How to dual boot ubutu and GN2 stock touchwiz? - Ubuntu Touch Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

I was looking forward to try ubuntu but i can't loose android access..... Plz provide em steps for both usage.......
I hate my X and love my Next.......... Conditions apply*
***if she has all what i need?? ****

What's ubutu?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium

Sorry ubuntu???
I hate my X and love my Next.......... Conditions apply*

No 1 can help with this strange?
I hate my X and love my Next.......... Conditions apply*

Not ATM you'd need a kernel that supports such (specifically made for Ubuntu and android) we'll get it eventually but not now
S4 INFO

Update: I finally received my Nexus 10 and tried the steps described below and they work very well. I can swap back and forth easily. Of note is that YMMV because the N10 I/O to internal storage is blazing fast which definitely reduces the wait time when swapping between the two nandroid backups. Keep in mind that your nandroid backups may not be compatible if you change your recovery software between CWM and TWRP.
Currently the closest to a dual boot is restricted to the Nexus 7 and one other device.
See post: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=38300214&postcount=104
MultiROM (Nexus 7) http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2011403
I will be getting a Nexus 10 next week and have written up these instructions from various things I have read as I plan to swap back and forth between Android and Ubuntu-Touch. Use at your own risk.
Original instructions:
http://www.droid-life.com/2013/02/2...view-on-a-nexus-device-using-custom-recovery/
A) Download the latest images for your device from the Daily images site.
> If you are using an unsupported official device then check to see if some dev has ported Ubuntu-Touch for your device and use those images.
See: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Touch/Devices#Work_in_progress
> http://cdimages.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-touch-preview/daily-preinstalled/current/
Example for the Nexus 10:
> quantal-preinstalled-armel+manta.zip
> quantal-preinstalled-armel+manta.zip.md5sum
> quantal-preinstalled-phablet-armhf.zip
> quantal-preinstalled-phablet-armhf.zip.md5sum
> Check the downloads against their md5sum
B) Boot into either CWM or TWRP recovery:
> It is always advisable to make at least one full nandroid "Android" backup.
Ubuntu-Touch install instructions:
1. Copy both downloaded zip files onto the target devices internal storage.
2. Reboot into recovery.
3. If required make a full nandroid "Android" backup
4. Wipe at least cache and then data only if you do not want it preserved.
5. Install the device zip.
6. Install the phablet ARMHF zip.
7. Reboot and give the latest Ubuntu-Touch a try.
Returning to Android or a Ubuntu-Touch nandroid backup:
1. Reboot into CWM or TWRP.
2. If required make a full nandroid "Ubuntu-Touch" or "Android" backup
4. Wipe at least cache and then data only if you do not want it preserved.
5. Restore the last "Android" or "Ubuntu-Touch" nandroid backup.
6. Reboot and you are back to the way you left the last "Android" or "Ubuntu-Touch" image.
I hope you find this info valuable.
Doug

Thanks for informing
I hate my X and love my Next.......... Conditions apply*

Related

Optimus V - From Stock to ICSandwich2.3.7 ROM Install Overview

Current as of December 28, 2011 (As far as I'm aware)
Being relatively new to Android customization, I figured it would be useful to share the steps I stumbled through to get a completely stock LG Optimus V (VM670) (2nd Gen) rooted and running the ICSandwich2.3.7 ROM.
First of all, it should be obvious, but ICSandwich2.3.7 is NOT 4.0, but Android 2.3.7 with a ICS-style theme on it... in case anyone was wondering/didn't read carefully and got excited...
Also, the Optimus V has TWO generations, if you bought your phone after August 2011, it is probably second gen, and most of the Recovery systems won't work. I had to use "xionia_cwma" to get recovery to work properly.
So here goes... I left version numbers and direct file links out, since they're always changing, and due diligence will find the newest version of everything.
1. Root phone with GingerBreak (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1044765)
2. Install TitaniumBackup from the Market, and back everything up (using batch operation)
3. Mount via USB to a PC, copy the TitaniumBackup data from your phone to your PC.
4. Install "FlashImageGUI.apk" via PC/USB/SD card (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1045797)
Use this to install a "recovery" system. ROM Manager doesn't work for 2nd gen Optimus V
5. I could not get other recovery systems to work on the 2nd gen Optimus V, only Xionia's worked. (http://forums.androidcentral.com/lg...covery-xionia-clockwork-cwma-v1-2518-6-a.html)
Download "xionia_cwma_xxxxx.zip" onto your USB mounted phone via a PC.
6. Install "xionia_cwma" recovery system using FlashImageGUI
7. Reboot into recovery system (may take ~10s to boot, wait)
8. BACK YOUR **** UP! (From inside recovery)
9. Reboot phone and copy this data (sd-card/clockworkmod/backup/yyyy.mm.dd.xx.xx.xx) to your PC.
10. Find your OS ROM you'd like to install (signed_ICSandwich2.3.7-FINAL-ThaUnknownArtist-xxxxxxxxxx.zip in this case), and copy it from your PC to your SD card via mounted USB.
11. Copy gapps-gb-full-xxxxxxxx-signed.zip to your SD card as well.
12. Reboot into recovery, prepared and backed up. YOUR PHONE WILL BE WIPED NEXT!
13. Clear cache, wipe data, and go to advanced, find "Toggle signature verification", toggle it to disabled. And clear "Dalvik cache"
14. Now do load zip from SD card, install the OS ROM zip package.
15. If that's successful, do the same for GoogleApps (gapps) (NOTE: I did this after first booting into the new ROM install, although I don't think it's required)
16. Reboot - it will take a while on first boot - and bask in the GLORY!
17. Install TitaniumBackup from the market and reinstall your backed up USER APPS and DATA (DON'T RESTORE SYSTEM APPS!)
(To do this use, "SettingsButton -> Batch -> [Restore Section] Restore missing apps with data")
Hope someone finds this useful. This is what I spent about 6+ hours figuring out by trial, error, and reading 49 page forum threads

Switch between ICS CM AND ICS CN ROM's

Howdy All !
I have the Classicnerd ICS v3 ROM installed on my TP, would like to switch to CM A2 ROM to check out their HD video stuff along with netflix. So what do i need to do. Can someone put some steps for newb's like me on how to switch back n forth between these lovely pieces of work.
Thanks
ncube2 said:
Howdy All !
I have the Classicnerd ICS v3 ROM installed on my TP, would like to switch to CM A2 ROM to check out their HD video stuff along with netflix. So what do i need to do. Can someone put some steps for newb's like me on how to switch back n forth between these lovely pieces of work.
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't think you can simply switch but you can experiment fairly easily using Nandroid backups
1) ReBoot into recovery
2) Backup current ROM (e.g. CN)
3) Install CM A2
a) format system, cache, wipe Dalvik
b) Flash new ROM (e.g. alpha2)
c) Flash Gapps
4) Reboot system and set up Alpha2, your apps and basic set up should still be OK from CN
5) Reboot into recovery again
6) Backup new ROM (e.g. alpha2)
To switch between then reboot to recovery and Restore chosen ROM and reboot. Note that will fully restore so any updates to data partition e.g. new apps downloaded will get lost unless you take a new back up.
The other things to consider is the space in the boot partition and the moboot default. There should be enough space in boot to accomodate both the uImage files but if not then you need to clean out the CN one before making the alpha2 install. A CN install will have created a moboot.default to try to start CN. An Alpha2 install will not touch moboot.default. If you leave it on alpha2 and want it to default boot into that then you will need to create a new moboot.default file.

[HOW-TO] Installing CM10.x Internally on Nook Tablet

[See post http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=43326042&postcount=123 for the new version of this post with updated links/pointers to Succulent's recent CM10.1 builds as well as CWM/TWRP recovery tool compilation].
[Caveat emptor: adopt/follow this guide at your own risk].
I've been running CM10 build by XDA Developer Succulent version 12/08 on SD card since its release ten days ago, and its reliable/stable performance has crossed the threshold for me to finally take the plunge and install it internally on emmc.
FWIW, here the process I used to install CM10 internally on my 16GB Nook Tablet (i.e., on its emmc).
Using a disk partition tool (such as MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition) create on SD card a Primary FAT32 partition, and set the partition ID type for the partition to 0x0C FAT32 LBA and set its Active flag. Once this is done, the partition should appear as a (read/write accessible) drive under Windows. If you are going to use this card for backing up your NT, keep in mind that each backup will require at least 600MB (for a barebone stock or CM config) and size the partition accordingly.
Obtain and copy to the SD card the following files:
MLO, u-boot.bin, and flashing_boot.img in SD_boot.zip obtained from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/11/how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet/
either one of the two recovery program image files: cwm_6012_sd.img (ClockworkMod Recovery (aka CWM)) in CM9-10_CWM_v6.0.1.2_8-16gb_tools_sdcard.zip, or twrp_2220_sd.img (TeamWin Recovery Project (aka TWRP)) in CM9-10_TWRP_v2.2.2.0_8-16gb_tools_sdcard.zip from http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1640958, rename it to recovery.img. If you want to try out (or use) both, name your alternate choice altboot.img.
the file cm-10-yyyymmdd-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/cm10-0-jelly-bean-for-nook-tablet-uploading/
the file gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip from http://goo.im/gapps/gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip
Put the SD card into the NT, and boot from its power off by inserting a powered USB cable. Press and hold the N button as soon as CyanoBoot comes up to get the boot menu to display.
Select either SDC Recovery (or Alternate Boot depending on which recovery tool you want to use).
Select Backup to backup your current NT config (/boot, /recovery, /system, and /data). Before proceeding to next step, see note (ii) near the end of this post.
Select Wipe data & factory reset.
Select install zip from SD card and install cm-10 zip file.
Select install zip from SD card and install gapps zip file.
Select power of and remove SD card from NT and power NT on again using the power button (alternatively you can just remove SD card and select reboot).
Once the NT boots up, set up the wifi connectivity and your google account info. If you had previously used Google backup service your apps will be auto-downloaded (but their settings will not be auto-restored)
A few additional points worth noting:
Installing CM10 ROM and gapps will override your NT's BN-provided boot, recovery, ROM, and Apps, so make sure that you backup all this stuff using backup process in step #5 above, safekeep the backup data on your PC/Laptop and better yet archive it on CD/DVD. Your media files in the NT media partition BN allocates for user should be intact.
To play it safe you should do the above in 2 phases: steps 1 through 5, then exit recovery and remove and mount SD card on PC to verify that backup data got newly created; then insert SD card and continue steps 6 through 9.
CWM and TWRP use different backup archive formats, so keep this in mind if you decide to switch. Furthermore, CWM has changed its archive format going from release 5.x to 6.x, so I think it would be prudent to save a copy of the recovery program together with the backup data it generated. (FWIW I prefer the tar/zip compatible backup data structure TWRP uses (which CWM 5.x had also used) over the BLOb structure which CWM 6.x use -- but YMMV).
To restore from backup data, boot into SD card and select from boot menu the same recovery program that was used to create the backup data, then select the particular backup dataset (indexed by date/time) you want to reinstall on your NT.
I would advise against blindly using other functions of the CWM and TWRP without looking up info and researching to understand what they really do.
See my post at http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=48612997#post48612997 for more "Info and Tips for Mitigating Risks in Rooting and Flashing Custom-ROM".
My thanks to all the developers who collective work created this wonderful ROM as well as the tools and info I made use of to install it. IMHO this ROM helps make the Nook Tablet one of the best-value tablets for the money (at least at the moment).
great post...fwiw here's my experience to get two NT16's up and running (I started with an old CM7 on both of them).
Backup nook with titanium backup on existing 32GB card.
Take screenshots for replacements
Reset nook to stock (1.4.2) and update to latest (1.4.3) with a fresh SD Card with repart.img copied to root (my red 2GB card):
http://raywaldo.com/2012/06/make-unbrick-repartition-image/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nu6e4m62tFc
c. 1.4.3 can be downloaded from B&N site directly. (http://www.barnesandnoble.com/u/Software-Updates-NOOK-Tablet/379003187/)
Create a CWM SD Card (ideally 4GB SanDisk) as per these instructions - http://raywaldo.com/2012/05/root-nook-tablet-with-cwm-sdcard/
Copy CM7 BETA and compatible GAPPS onto this card or another blank one. You can get the files from here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1481826 and http://wiki.cyanogenmod.com/wiki/Latest_Version/Google_Apps
Boot into this CWM Card, wipe data/wipe cache and dalvik cache. Install zip from sdcard (either current or pop in the new one). Choose cm-7 beta first, then gapps. Remove sd card. Reboot. Wait a while for it to set itself up.
Go into settings/applications and clear the cache for google market/play.
You now have CM7 installed and can setup the basics (google, wifi etc..)
Insert your 32GB (or 16 or 8 or whatever) Sandisk SD Card (it should ideally have the Titanium Backup folder from step 1, any media you want in Music and Movies folder and the CM10 and gapps zip in the downloads folder -- and that's it!)
Once mounted, download Goo Manager from the google play store and run it, accepting superuser requests.
Choose settings menu and "Install OpenRecoveryScript" and it should install openrecovery twrp recovery manager. Once it has installed and informed you of success, reboot into recovery (this is important), upon reboot hold the "n" and choose internal emmc recovery from the menu.
You will now find yourself in TWRP. From the install menu, add the CM10 PURE AOSP 4.1.2 JBV06.1-Hashcode and then the gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip and swipe to confirm flash. This is it. Fingers Crossed!
NOTE: On one NT 16 (I have two), step 12 DID NOT WORK. It wouldn't install the CM10...zip -- and simply rebooted itself or hung...so I powered off, and rebooted to the CWM Card in #6..and used CWM to wipe caches etc… and then installed the two zips...and voila.
hope it helps.
digixmax said:
I've been running CM10 build by XDA Developer Succulent version 12/08 on SD card since its release ten days ago, and its reliable/stable performance has crossed the threshold for me to finally take the plunge and install it internally on emmc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How do you feel about it now that you've installed it internally? I took the plunge as well today, but I'm not sure it's runs any better internally than it does from the sd card. Having said that, it runs so incredibly well from the card, so it's really hard to beat, but still... I'm actually having more issues with the internal install than the sd version.
I had had enough of the stock reader (that I'm actually pretty fond of) not remembering my place in sideloaded books, so I didn't feel I had anything to loose and am glad I made the install though. Installed once makes it easier to reinstall when an even better build comes along.
I made the switch since the stock ROM was so barebone and clumsy I virtually never use it since I had the NT, and the rooted stock ROM is just marginally better -- I found out there are so many apps I 've been using on CM10 that are simply not available for BN's (Android) Gingerbread. I also like the fact that I can now reboot (if ever needed) untethered.
I think performance-wise it runs about the same as it was running on SD, if it's better then it's not yet noticeable.
What kind of issues are you having with your new setup?
Some apps misbehaved. Didn't install properly or gave error messages. I decided to re flash and this this second install hasn't had any issues at all. Same files from the same card.
It is nice to have it internally and be able to switch sd cards should I want to.
Sent from my Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet using Tapatalk 2 and SwiftKey
I ran into a problem with v12/08: when I connect the NT to the PC I do not get the “USB connected” notification with option to “turn on the USB storage”, and thus cannot access neither the emmc media partition nor the sdcard. The problem exists with both CM10 running on emmc and running on sdcard. Furthermore when running on sdcard, hitting “storage” in “settings” results in a force-close of “settings”.
I am curious if anyone else has the same problem, or I am just missing some setup setting somewhere.
In the meantime, I am back to running another ROM off SD.
Those storage setting issue I had with the 1118 build but not with later ones. Connection to PC work fine but I don't think I need to do the turn on USB thing. No PC nearby at the moment
Edit: I am now near a PC, and I do get the "touch to turn on USB" or words to that effect. So it works as it should..
Sent from my Nook Tablet using Tapatalk 2 and SwiftKey
Thanks, I've tried reinstalling a couple of times (as well as installing a different ROM) without success.
I found the answer to my problem: I was used to getting the full-screen alert “USB mass storage” (upon insertion of tethered USB cable), and didn’t notice the tiny alert “USB connected” on the status bar (which when pulled down would in turn launch the “USB mass storage” alert).
Question: I'm not new to rooting and flashing, but am new to NT. I rooted my wifes NT, installed a launcher to switch back and forth, and loaded a few apps. I did not change the stock recovery and used a boot sdcard to run an older version of CWM. I forgot to hack OTA off so while messing around the darn thing upgraded to 1.4.3. The stock rom is such an old version of GB it is really worthless. So here is my question. Can I use this method to go directly to CM10? Im not too concerned about the issues mentioned in this thread, but more concerned about the method and the type of issues I might encounter. I see some threads say to flash CM 7 first, why I'm not sure. It almost looks to simple. Just looking for confidence. If it were mine I wouldnt care. Thanks for any help.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I317 using xda premium
Dean1650 said:
Question: I'm not new to rooting and flashing, but am new to NT. I rooted my wifes NT, installed a launcher to switch back and forth, and loaded a few apps. I did not change the stock recovery and used a boot sdcard to run an older version of CWM. I forgot to hack OTA off so while messing around the darn thing upgraded to 1.4.3. The stock rom is such an old version of GB it is really worthless. So here is my question. Can I use this method to go directly to CM10? Im not too concerned about the issues mentioned in this thread, but more concerned about the method and the type of issues I might encounter. I see some threads say to flash CM 7 first, why I'm not sure. It almost looks to simple. Just looking for confidence. If it were mine I wouldnt care. Thanks for any help.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I317 using xda premium
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cm7 is a gingerbread rom, it can be flashed by cwm 5 and 6 both. But cm10 is jellybean and must be flashed with cwm 6 only (or twrp) . And once you have cm7, you get cyanoboot (2nd bootloader) which is necessary to load cwm6, whether its internally flashed recovery or SD card recovery.
If you still have your bootable SD card, boot into recovery and check the version (cwm 5 most likely) , then do the longer, but simpler method - stock > cm7 > flash cwm6 internal and boot into it from cyanoboot > cm10.
I see the difference between the 2 methods..a few more questions. I dont see where or how recovery gets flashed in the first method. Looks like either/both are used but not flashed. In both methods, I dont see any sdcard additional partition requirements so can I assume everything can get copied to the boot partition? Haven't looked at the card I made yet, but if CWM is current enough for CM7 it should work fine. I appreciate this thread. It has cleared up a lot of questions.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I317 using xda premium
Dean1650 said:
...
I forgot to hack OTA off so while messing around the darn thing upgraded to 1.4.3. The stock rom is such an old version of GB it is really worthless. So here is my question. Can I use this method to go directly to CM10? Im not too concerned about the issues mentioned in this thread, but more concerned about the method and the type of issues I might encounter. I see some threads say to flash CM 7 first, why I'm not sure. It almost looks to simple. Just looking for confidence. If it were mine I wouldnt care. Thanks for any help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, you can use this process to go directly from stock or rooted stock to CM10 -- I used it to go from rooted 1.4.3 directly to CM10. With SD-based flash, there is no need to go the circuitous multi-stage flashing process.
And if you use Succulent's CM10 builds from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/cm10-0-jelly-bean-for-nook-tablet-uploading/ his ROM zip files all include emmc recovery so you don't even have to separately flash recovery as you would have with other ROMs. I think his approach, in addition to being convenient, has the benefit of avoiding intermediate states where there is potential incompatibility between ROM and recovery versions (which I think is conducive to causing bootloop).
Of course if for some reason you later prefer a different version of recovery than the one he includes (CWM 6.0.2.5) you can always reflash your particular choice of recovery by itself.
FWIW I am running Succulent's cm-10-20121225-acclaim-HD.zip (GCC 4.6) at the moment and it works great.
Dean1650 said:
I see the difference between the 2 methods..a few more questions. I dont see where or how recovery gets flashed in the first method. Looks like either/both are used but not flashed. In both methods, I dont see any sdcard additional partition requirements so can I assume everything can get copied to the boot partition? Haven't looked at the card I made yet, but if CWM is current enough for CM7 it should work fine. I appreciate this thread. It has cleared up a lot of questions.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Everything that gets flashed via recovery (either CWM or TWRP) comes in zip archive form, and this applies to ROM, gapps, as well as recovery itself. (If you ever want to flash recovery, the simplest way is to get a recovery zip file, such as one of those with keyword emmc from http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1640958, and flash it from SD using the process in the first post, just as you would flash a ROM build or gapps).
If you are curious about what gets installed and where, just open (but don't extract) the to-be-flashed zip file (e.g., using winrar/winzip/7-zip): everything except the META-INF folder is what get installed, and the updater-script file in META-INF\com\google\android\ (which you can open using a text editor like notepad) contains installation script detailing where (i.e., which partition on the NT) various components of the zip file get installed.
Typical ROM builds zip contain boot.img which gets installed on /boot partition, and a bunch of system files and apps to be installed on /system partition. Succulent's ROM builds also include recovery which gets installed on /recovery partition. Finally gapps apps get installed on /system as well.
Really, really appreciate this OP, the replies, and the knowledge. VERY helpful. Wont do this til the 1st and will let you know the results... Again, THANKs
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I317 using xda premium
Well your method worked flawlessly. I had a few minor operator errors but it went just as you explained. I did, however, have a fatal bug in the rom. Not sure who to report it to, but while messing around in settings I tried to change the color of the clock in the status bar. It totally blew away systemui. I tried everything I knew of to restart and recover but had to resort to wipe/factory reset. Could not figure out what data file got corrupted. That in turn made me have to flash the gapps again because none of the Google apps worked including play store. The net result is to add 1 more step to your method. BEFORE messsing with settings, and after the initial setup is complete, boot to recovery and do another backup..I forgot to mention I flashed 20121231, which is the latest release. Thank you so much for your knowledge and reseach. STOCK ROOTED TO CM10 RELEASED.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I317 using xda premium
Stuck on backup in CWM 6.0.1.2
My 16gbNT is currently running Team_B CM7. I'm trying to install Kuzma30's CM10.1 from a SD card. Following the instructions from this OP. While trying to perform my backup the process gets about 3/4 of the way through and then sticks at the file named "generic11.lda". It doesn't continue after that and I have left it alone for a considerable amount of time. Any idea what's causing the stick? I've tried it about three or four times with occasionally sticking at different files but it is still about 3/4 of the way through. Backup will not finish.
Any help is greatly appreciated.
I'd suggest trying a version of CWM that is considered compatible with CM7, e.g., CM7-9_CWM_v5.5.x_8gb-16gb_tools_sdcard.zip from http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1640958 (but then remember to flash CM10.1 with 6.0.1.2).
Also check and make sure that you have enough space on your SDcard (you can/should remove backup data associated with failed partial backup attempts).
Backup success, Install failure
digixmax said:
I'd suggest trying a version of CWM that is considered compatible with CM7, e.g., CM7-9_CWM_v5.5.x_8gb-16gb_tools_sdcard.zip from http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1640958 (but then remember to flash CM10.1 with 6.0.1.2).
Also check and make sure that you have enough space on your SDcard (you can/should remove backup data associated with failed partial backup attempts).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Backup successful! Thanks button pressed. Now on the install I used CWM 6.0.1.2 and I'm not allowed to complete the install. It aborts installation and gives the following error:
"Installing update...
set_perm: some changes failed
E:Error in /sdcard/cm-10.1-20130102-UNOFFICIAL-acclaim.zip
(Status 7)
Installation aborted."
Any ideas?
Your guide is quite clear but somehow it is not working for me. I have a fresh NT 8GB with stock 1.2 on it.
I obtained the 6 files you mention:
- u-boot.bin
- MLO
- flashing_boot.img
- recovery.img (= cwm_6012_sd.img)
- gapps-jb-20121011-signed.zip
- cm-10-20121231-NOOKTABLET-acclaim-HD.zip (from: http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/03/cm10-0-jelly-bean-for-nook-tablet-uploading/)
I copied them to a 16GB 10x SD card and placed the SD card in my NT.
The problem is that whatever I do, it always boots the stock os and never into Cyanoboot. I know I have to connect the NT to my computer with USB and wait for it to boot, but even then it only load the stock OS.
Am I doing something wrong here?
Help much appreciated!

A Noob's Bootloop Solution for the AOSP 4.0.4 ICS [Multi-Source] ROM

Below is a step-by-step guide for fixing the Bootloop issue on TwistedUmbrella's AOSP 4.0.4 ICS ROM [Multi-Source]
Please know that while I am a self-confessed noob, I have done my homework. I don't think that I've done anything special here but after seeing continued posts about this issue, I figured maybe this was something that people hadn't thought of yet. The instructions are for 4ext Recovery and I have tried to make them as plain and simple as possible. Let me know if anything is unclear.
Dirty
1. Create Backup. (A full backup is recommended but an Advanced backup of just the Boot partition will suffice here)
2. Wipe Cache+Dalvik.
3. Install ROM from SD card.
4. Advanced Restore - Boot. (From full Backup or Advanced based on what you did in Step 1)
5. Optional: Install desired Playground Extras.
6. Reboot.
Clean
1. Create full Backup.
2. Format All Partitions (except SD card).
3. Install ROM from SD card.
4. Advanced Restore - Boot and Data.
5. Optional: Install desired Playground Extras.
6. Reboot.
I tried to find another relevant thread before creating this post but only found this one and I just don't know how many people, if any, will see my response there.
Let me now how this works for you guys. And please, be kind in your responses. I am new and just want to help
If it's just the kernel, or something else in the boot.img that's corrupt, or causing a bootloop on a specific rom build, you could always take one from an earlier build of that rom that you know worked.
Then just drag and drop the boot.img and associated modules into the rom.zip from the old rom to the new rom on a computer with 7zip or winrar, flash it, and hopefully boot.
Just thought it might save a step or two for those that are having this type of issue.
call me a noob....but can someone explain to me what is so great about 4ext? I've been using TWRP since it was first available for the tbolt and I've been able to flash every version of twisted's ICS rom with no bootloops at all...

Pretty new here and wanting to learn

Ok hey everyone. I'm new around here and I'm looking for a a pretty stable rom that allows me to tether my phone and small visual changes. Anyone know which one I can use? I'm currently rooted on my HTC One m8 with att. Is the flashing process hard? Just lookin for info and insight. Thank you.
Sent from my HTC One_M8 using Tapatalk
Flashing ROM is quite easy. For the most part, you want to:
1) Backup your user data, and any personal files you want to keep safe
2) Use TWRP "Backup" function to make a nandroid backup of your current stock setup
3) Put the desired ROM on the phone internal storage or removable SD
4) Boot TWRP, select the default wipe (user data, cache and Dalvik)
5) Select "Install" function in TWRP, select the desire ROM
6) Reboot and setup
Steps 1 and 2 are not strictly "required" to flash a ROM. But I highly recommend doing them, nonetheless. Step 2 in particular, as it will prevent the case of a ROM not booting for whatever reason, and therefore prevents the common "I'm stuck with no nandroid backup" thread that pops up here.
Couple potential complications:
a) Is your current stock ROM updated to Lollipop?
b) Do you actually use AT&T as your carrier?
c) Do you have LTE in your area?

Categories

Resources