Related
Hi
I've done a bit of searching but can't find anything too specific to what I'm trying to do. Basically we have 10 Android tablets, and I want to make them all standardised e.g. have the same Apps on, configured in the same way (e.g. enterprise wireless network added).
Now the thing is if anyone messes around with them I want a really easy way to restore them to the original config which I've done.
One way I thought was to configure one fully, install Titanium Backup on it, do a full backup of apps/system data etc, and put the backup onto an SD card. Then I already have the base ROM on an SD card so if theres any problems, I can just flash the ROM over it again, install TB, and restore all the data. Would this be suitable to do to duplicate the data onto 10 tablets, and also restore the data if required?
The other thing I looked into was customising a ROM myself, don't want to do anything too tricky it'll just be a case of removing all the preinstalled crap I don't want, preloading the Apps we do want, and if possible preloading the wireless key and getting rid of the first boot initial set up wizard.
PS I've looked at installing CWM and doing whole image backups, but supposedly the tablet isnt supported (its an Ainol Novo 7 Elf 2)
Any advice would be great, hopefully theres some fairly straight forward way of managing this
Thanks
One of the reasons I integrated a full blown GNU/Linux on my devices, was the need to run full and automated backups. If you are looking into the possibility making a custom ROM, this might be a solution for you as well. I'm using BackuPC to run backups nightly, backing them up as any other GNU/Linux machine (using tar over ssh).
See the link in my signature for more information about this.
kuisma said:
One of the reasons I integrated a full blown GNU/Linux on my devices, was the need to run full and automated backups. If you are looking into the possibility making a custom ROM, this might be a solution for you as well. I'm using BackuPC to run backups nightly, backing them up as any other GNU/Linux machine (using tar over ssh).
See the link in my signature for more information about this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
Thanks for the reply, not too sure this would be the right option for us. I don't really need to take nightly backups, I just need to make a backup of a preconfigured image, and then put that image onto 10 other devices. Then I want to keep the original backup and have an easy way to restore it onto any devices which have been messed up. Sort of like image cloning for PCs, I want to prepare a base image, and then flash it over all the devices.
fro5tie said:
Hi
Thanks for the reply, not too sure this would be the right option for us. I don't really need to take nightly backups, I just need to make a backup of a preconfigured image, and then put that image onto 10 other devices. Then I want to keep the original backup and have an easy way to restore it onto any devices which have been messed up. Sort of like image cloning for PCs, I want to prepare a base image, and then flash it over all the devices.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, I see. Compile the image to you likings (boot image and system partition), and then flash it using fastboot onto you devices.
Hi
Does anyone have any more thoughts on this?
I have experimented with Titanium Backup and this seems to work quite well. I have installed a ROM, and customised it e.g. installed the apps I need and configured the apps, wireless settings and home screens etc. Then I do a full apps + system backup in TB to my SD card.
Then the plan is, I can reflash the ROM onto the other device, install TB and then restore this backup. This saves my user state and wireless settings etc.
Only problems is when I flash the ROM, I have to go through all the initial set up again and also remove some preinstalled apps which I dont want. Any ways around this?
There must be something I'm missing. Why don't you install the device, walk through the setup, remove the bloatware you don't want and then dumps the disk partitions into images you flash the other devices with using fastboot? This way you'll get'em cloned, isn't it this you want..?
Of course there's still some tinkering needed once restored/cloned, such as giving them individual Google accounts etc, but you can easily fix this without re-running the setup wizard.
kuisma said:
There must be something I'm missing. Why don't you install the device, walk through the setup, remove the bloatware you don't want and then dumps the disk partitions into images you flash the other devices with using fastboot? This way you'll get'em cloned, isn't it this you want..?
Of course there's still some tinkering needed once restored/cloned, such as giving them individual Google accounts etc, but you can easily fix this without re-running the setup wizard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
Yes that's what I want to do! How would I go about dumping the disk into an image and then flashing?
fro5tie said:
Hi
Yes that's what I want to do! How would I go about dumping the disk into an image and then flashing?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There are several methods. Some boot loaders (such as nvflash for tegra based devices) can actually read back the disk partitions to a computer via the USB port. You can also on the tablet read the raw mtd device with busybox/dd. I assume you've unlocked the bootloader and gain root access to the device, since this is a requirement for flashing them as well. A third alternative is using busybox/tar, and then recreate the filesystem image using mkyaffs (or if ext3/ext4 even easier, just loopback mount an image on you linux maching to unpack the tar archive to). Once you got the images (system and userdata partitions), you flash the devices with "fastboot flash system system.img" and "fastboot flash userdata data.img". I don't believe you'll need to tamper with the other partitions.
kuisma said:
There are several methods. Some boot loaders (such as nvflash for tegra based devices) can actually read back the disk partitions to a computer via the USB port. You can also on the tablet read the raw mtd device with busybox/dd. I assume you've unlocked the bootloader and gain root access to the device, since this is a requirement for flashing them as well. A third alternative is using busybox/tar, and then recreate the filesystem image using mkyaffs (or if ext3/ext4 even easier, just loopback mount an image on you linux maching to unpack the tar archive to). Once you got the images (system and userdata partitions), you flash the devices with "fastboot flash system system.img" and "fastboot flash userdata data.img". I don't believe you'll need to tamper with the other partitions.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
Thanks for the quick reply, much appreciated.
Unfortunately you've lost me a bit here!
Yes the device is rooted, I dont have a linux machine though.
Any chance you'd be able to provide some more specific instructions? The device is a chinese tablet from manufacturer Ainol, the model is a Novo 7 Elf 2. Unfortunately there isn't much discussion on these online so specific help is hard to find!
fro5tie said:
Any chance you'd be able to provide some more specific instructions? The device is a chinese tablet from manufacturer Ainol, the model is a Novo 7 Elf 2. Unfortunately there isn't much discussion on these online so specific help is hard to find!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can provide you specific answers to specific questions, but I have no experience of the tablet in question, so you'll have to do some digging yourself first. Make sure it supports fastboot, investigate what the proprietary bootloader is capable of, see how/if you can obtain an original image etc.
One maybe easier solution, especially if you plan to restore the tablets on a regular basis, is to only make a new boot image to reflash the devices with. The only modification done is that you change the /init.rc script to mount /data and /system from the SDcard instead of from the internal nand disk device.
Once this is done, you'll power up and run the installation wizard and everything on your master tablet. Then power it down, and clone the SDcard. This SDcard now contains everything, so you'll simply restore a device by replacing its SDcard with a copy of this master card. I guess it's easier to clone a SDcard than reflashing several internal partitions. Easier to make the master as well - you don't need to dd or tar them, they are already in "image" format. If you can get hold of the original firmware, this should be quite easy without the need to preserving data from the device itself.
fro5tie said:
Any chance you'd be able to provide some more specific instructions?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Issue the commands "cat /proc/mtd" and "mount" on your device at command prompt (e.g. via "adb shell" or the "ConnectBot" terminal app). This shows you if the device allows you to copy the boot image from it. Paste in the output into this thread. If you believe the "clone the tablet via the SDcard" is a good solution for you, the process is in short terms something as below;
Copy the boot image to the sdcard:
# dd if=/dev/mtd/mtd2ro of=/mnt/sdcard/boot.img bs=2048 (device dependent of contents of /proc/mtd)
Remove the sdcard, insert into a computer, split the boot image info kernel + initramfs. Read http://android-dls.com/wiki/index.php?title=HOWTO:_Unpack%2C_Edit%2C_and_Re-Pack_Boot_Images for instructions about how to work with the boot.img file. I really recommend a GNU/Linux environment for this.
Then edit /init.rc replacing the "mount yaffs2 [email protected] /system" with "mount ext3 /dev/block/mmcblk0p2 /system" for system and data (use p3 for data partition, the device name may be different on your tablet, see mount output).
Create an SDcard with three partitions: #1 vfat (standard), #2 and #3 ext3. Insert into you device and boot it up again.
# mount -t ext3 /dev/block/mmcblk0p2 /root
# cd /system
# tar cf - . | (cd /root ; tar xf - )
# umount /root
# mount -t ext3 /dev/block/mmcblk0p3 /root
# cd /data
# tar cf - . | (cd /root ; tar xf - )
# umount /root
This copies your partitions to the SDcard. Shutdown the tablet again.
Make a new boot.img using the instructions in the link above, using the edited init.rc script.
Now you can non-destrutive give this a try.
Place you tablet in fastboot mode (often vol-up (or vol-down) during power on).
$ fastboot devices
This vill verify the tablet is in fastboot mode. It should be listed. Then:
$ fastboot boot boot.img
Note here, only BOOT the tablet, do NOT use the "flash" keyword. This in case of the image isn't working, you'll just have to restart you tablet, and no harm's done.
Look around. Do a "mount" command. Everything works? Mount shows /data and /system from sdcard? Perfect. Now you can reflash it. Shutdown and flash:
$ fastboot flash boot boot.img
Now the device will use /data and /system from the SDcard every time. Customize your device, and then clone your SDcard and try it in tablet #2 you'll booting with your new boot.img and the cloned SDcard. Verify that #tablet #2 is a perfect clone of tablet #1. It is? Now you can flash the boot,img into all your tablets.
--------------------
But don't forget, there may be other solutions as well, maybe more suitable. This you'll have to investigate yourself.
And the usual disclaimer - you can probably not follow above by the letter. There sure is some obstacle you'll have to overcome, something non-standard, etc.
Also keep the original boot.img file for safekeeping in the case you want to restore the device's boot image some day.
Wow! Thanks for the info! This is really helpful, I need to set aside a bit of time to work through this and have a look. Thanks again its really appreciated, I'll be back with info once I've had chance to give it a go!
I certainly can't offer more detailed info than the fellow from Sweden who seems to really know his stuff...but what about making a nandroid backup of your fully configured reference tablet (I'm assuming all tablets are rooted). Ensure all your tabs have CWM recovery and copy your nandroid file to each one.
If any of your fleet get 'corrupted' you can simply restore the original, fully configured ROM.
In fact that sounds too obvious..likely I missed something about your scenario which precludes this option from consideration!
Good luck mate.
tweeny80 said:
I certainly can't offer more detailed info than the fellow from Sweden who seems to really know his stuff...but what about making a nandroid backup of your fully configured reference tablet (I'm assuming all tablets are rooted). Ensure all your tabs have CWM recovery and copy your nandroid file to each one.
If any of your fleet get 'corrupted' you can simply restore the original, fully configured ROM.
In fact that sounds too obvious..likely I missed something about your scenario which precludes this option from consideration!
Good luck mate.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi
Yes that was my first thought as well, tablets are rooted yes but there is no CWM for the tablet. Its an obscure Chinese branded tablet.
Unless there is another way to do nandroid backups?
hmm tricky situation. Catch 22 ! From what I know, your best bet is to backup all possible things through Titanium Backup given that you don't have the use of Nandroid backups. You can include wifi settings, messages etc but it's modular & not systemic.
I did a quick google search with no luck - time to upgrade your fleet dude :-0
Best of luck.
Q&A for [TOOL][NABI2] NabiLab - Root, Play, Recovery
Some developers prefer that questions remain separate from their main development thread to help keep things organized. Placing your question within this thread will increase its chances of being answered by a member of the community or by the developer.
Before posting, please use the forum search and read through the discussion thread for [TOOL][NABI2] NabiLab - Root, Play, Recovery. If you can't find an answer, post it here, being sure to give as much information as possible (firmware version, steps to reproduce, logcat if available) so that you can get help.
Thanks for understanding and for helping to keep XDA neat and tidy!
State of Nabi 2 Root as of 12/14?
So I have admittedly been out of the loop on the state of rooting my two Nabi 2s since after I restored them to stock and all back last year when they released the update that included the Gapps. So I've been running stock since then and am on the latest firmware (2.4.6 I believe). All is mostly fine, but I would really like to get the external SD cards to be writable again, and from what I can tell, I need root again to do that.
So...as of today...what is the state (and best procedure) of rooting the Nabi 2 on the latest OTA update? Is Nabi Lab still the best tool? From what I've pieced together from scattered threads, it's looking like possibly use Nabi Lab to install TWRP, and then use that to install the SuperSU (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1538053). However, I could likely be wrong...hence why I'm asking.
Eyebolt said:
So I have admittedly been out of the loop on the state of rooting my two Nabi 2s since after I restored them to stock and all back last year when they released the update that included the Gapps. So I've been running stock since then and am on the latest firmware (2.4.6 I believe). All is mostly fine, but I would really like to get the external SD cards to be writable again, and from what I can tell, I need root again to do that.
So...as of today...what is the state (and best procedure) of rooting the Nabi 2 on the latest OTA update? Is Nabi Lab still the best tool? From what I've pieced together from scattered threads, it's looking like possibly use Nabi Lab to install TWRP, and then use that to install the SuperSU (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1538053). However, I could likely be wrong...hence why I'm asking.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nabilab will still work as long as you use a version with a Jellybean TWRP(since you are on 2.4.6).
katinatez repackaged it for jellybean here:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=48987089&postcount=2088
I've searched high and low and can't find anything. I have nabi2S running KitKat. Every rooting guide I've found is for JB. Is there any way to root the 2S?
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
jaxbierley said:
I've searched high and low and can't find anything. I have nabi2S running KitKat. Every rooting guide I've found is for JB. Is there any way to root the 2S?
Sent from my Nexus 5 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For the sake of anyone else looking for this information we are discussing it at the main Nabi thread starting at post #2477
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1905674&page=248
Stock Restore
Hi
I have downloaded NabiLab, as I am having wifi issues on my updated Nabi2. I unzipped, ran the .bat and chose option 3 (with my nab connected via USB). Nothing happened, no errors etc, the screen flashed up and shut down. Do I need to do something with the Nabi (recovery mode etc), do I need to install anything from NabiLab before trying this? Any help would be appreciated
Firepants said:
Hi
I have downloaded NabiLab, as I am having wifi issues on my updated Nabi2. I unzipped, ran the .bat and chose option 3 (with my nab connected via USB). Nothing happened, no errors etc, the screen flashed up and shut down. Do I need to do something with the Nabi (recovery mode etc), do I need to install anything from NabiLab before trying this? Any help would be appreciated
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What version of software? Use Nabilab2015 http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=59073456&postcount=2544
It has more diagnostic info. Just be in Android or TWRP with ADb enabled. It also can see if drivers are loaded.
Hacking Nabi2 to Allow Data2SD
I managed today to hack my kids Nabi2 to enable Data2SD. I was to frustrated by the limited space in the tab. My kids were complaining about not being able to add more games. Thus, I decided to take the risk of modifying the mount points of the tab to allow the data partition to point to a partition in a large sdcard, instead of the limited 4.5 GB space in the internal storage.
Warning: I am not responsible of any damage as a result of following the next steps. Always make backups
Note: I have the last update (KitKat) installed in the Nabi2
1- Dump the boot image from an adb shell:
Code:
su
cat /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/LNX > /sdcard/boot.img
2- Open this url http://android-dls.com/wiki/index.php?title=HOWTO:_Unpack,_Edit,_and_Re-Pack_Boot_Images
to see the instructions of how to unpack and repack the boot image. Note that, the splitimage script mentioned in the page can be found at https://gist.github.com/jberkel/1087743
Warning: do not do anything in the tutorial, just wait
3- Format an sdcard as one partition of ext4 type
4- Insert the sdcard in the nabi2
5- Use the tutorial in step 2 to extract the ramdisk contents from the boot image and then Modify the file "fstab.mt799" in the ramdisk folder by replacing the line
Code:
/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/UDA /data ext4 noatime,nosuid,nodev,journal_async_commit,data=writeback,nodelalloc,errors=panic wait,check,encryptable=/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/MDA
with
Code:
/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.0/by-num/p1 /data ext4 noatime,nosuid,nodev,journal_async_commit,data=writeback,nodelalloc,errors=panic wait,check,encryptable=/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/MDA
which switches the data partition mount point to be on the sdcard
and the line
Code:
/devices/platform/sdhci-tegra.0/mmc_host/mmc2 auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=sdcard1:auto
with
Code:
/devices/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/mmc_host/mmc0 auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=sdcard1:12
which mount your old data partition into the directory of the external sdcard
6- Repack the boot image as mentioned in the url in step 2
7- Copy the new boot image to the nabi2 sdcard
8- Once you copied the new boot image (e.g. new_boot.img), replace the current boot image with the new one using adb shell:
Code:
su
cat /sdcard/new_boot.img > /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/LNX
9- Now the kernel is replaced and once you rebooted your external sdcard would be in use, but note that your device is now having an empty data partition on the external sdcard, so you have to setup everything from the beginning. Note also that your previous data partition is now mounted as an sdcard, however, you have to format it from ext4 to fat32 to work as an sdcard (you can do the format from setings->storage->sdcard format)
ashahin1 said:
I managed today to hack my kids Nabi2 to enable Data2SD. I was to frustrated by the limited space in the tab. My kids were complaining about not being able to add more games. Thus, I decided to take the risk of modifying the mount points of the tab to allow the data partition to point to a partition in a large sdcard, instead of the limited 4.5 GB space in the internal storage.
Warning: I am not responsible of any damage as a result of following the next steps. Always make backups
Note: I have the last update (KitKat) installed in the Nabi2
1- Dump the boot image from an adb shell:
Code:
su
cat /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/LNX > /sdcard/boot.img
2- Open this url http://android-dls.com/wiki/index.php?title=HOWTO:_Unpack,_Edit,_and_Re-Pack_Boot_Images
to see the instructions of how to unpack and repack the boot image. Note that, the splitimage script mentioned in the page can be found at https://gist.github.com/jberkel/1087743
Warning: do not do anything in the tutorial, just wait
3- Format an sdcard as one partition of ext4 type
4- Insert the sdcard in the nabi2
5- Use the tutorial in step 2 to extract the ramdisk contents from the boot image and then Modify the file "fstab.mt799" in the ramdisk folder by replacing the line
Code:
/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/UDA /data ext4 noatime,nosuid,nodev,journal_async_commit,data=writeback,nodelalloc,errors=panic wait,check,encryptable=/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/MDA
with
Code:
/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.0/by-num/p1 /data ext4 noatime,nosuid,nodev,journal_async_commit,data=writeback,nodelalloc,errors=panic wait,check,encryptable=/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/MDA
which switches the data partition mount point to be on the sdcard
and the line
Code:
/devices/platform/sdhci-tegra.0/mmc_host/mmc2 auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=sdcard1:auto
with
Code:
/devices/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/mmc_host/mmc0 auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=sdcard1:12
which mount your old data partition into the directory of the external sdcard
6- Repack the boot image as mentioned in the url in step 2
7- Copy the new boot image to the nabi2 sdcard
8- Once you copied the new boot image (e.g. new_boot.img), replace the current boot image with the new one using adb shell:
Code:
su
cat /sdcard/new_boot.img > /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/LNX
9- Now the kernel is replaced and once you rebooted your external sdcard would be in use, but note that your device is now having an empty data partition on the external sdcard, so you have to setup everything from the beginning. Note also that your previous data partition is now mounted as an sdcard, however, you have to format it from ext4 to fat32 to work as an sdcard (you can do the format from setings->storage->sdcard format)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are not sure which line to change, I have the fstab.mt799 file attached with this post. You can simply replace your file with this one.
ashahin1 said:
I managed today to hack my kids Nabi2 to enable Data2SD. I was to frustrated by the limited space in the tab. My kids were complaining about not being able to add more games. Thus, I decided to take the risk of modifying the mount points of the tab to allow the data partition to point to a partition in a large sdcard, instead of the limited 4.5 GB space in the internal storage.
Warning: I am not responsible of any damage as a result of following the next steps. Always make backups
Note: I have the last update (KitKat) installed in the Nabi2
1- Dump the boot image from an adb shell:
Code:
su
cat /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/LNX > /sdcard/boot.img
2- Open this url http://android-dls.com/wiki/index.php?title=HOWTO:_Unpack,_Edit,_and_Re-Pack_Boot_Images
to see the instructions of how to unpack and repack the boot image. Note that, the splitimage script mentioned in the page can be found at https://gist.github.com/jberkel/1087743
Warning: do not do anything in the tutorial, just wait
3- Format an sdcard as one partition of ext4 type
4- Insert the sdcard in the nabi2
5- Use the tutorial in step 2 to extract the ramdisk contents from the boot image and then Modify the file "fstab.mt799" in the ramdisk folder by replacing the line
Code:
/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/UDA /data ext4 noatime,nosuid,nodev,journal_async_commit,data=writeback,nodelalloc,errors=panic wait,check,encryptable=/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/MDA
with
Code:
/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.0/by-num/p1 /data ext4 noatime,nosuid,nodev,journal_async_commit,data=writeback,nodelalloc,errors=panic wait,check,encryptable=/dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/MDA
which switches the data partition mount point to be on the sdcard
and the line
Code:
/devices/platform/sdhci-tegra.0/mmc_host/mmc2 auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=sdcard1:auto
with
Code:
/devices/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/mmc_host/mmc0 auto vfat defaults voldmanaged=sdcard1:12
which mount your old data partition into the directory of the external sdcard
6- Repack the boot image as mentioned in the url in step 2
7- Copy the new boot image to the nabi2 sdcard
8- Once you copied the new boot image (e.g. new_boot.img), replace the current boot image with the new one using adb shell:
Code:
su
cat /sdcard/new_boot.img > /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/LNX
9- Now the kernel is replaced and once you rebooted your external sdcard would be in use, but note that your device is now having an empty data partition on the external sdcard, so you have to setup everything from the beginning. Note also that your previous data partition is now mounted as an sdcard, however, you have to format it from ext4 to fat32 to work as an sdcard (you can do the format from setings->storage->sdcard format)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you don't have the time to do all these steps, I have the modified boot file attached here.
Yo can either follow steps 7 and 8 above to write it, or use the fastboot command as follows:
Code:
fastboot flash boot new_boot.img
Nabi2 not found
Hi, I purchased a reconditioned Nabi, which was reset back to stock. The wifi worked fine, until I updated it through the tablet. I am now on version 2.0 with no wifi. I have tried various options through NabiLab , however my Nabi is not recognised as being connected (although windows picks it up). Please help!
Swipe to restore
I am trying to return my nabi to stock, i can get to the screen that asks you to 'swipe to restore' but the screen is not responding. I dont have issues with the touchscreen normally
Aytul said:
I am trying to return my nabi to stock, i can get to the screen that asks you to 'swipe to restore' but the screen is not responding. I dont have issues with the touchscreen normally
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's weird...if you keep messing with it you may find a spot a little left, right, higher, or lower where you can grab the button to swipe....or you try to re-flash TWRP or maybe there's a new version of TWRP for your particular nabi software version.
did you ever get nabilab to see it? did you check the device manager to see if it was totally recognized? Are developer options enabled?
n3wt said:
That's weird...if you keep messing with it you may find a spot a little left, right, higher, or lower where you can grab the button to swipe....or you try to re-flash TWRP or maybe there's a new version of TWRP for your particular nabi software version.
did you ever get nabilab to see it? did you check the device manager to see if it was totally recognized? Are developer options enabled?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The Nabi is showing as a device, it's responds as it should up to the point of TWRP. I had to repeatedly press buttons to get to the restore swipe and have tried many times, unsuccessfully. Where do I enable developer options?
I am on version 2 (Nabi) and using the most up-to-date version of NabiLab. I am trying to restore to stock so that the software version goes back, as the update has stopped my wifi working. Even a factory reset doesn't take the Nabi software back further than v2.0
Aytul said:
The Nabi is showing as a device, it's responds as it should up to the point of TWRP. I had to repeatedly press buttons to get to the restore swipe and have tried many times, unsuccessfully. Where do I enable developer options?
I am on version 2 (Nabi) and using the most up-to-date version of NabiLab. I am trying to restore to stock so that the software version goes back, as the update has stopped my wifi working. Even a factory reset doesn't take the Nabi software back further than v2.0
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For developer options you go to settings, scroll all the way down, if you don't see "Developer options" there, press About tablet, then repeatedly tap build number until it pops up and says "You are now a developer!", then go back and now you should see the Developer options menu item, press it and then make sure it's on at the top and that the USB Debugging option is checked.....then try nabilab again.
n3wt said:
For developer options you go to settings, scroll all the way down, if you don't see "Developer options" there, press About tablet, then repeatedly tap build number until it pops up and says "You are now a developer!", then go back and now you should see the Developer options menu item, press it and then make sure it's on at the top and that the USB Debugging option is checked.....then try nabilab again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes this is enabled, as without it I am unable to run nabilab etc. The problem is TWRP & the version of software I am running on the tablet?
Aytul said:
Yes this is enabled, as without it I am unable to run nabilab etc. The problem is TWRP & the version of software I am running on the tablet?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, the touch issues are probably due to a bad build of TWRP but not necessarily the wrong one. The problem with nabilab not being able to see the tablet I think has to be drivers. Have you checked device manager to make sure there are no unrecognized things? 'cause the tablet show up as two separate things in there and it sounds like the USB storage part is working but not the adb and/or fastboot part(s).
n3wt said:
Well, the touch issues are probably due to a bad build of TWRP but not necessarily the wrong one. The problem with nabilab not being able to see the tablet I think has to be drivers. Have you checked device manager to make sure there are no unrecognized things? 'cause the tablet show up as two separate things in there and it sounds like the USB storage part is working but not the adb and/or fastboot part(s).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've managed to sort the drivers by installing PDANet, then managed to sort TWRP by installing an older version. I've now updated to 2.1 on the Nabi but no luck with the wifi issue..i'm guessing it's really broken and it happening whilst updating may have been a coincidence?!
Aytul said:
I've managed to sort the drivers by installing PDANet, then managed to sort TWRP by installing an older version. I've now updated to 2.1 on the Nabi but no luck with the wifi issue..i'm guessing it's really broken and it happening whilst updating may have been a coincidence?!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It might just be broken but that's a heck of a coincidence... Do you have a backup from before the wifi issue started? If so, I'd try to thoroughly wipe everything but your external sd card and then restoring your backup and see if that helps.
n3wt said:
It might just be broken but that's a heck of a coincidence... Do you have a backup from before the wifi issue started? If so, I'd try to thoroughly wipe everything but your external sd card and then restoring your backup and see if that helps.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi, I bought it as a reconditioned did unit. Turned it on, updates it (wifi worked) and then had this problem, so no backup to go back to unfortunately
This is a CyanogenMod 12.1 ROM for the Exynos3470 based Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 7.0 LTE (T235/T235Y).
DO NOT USE IT FOR T230(NU)/T231 OR YOU WILL BRICK YOUR DEVICE
Although T235 and T230(NU)/T231 (T230:WiFi / T231:3G) share the "Galaxy Tab 4 7.0" name they are not related in terms of hardware due to the different SoCs used (Samsung Exynos3470 vs. Marvell PXA1088).
Hence please do not ask for support or ROMs for the T230(NU)/T231.
Working features
Receiving and making calls
Hardware sensors (Acceleration)
Audio
Bluetooth
Wifi
HW accelerated GUI
MTP storage
GPS
USB-OTG (Mass-Storage, Keyboard, Mouse working, USB-Audio untested)
Camera (pictures+video: Back+Front)
Non-working features:
SELinux
Known issues:
See the Bug Report section of this thread
Disclaimer:
You flash this image at your own responsibility. I am not responsible for any damage that might be caused by flashing this image (bricked device, lost data, ...)
Flashing this kernel image will trigger the KNOX counter, so your warranty will be void.
Applications that use KNOX (e.g. "Private Mode") might not work anymore when returning to the stock ROM, as the device is regarded as compromised. Do not flash this ROM if you need those applications.
The image is only for Tab 4 7.0 SM-T235 and SM-T235Y (Exynos)
It might be instable, crash your device, drain your battery, or even might damage your smartphone
Backup your data before flashing and check if the original firmware is present (e.g. at SamMobile)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Before you start:
Backup your data, like call history, contacts, sms, WhatsApp messages, favourite app settings that are on internal and external sd (by using Titanium Backup or other apps available on PlayStore). At least all internal data will be lost in any case. If you have bad luck you might also loose data from your external sd card.
Download:
Odin3-v1.85
TWRP 2.8.7.0 recovery image [09/08/2015] (AndroidFileHost Mirror)
CM 12.1 ROM (AndroidFileHost Mirror)
Google Apps (contains Google Play, ...) for Android 5.1.1 from Jajb (Recommended) or the one that suits you best from Consolidated GApps.
Install recovery:
Reboot your device into Odin mode: turn off your device, then press Volume-Down + Home + Power button at the same time and release them.
Confirm the following warning message with the Volume-Up button.
Connect your device to your PC via USB
Make sure the device driver's are installed on your PC
Start Odin
In Odin select PDA and select the recovery image (recovery.tar.md5)
Check that only "Auto Reboot" and "F. Reset Time" is set
Click on "Start": the kernel image should be flashed now and the device should reboot afterwards. By flashing the recovery, your warranty will be void.
After the recovery flashing process was successful, power of your device. If not restart into Download mode and flash again or flash the stock rom.
Before you flash:
You need the latest TWRP recovery (see links above). Otherwise TWRP might not be able to flash the ROM.
Wipe the device to avoid problems with remaining files from the old installation (see instructions below). This also applies if you already installed an older version of CM 12.1.
Flash CyanogenMod:
Reboot into recovery mode (Press Volume-Up + Home + Power button)
If you come from a stock ROM, this is your opportunity to make a Backup of your phone(Backup, then select Boot, System, Data, then swipe to backup). Note that the recovery might fail to restore the backup when you want to go back to the stock ROM (for me it got stuck after a restore during boot. But the backup was made with a different version of TWRP, so it might work in general) - simply do not expect too much of it at the moment.
If you haven't copied the installation files yet, you can now copy the GApps and CyanogenMod zip to your internal sd or external sd (be careful not to put the files into the data directory of the internal sd card as this will be deleted in the next step). Be sure that MTP is enabled (inside Mounts, click on Enable MTP), then, from your pc, copy the files. If MTP does not work from recovery, try it directly from Android or remove the external sd card from the phone and put it into your PC.
Wipe Dalvik Cache, Cache, System and Data (inside Wipe -> Advanced Wipe). Do not report problems if you did not wipe those partitions as the problems are most probably related to this!
Install the CM 12.1 ROM zip-package
Install the GApps zip-package
Reboot the system and enjoy a Lollipop
How to root:
No SuperSu is needed as CyanogenMod already comes with integrated root support. Root access is disabled by default.
You normally do not need root access. If you want to activate root access for apps, do the following:
Open the Settings menu, select "About Phone"
Tap on the "Build number" entry seven times. You should be notified, that the developer settings are now active.
Open the Settings menu, select "Developer options". Enable root access by selecting "Apps" in the "Root-Access" setting.
In case you want to go back to the stock ROM:
lf you do not have the latest stock ROM you can download it from SamMobile
Reboot your phone into Odin mode
Open Odin on your PC and connect your smartphone with your PC via USB
If you have a zip-file unzip it so that you have a .tar.md5 file
In Odin click on the PDA button and select the .tar.md5 file. Then press "Start".
Normally the stock rom fails to boot as the data from CM12 is still on the data partition. So after flashing the stock rom, reboot into recovery mode (it looks a bit different now). First wipe the data partition, then wipe the cache.
Reboot
Changelog
Code:
09/08/2015:
*Update kernel to T235XXU1AOD1
*Synchronize with newest CM 12.1 sources (contains stagefright patches)
*Fixed black screen on minimal brightness
12/07/2015:
* Charging animation in standby-mode fixed
11/07/2015:
* Update to newest CyanogenMod sources (LMY48G)
* Left touchkey working now (configured as App-Switch button)
* Camera Preview working (saving a picture might still crash)
30/06/2015:
* Image sizes reduced to fix "unable to mount /system" problems
28/06/2015:
* Initial test-build
This section is for developers:
A README file with build instructions can be found here:
https://github.com/cm-3470/patcher_degaslte
Sources:
Code:
https://github.com/cm-3470/android_device_samsung_degaslte
https://github.com/cm-3470/android_vendor_samsung_degaslte
https://github.com/cm-3470/android_kernel_samsung_degaslte
https://github.com/cm-3470/android_device_samsung_smdk3470-common
Developers welcome
Help from other developers is always welcome. See the bug/feature section and this thread to see what is missing. Just give some short info (here in this thread or PM) that you want to work on some issue or feature so that work can be synchronized. Maybe there are also other devs that want to work with you on the same issue.
Knowledge in how the kernel works and good programming skills in C, C++ and Java would be nice but not necessary for all problems. At least you should be able to build the ROM and test your changes yourself but you do not need experience in porting ROMs.
XDA:DevDB Information
[T235][ROM][5.1.1][LMY48G] CyanogenMod 12.1 for T235(Y) [Alpha 09/08/2015], ROM for the Samsung Galaxy Tab 4
Contributors
hennymcc
Source Code: https://github.com/cm-3470
ROM OS Version: 5.1.x Lollipop
ROM Kernel: Linux 3.4.x
ROM Firmware Required: TWRP Recovery [version from 09/08/2015]
Based On: CyanogenMod
Version Information
Status: Alpha
Created 2015-06-29
Last Updated 2015-09-24
i've tried to test the rom but i can't install so far... i've wiped all but it said it can't mount system again...
http://www.mobosdata.com/samsung-galaxy-tab-4-7-0-lte-sm-t235y
According to this the SM-T235Y is based on Marvel cpu vs exynos on the sm-t235
Does anyone really know the differences ? On another page i read the sm-t235y has a snapdragon 400 ...
Hectic confusing samsung numbering + different devices with same model name .
@hennymcc
do you have included selinux_defconfig in your twrp kernel?
androidboot.selinux=disabled at twrps kernel cmd line should be removed
i wiped system and all partitions using your new twrp but when i install the zip file then /system becomes unmountable
/system is formated ext4
should i try to format it f2fs ?
interstellar22 said:
i wiped system and all partitions using your new twrp but when i install the zip file then /system becomes unmountable
/system is formated ext4
should i try to format it f2fs ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
any marvell devices will not work with this or any other custom rom.
sub77 said:
any marvell devices will not work with this or any other custom rom.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
this is an exynos device not marvell
and now for some reason i cant restore the backup i made
i tryed restorng the backup with twrp 2.8.6.0 recovery from this thread and the 2.8.1.0 from the other.
one gives boot animation loop and the other is stuck at boot
hennymcc said:
In case you want to go back to the stock ROM:
lf you do not have the latest stock ROM you can download it from SamMobile
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Stock Roms on Android File Host (quicker, free-er host site than Sammobile)
@interstellar22 did you try wiping cache after you restored, before you booted?
thisisapoorusernamechoice said:
Stock Roms on Android File Host (quicker, free-er host site than Sammobile)
@interstellar22 did you try wiping cache after you restored, before you booted?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i tryed once without wiping cache, but i had cache backed up also
then i tryed to do a factory reset
still stuck at bootlogo
and adb logcat and adb devices shows nothing
sub77 said:
@hennymcc
do you have included selinux_defconfig in your twrp kernel?
androidboot.selinux=disabled at twrps kernel cmd line should be removed
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The default selinux setting is enforced. As the selinux configuration files are not complete, Android would not boot.
Setting androidboot.selinux=permissive might work, but when I tested this setting on my S5 mini, it was rather unstable for some reason.
interstellar22 said:
http://www.mobosdata.com/samsung-galaxy-tab-4-7-0-lte-sm-t235y
According to this the SM-T235Y is based on Marvel cpu vs exynos on the sm-t235
Does anyone really know the differences ? On another page i read the sm-t235y has a snapdragon 400 ...
Hectic confusing samsung numbering + different devices with same model name .
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
sub77 said:
any marvell devices will not work with this or any other custom rom.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
interstellar22 said:
this is an exynos device not marvell
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
T235 and T235Y definitely use Exynos 3470 SoCs. Here an extract from the T235Y default.prop:
Code:
ro.product.model=SM-T235Y
ro.product.name=degasltezt
ro.product.device=degaslte
ro.product.board=universal3470
ro.chipname=exynos3470
The default.prop file of the T235 is similar, only that the product name is degasltexx.
Marvell's PXA1088 SoC is used in the T230/NU which is the non-LTE (WiFi-only) variant of the Tab 4 7.0.
Marvell's PXA1088 and Samsung's Exynos3470 are totally different and have nothing in common (except an ARM core), the same applies to Qualcomm's Snapdragon. There are many websites that mention wrong SoC names as Samsung's naming scheme is rather confusing.
The same applies to the S5 Mini: G800F/M/Y -> Exynos3470, G800H -> Qualcomm Snapdragon.
corneo said:
i've tried to test the rom but i can't install so far... i've wiped all but it said it can't mount system again...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Code:
Info: format successful
I:mkfs.f2fs -t 1 /dev/block/mmcblk0p18 process ended with RC=0
Done.
Why was the system partition formatted with f2fs? The default file system is ext4.
The TWRP partition table is hardcoded to ext4 so that's probably the reason for these lines:
Code:
E:Unable to mount '/system'
I:Actual block device: '/dev/block/mmcblk0p18', current file system: 'ext4'
Could you reformat it with ext4?
interstellar22 said:
i tryed once without wiping cache, but i had cache backed up also
then i tryed to do a factory reset
still stuck at bootlogo
and adb logcat and adb devices shows nothing
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you flash the stock ROM with Odin?
And afterwards wipe the data partition and then the cache with the _stock_ recovery (as TWRP is not available after flashing the stock ROM)?
interstellar22 said:
i wiped system and all partitions using your new twrp but when i install the zip file then /system becomes unmountable
/system is formated ext4
should i try to format it f2fs ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Short summary:
interstellar22 and corneo tried it so far and both got the error message "/system unmountable"
Strange that corneo was able to generate an error log.
@corneo: did you create the log with adb?
At least according to corneo's log, it seams that after the F2FS format the partition is reformatted with EXT4 afterwards:
Code:
Formatting system using make_ext4fs function.
It also says:
Code:
erasing 588800 blocks
blkdiscard failed: Invalid argument
writing 134395 blocks of new data
lseek64 failed: Invalid argument
I:Legacy property environment disabled.
E:Error executing updater binary in zip '/external_sd/cm-12.1-20150627-UNOFFICIAL-degaslte.zip'
Error flashing zip '/external_sd/cm-12.1-20150627-UNOFFICIAL-degaslte.zip'
Not that sure about what causes this error. Maybe the partition sizes have to be changed.
hennymcc said:
Short summary:
interstellar22 and corneo tried it so far and both got the error message "/system unmountable"
Strange that corneo was able to generate an error log.
@corneo: did you create the log with adb?
At least according to corneo's log, it seams that after the F2FS format the partition is reformatted with EXT4 afterwards:
Code:
Formatting system using make_ext4fs function.
It also says:
Code:
erasing 588800 blocks
blkdiscard failed: Invalid argument
writing 134395 blocks of new data
lseek64 failed: Invalid argument
I:Legacy property environment disabled.
E:Error executing updater binary in zip '/external_sd/cm-12.1-20150627-UNOFFICIAL-degaslte.zip'
Error flashing zip '/external_sd/cm-12.1-20150627-UNOFFICIAL-degaslte.zip'
Not that sure about what causes this error. Maybe the partition sizes have to be changed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i've created the log in recovery and copied it to sd.
now i flashed the tab again with odin and try it again. same issue...
Gesendet von meinem One M8
i managed to get the original firmware back with odin
could it be that the system.new.dat file is corrupted ?
i had formated system with ext4 then did the update and was still getting unable to mount /system afterwards
so most probably the system.new.dat file has some problems or i have no idea why i cant mount /system afterwards
Maybe it is caused by wrong BOARD_...IMAGE_PARTITION_SIZE values in BoardConfig.mk.
Could you please post the contents of /proc/mounts and /proc/partitions:
Code:
cat /proc/mounts
cat /proc/partitions
The above should be performed from the stock ROM. The device must be rooted.
Hmm, the problem might be here:
Code:
Patching system image unconditionally...
blockimg version is 2
erasing 588800 blocks
blkdiscard failed: Invalid argument
writing 134395 blocks of new data
lseek64 failed: Invalid argument
588800 * 4096 = 2411724800 bytes (2,2GB)
This is the value of the BoardConfig.mk taken from the S5 Mini (BOARD_SYSTEMIMAGE_PARTITION_SIZE := 2411724800).
But the system partition is only 2233466880 bytes:
Code:
/system | /dev/block/mmcblk0p18 | Size: 2096MB Used: 1828MB Free: 268MB Backup Size: 1828MB
Code:
I:wipe_path '/system'
Formatting System using make_ext4fs function.
Creating filesystem with parameters:
Size: 2233466880
The system.img itself is only 500MB in size. So I guess reducing the image size should fix the problem.
An updated ROM is available. The image sizes have been reduced. I hope this fixes the problems with the system-partition.
Also use the new TWRP recovery as the partition sizes might be hardcoded in the old one.
good news! new recovery and system image works! very smooth so far, searching for bugs now. the only one i found are the extended settings option. it doesn't work but thats no problem for me. thank you very much!
Gesendet von meinem One M8
Intro
This is a guide for people who want to make some modifications to config files, or other files, on System partition but do not want to root their phone or install custom recovery in order to keep OTAs and some apps, which don't play nicely with rooted phones, working. Examples of those config mods could be changing DPI or changing volume levels etc, which you would only do once and forget about it.
While root allows you to do those kinds of changes from within android, this methods would require a PC.
If you are familiar with temporary booting into a custom recovery, skip to step 5.
The usual i am not responsible for any of your actions / bricked phones disclaimer applies.
Prerequisites
- A working adb / fastboot environment. Please use Android SDK, if you installed your adb and fastboot using other tools, things might not work, so please just install SDK, install Google USB Driver from SDK manager, install Platform-Tools from SDK manager (should be installed by default) and then add your sdk platform-tools path to your PATH environment variable to have it available in cmd in every path.
- Unlocked bootloader
- TWRP image for you phone (.img) https://twrp.me/devices/huaweinexus6p.html
Follow the [GUIDE] Unlock/Root/Flash for Nexus 6P for that.
Instructions
Here is an example of modifying DPI. I prefer build.prop method of modifying DPI because using the adb wm density command usually caused some issues for me, but modifying via build.prop didn't.
1 - With you phone ON, connect it to the PC and make sure adb is working by running
Code:
adb devices
and making sure that device is listed
2 - Reboot into bootloader. and make sure fastboot is good to go too. Run commands one at a time:
Code:
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot devices
3 - Place your TWRP image file in some easily accessible folder, for the sake of this example i will use C:\Mods.
4 - Temporary boot into TWRP (we are not flashing it here at all).
Code:
fastboot boot c:\Mods\twrp-2.8.7.0-angler.img
Here is where things may not work. If you don't see your phone boot into TWRP then either your adb / fastboot environment not setup correctly (installed via a tool instead of SDK) or your img file is corrupt.
One thing that works for me when TWRP refuses to boot is to restart cmd and issue the command again this closes and reopens adb/fastboot daemon.
5 - Once TWRP is up on your phone it may display a warning saying "TWRP has detected an unmounted system partition". Swipe to allow modifications at the bottom. This screen may not come up at all.
6 - Go to Mount >>> Tick System >>> Make sure "Only Mount System Read Only" is unticked >>> Press Back button
7 - Back on your PC check if your device is listed
Code:
adb devices
8 - Pull the file you need to modify from system partition to your PC. Please note the direction of the slashes:
Code:
adb pull /system/build.prop c:/Mods
9 - Now you should see build.prop in your c:\Mods folder. Use Notepad++ or something like that to edit the file. Find the line with lcd_density= and change it's value to whatever you need and save the file.
10 - Push the file back to your phone:
Code:
adb push c:/Mods/build.prop /system
11 - Reboot
Code:
adb reboot
12 - Profit.
Hope this will help anyone who is looking to do some mods without installing custom recovery and rooting your phone.
Cheers.
Would this work for adding the tethering bypass line in the build prop?
Yes it will. What's the line again I was looking for it the other day and couldn't find it...
Works are per OP's original post, tested and boosted the headphone volume without a problem.
Headphone path is /system/etc/mixer_paths.xml
So as per OP's example to pull: adb pull /system/etc/mixer_paths.xml c:/Mods
push: adb push c:/Mods/mixer_paths.xml /system/etc
I'm using the OP's "Mods" folder to demonstrate the file path but this may vary on your PC.
Can I use this to push SuperSU / etc to my device without having to permanently flash TWRP?
skrowl said:
Can I use this to push SuperSU / etc to my device without having to permanently flash TWRP?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can certainly push the files to system partition and they will retain there after reboot. So if you know which files have to be pushed for SuperSU then give that a go. It shouldn't break anything.
I haven't tried pushing SuperSU files to system partition before so I can't guarantee that OTAs will work after this. The only way to find out is to try it i guess...
Can you run nandroids?
not sure if it's allowed or not.. but with this can i push hosts file onto the phone as well for ad-blocking...?????
I will say thanks now and try it later. These are the type of tweaks I would like to make to my phone. Do you know if changing the DPI cause any stock applications to show up broken like they do on the Samsung phones?
NCguy said:
Can you run nandroids?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Im not sure what you mean?
rohit25 said:
not sure if it's allowed or not.. but with this can i push hosts file onto the phone as well for ad-blocking...?????
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If it's on the system partition then I yes you can.
locolbd said:
I will say thanks now and try it later. These are the type of tweaks I would like to make to my phone. Do you know if changing the DPI cause any stock applications to show up broken like they do on the Samsung phones?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've never had a problem with changing DPI using this method on a nexus phone if that helps.
denk said:
Im not sure what you mean?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you run nandroids backups from TWRP by just booting into it?
okay so after i did this i get the following during boot up
"Your device is corrupt. It can't be trusted and may not work properly". Does this mean i will not get Securty Updates any more? I saw i had an update before i performed this however, now i do not see that update notifications any more.
locolbd said:
okay so after i did this i get the following during boot up
"Your device is corrupt. It can't be trusted and may not work properly". Does this mean i will not get Securty Updates any more? I saw i had an update before i performed this however, now i do not see that update notifications any more.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I got this too when I flashed MOAB via adb sideload. I'm just wondering if the same warning appears with the adb push method. Also, the file's permissions don't need to be set after adb push?
My main concern is if Android Pay still works with the red triangle warning. Anyone?
FYI Flashing back to stock is no issue for me.
NCguy said:
Can you run nandroids backups from TWRP by just booting into it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think if you get the latest TWRP which supports decryption of data partition (where all your stuff is) you should be able to back it up.
Edit: backup works on nexus 5 with temporary TWRP boot. Sorry I'm still waiting for my 6p to arrive.
locolbd said:
okay so after i did this i get the following during boot up
"Your device is corrupt. It can't be trusted and may not work properly". Does this mean i will not get Securty Updates any more? I saw i had an update before i performed this however, now i do not see that update notifications any more.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for trying it out! Sometimes OTA notifications take a little while to come up after reboot. But based on the warning Im afraid that they might be disabled now. It looks like it runs some sort of a check on the system partition to verify its legitimacy. So modifying files would be fine on it using this method but looks like adding them won't work.
TWRP just released their recovery with decryption support so you can just follow the standard procedure or just temporary booting into TWRP and rooting from there which works as well.
denk said:
I think if you get the latest TWRP which supports decryption of data partition (where all your stuff is) you should be able to back it up.
Edit: backup works on nexus 5 with temporary TWRP boot. Sorry I'm still waiting for my 6p to arrive.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On your Nexus5 I assume you are also unrooted? And have you tried a Nandroid restore, booted TWRP, no root?
NCguy said:
On your Nexus5 I assume you are also unrooted? And have you tried a Nandroid restore, booted TWRP, no root?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just ran a restore to test it for you. Works fine as well.
My N5 is unrooted.
.
denk said:
Just ran a restore to test it for you. Works fine as well.
My N5 is unrooted.
.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks a lot for that. I didn't unlock the bootloader. Ugh. Time to start over. To me nandroids alone make it worth the effort.
Hey All
I'm new to Android but not linux.
Bought cheap Allwinner type 5.1.1 tablet - 10.6" Fusion5 108 Octa Core Android Tablet PC
rooted it using KingRoot, messed around with Supersume to remove KingRoot and now device won't boot properly. Using adb I can see dmesg is complaining about debuggered which is actually now a zero byte file. su won't work now and I don't have the rights to fix it.
Before I did any of this the first thing I did as root was backup the mmc partitions to a USB stick.
The bootloader and recovery areas have not been changed.
Can I use my system partition backup to create a update.zip for use in recovery mode?
Or maybe in fastboot though I'm currently having problems getting fastboot to see my tablet whether I use linux or windows so recovery mode fix prefered..
lol
Looks like the solution is to post here, and then find a partial answer 5 minutes later.
fastboot command on linux didn't work (despite adb working, udev configured etc)
Then tried with manufacturer id
fastboot -i 0x1f3a
then works
Then did
fastboot -i 0x1f3a erase system
fastboot -i 0x1f3a flash system /home/user/android/13-11-16/system
It complained that about magic so I suspect this DIDN'T work. although data was sent.
fastboot -i 0x1f3a reboot
and device came up in a graphical environment asking for wireless password. Judging by network trace on my router I think it might be trying to download a factory image over the Internet. Will see.
Bit confused as my system parition backup is like 900Mb but when I did flash system I think it said device reported size was 32MB approx. More to learn
OK
The 32Mb was referring to buffer size, so can confirm system flash did work.
Device was booting, getting to graphical environment, and then trying to connect some web servers - not sure why really but seem to have got past that point.
Now can't install apps - get stuff like
W/art ( 9462): Unable to open /data/dalvik-cache/. to delete it's contents: Permission denied
W/art ( 9462): Unable to open /data/dalvik-cache/arm to delete it's contents: Permission denied
W/art ( 9462): Could not create image space with image file '/system/framework/boot.art'. Attempting to fall back to imageless running. Error was: Unable to relocate image '/system/framework/boot.art' from '/system/framework/arm/boot.art' to '/data/dalvik-cache/arm/[email protected]@boot.art': Only the zygote can create the global boot image.
Think /data is corrupt so will flash my backup of that.
I'm more thinking outloud at this point rather than expecting people to do it for me But I'll post anyway if that's ok if only for my own reference - though any insights by all means.
Can't flash data backup.
Ended up with 13Gb file from mmc copy when system was working so after img2img didn't seem to be working used ext2simg on it as it was a ext image.
Created a more reasonable sparse 887335016 file.
fastboot wouldn't flash it though complaining that data partition was unknown. Searching seems to suggest that sometimes the bootloader doesn't know about all partitions (though it does about system which was flashed ok).
Tried playing with other recovery environments. Not willing to flash anything at this point so trying flashboot boot <img>. No luck so far - device just stays on bootloader splash screen. Probably not great that this device is a Allwinner A38 to which there doesn't seem to be huge support at the moment.
Even tried flashboot boot <recovery partition dump> file I made and that doesn't work.
Trimmed the first 0x800 so image starts with kernel code without joy.
A binwalk of the initrd image inside the dump shows a init.recovery.sun8i.rc file, and a default.prop with
ro.secure=1
ro.allow.mock.location=0
ro.debuggable=0
in init
# Always start adbd on userdebug and eng builds
on property:ro.debuggable=1
write /sys/class/android_usb/android0/enable 1
start adbd
So assuming default.prop is used (I'm still learning) then that's why I can't adb when in recovery mode. Seems stupid to design it that way.
I'm thinking if I can restore data partition it will fix the can't install apps problem, though perhaps the /system part is fundamentally busted. If I can reinstall KingRoot and root again I assume the device will be usable as it would effectively undo my supersume attempt to remove it.
Env partition dump I made used by the bootloader there is
Code:
boot_normal=sunxi_flash read 40007800 boot;boota 40007800 boot
boot_recovery=sunxi_flash read 40007800 recovery;boota 40007800 recovery
Usage:
sunxi_flash read command parmeters :
parmeters 0 : addr to load(hex only)
parmeters 1 : the name of the part to be load
[parmeters 2] : the number of bytes to be load(hex only)
if [parmeters 2] not exist, the number of bytes to be load is the size of the part indecated on partemeter 1
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So maybe I need to specify the correct memory location when I'm fastboot boot'ing
There's no image type header specifing load address at the start of the recovery part dump I made.
Didn't manage to boot the recovery image - don't know why but a challenge for another day. Would probably be easier with UART access or similar to see what is actually happening.
In the end I mounted my /system backup on my linux server, cleaned it of KingRoot crap, and flashed it. Now everything is fine! Except no root access and the script I added to give me it comes us as unlabeled in selinux and isn't accessible.
The learning journey continues
og0 said:
Didn't manage to boot the recovery image - don't know why but a challenge for another day. Would probably be easier with UART access or similar to see what is actually happening.
In the end I mounted my /system backup on my linux server, cleaned it of KingRoot crap, and flashed it. Now everything is fine! Except no root access and the script I added to give me it comes us as unlabeled in selinux and isn't accessible.
The learning journey continues
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know this is a 2 year old thread... but does the OP still have that firmware that fixed the tab??
I have a Fusion5_108 with the A83T allwinner processor, stuck in a boot loop, wont get past the 'no command' screen when trying to recover,
think my only option is to make an sd card with a working firmware on it, and load it onto the devise like that, but i cant find a firmware or anything for this tablet