra fields bug patched in older API versions?

Hi guys,
Sorry in advance if I posted this to the wrong place as I am not allowed to post into Android devs-only forum.
I am currently investigating the extra fields flaw in apk signature verification discovered in juli 2013 by trying to replicate it on the AVD.
First of all...this is research only as I am trying to understand my system's internals and especially permissions handling.
What i try to achieve is to root the AVD by using the elevated permissions of a apk signed with the platform key.
1. I have an apk signed with the platform key from my cyanogenmod 10.2 device and a classes.dex with size under 65k that will try to install SuperSU on my AVD
2. When creating a new apk I put the original classes.dex into the extras field of the corresponding ZIP entry and pad it to have a size of 65533
3. The rooting classes.dex goes into the data field of the ZIP entry and extra lengh is set to 65533 or -3 as seen by the buggy verifier. This classes.dex is also padded to have the exact size of the original classes.dex
4. My MainActivity tries to install the just assembled apk
Expected result: As the verifier is validating the original classes by jumping 3 backwards instead of 65533 forward the apk should be installed having elevated system privileges.
Actual result: AVD refuses installation of the apk with error code -103 as the "digest of classes.dex does not match those in the apk".
My thoughts on what may cause this:
A) I know that google merged the fix for this bug into HEAD but it still should work on AVD 2.3 and 4.1.
Or are all versions of AVD patched agains extras field expliotation? As I update my APIs everyday the fix is likely to be in my AVD.
Correct me if i am wrong.
B) As I use a cyanogenmod 10.2 apk as the base the platform keys may not match those of the AVD.
If so the error should be different to -103 but something like "system user signature does not match"
Please would someone point me into the right direction?

[SOLVED][Q] Help adding Gradle based library to my non-Gradle non-Eclipse project

I'm trying to use HoloColorPicker by Lars Werkman, now I'm not using Eclipse or the Android Studio, I'm doing everything via command line and advanced text editors (that's just how I like it). Now the problem I'm running into is HoloColorPicker uses Gradle, so it doesn't have a build.xml file, giving me this error when I try to build:
Invalid file: /HOMEFOLDER/DevTools/AndroidLibs/HoloColorPicker/build.xml
I used the `android update project` command to add the library to my project, so how do I either convert the Gradle project to a standard android proect, or get it to build the library with gradle instead of build.xml???
Any help is greately apprecieated, thanks.
Well, I think I figured it out, all I had to do was open a terminal in the folder of library project and run this:
android update lib-project --path . --target 1
Afterwards it created the appropriate files that were needed and it now compiles, of course I won't know for 100% certainty until I actually use some things from the library and get it to run.
Well, I've tested it and this did fix my issue, I was able to successfully import the library.

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