Hi,
Just a quick question. I've got a Fire 7 (not HD, just the cheap version for the lad for Christmas) running OS 5.0.1 and I just want to ditch the amazon launcher mess. I've managed to get it adb enabled but I'm getting an error when I run this shell script:
adb shell
su
pm disable com.amazon.firelauncher
this is the error:
/system/bin/sh su: not found
Not ideal I'm guessing yes to root.
Cheers,
Rob
su is the command to invoke superuser, or root access. The actual executable is /system/bin/sh su, which it can't find.
You will need to have root access, and then install su using some superuser manager (I personally prefer superuser, but haven't gotten it to work on my fire hd6 2014; supersu however does work).
EDIT:
I've got a Fire 7 (not HD, just the cheap version for the lad for Christmas)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You may be asking in the wrong forum (not that I mind, but any 'root guides' you'll find here are for the Fire HD 6 and Fire HD 7) -- if you've got a Fire 7, you likely want this forum instead. Mind I'm not 100% on that being the right forum -- I'm just 100% on this being the wrong one. Close enough for simple stuff like this to be the same, but different enough that a root guide in this forum will likely not work for you.
Hi, thanks for the reply, you're right, think I wandered into the wrong forum. Found this useful looking thread on the amazon fire forum which sounds like it will do exactly what I need for now:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/amazon-fire/general/alternative-launcher-one-click-script-t3239966
k2trf said:
su is the command to invoke superuser, or root access. The actual executable is /system/bin/sh su, which it can't find.
You will need to have root access, and then install su using some superuser manager (I personally prefer superuser, but haven't gotten it to work on my fire hd6 2014; supersu however does work).
EDIT:
You may be asking in the wrong forum (not that I mind, but any 'root guides' you'll find here are for the Fire HD 6 and Fire HD 7) -- if you've got a Fire 7, you likely want this forum instead. Mind I'm not 100% on that being the right forum -- I'm just 100% on this being the wrong one. Close enough for simple stuff like this to be the same, but different enough that a root guide in this forum will likely not work for you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cheers,
Rob
Related
Hello,
I rooted my 8.9" and lose root after i installed busybox. Right now, i cannot install SU binary. I tried factory reset, unroot, and reroot without any success. Is there a way i can install SU binary manually?
Thanks.
anyone???
It appears that I will have to live with it.
Thanks.
auky said:
It appears that I will have to live with it.
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know what or how you did what you did. You won't get many answers without providing specific examples.
I for one have NEVER heard of ANYONE losing root from BusyBox, but everyone I know, including myself, uses BusyBox Pro v. 10.5 currently. Most of the people I know also use SuperSU from Chainfire. Generically saying tha some busybox installation messed with some generic root or SU installation/binary, really does not give anyone much to go on.
You can apply the root exploit again. There is no issue with that, or you can use adb to copy the su binary over, set permissions & ownership & the cp it to the correct directory.
At any rate, there are too many possibilities & possible solutions depending on what you did & how you did it.
GSLEON3 said:
I don't know what or how you did what you did. You won't get many answers without providing specific examples.
I for one have NEVER heard of ANYONE losing root from BusyBox, but everyone I know, including myself, uses BusyBox Pro v. 10.5 currently. Most of the people I know also use SuperSU from Chainfire. Generically saying tha some busybox installation messed with some generic root or SU installation/binary, really does not give anyone much to go on.
You can apply the root exploit again. There is no issue with that, or you can use adb to copy the su binary over, set permissions & ownership & the cp it to the correct directory.
At any rate, there are too many possibilities & possible solutions depending on what you did & how you did it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi GSLEON3,
You have given me hope. Thank you for the respond. I rooted my HDX 8.9 with no issue. Without knowing if I have busybox, I downloaded and installed the attached busybox apk. After that, I lose root. When I open SuperSU, I was asked to install SU binary, but when I click "Normal", the SU binary installation will fail. I tried unrooting and rerooting (with Bin4ry method as well as manual) without any success. Error messages such as "must be SUID to work properly" when I tried unroot and reroot. Guess i lose write ability. I will really appreciate it if you can tell me how to adb to copy SU binary or help me get root back.
Thanks.
Have a strange one I don't know how to fix. Purchased a Pyle PTBL102BCD tablet for the Mrs. to use basically as an ebook reader (according to About, running 4.2.2). When it came in I started sideloading apps to prepare it for her (I do not have a Google account), and searched on the Net about rooting the device. Found a one-click that worked with a different Pyle tablet, so I gave it a shot.
Now I have root access _only_ through the adb shell. None of the apps (including Superuser.apk itself as tested by updating /system/bin/su) can get root access, yet I have no problem running root through an adb shell - remounted file systems, even performed an su which is the only instance Superuser.apk's log shows. Root access in the shell remains between reboots, so it's not a temporary root.
If the adb shell has root, I _should_ be able to use it to grant access to everything else, and I've followed a few different "manual" root instructions (having different permission settings for su and busybox), with no joy. So long as I connect with a USB cable and type on the Windows machine, I'm god. On the tablet itself...not so much.
I hope that someone with a more intimate knowledge of Android internals can point me in the right direction for achieving root completely. Currently have Titanium Backup and ConnectBot (long java errors when I attempt to su there) installed to test root, Superuser v3.1.3 and su v3.1.1. Permissions on su are -rwsr-sr-x. And the human is confused.
Did you get anywhere with this? I have the same problem. What one-click did you use?
mfurlend said:
Did you get anywhere with this? I have the same problem. What one-click did you use?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Side note; REALLY hate the new forum software. With all the untrusted Google and Amazon javascript (which my company firewalls), it's a pain for me to even log in let alone post replies. (And I wonder if I'm the only person in the world sick to death of all the unnecessary ajax garbage...)
Anywho, used Kingo, rooted and unrooted a few times, until I finally acquired complete root on the thing. Once I did, I could run Samba, and once that worked, I could more easily transfer files and apks to the tablet.
Still don't understand why it was left in such a...weird...state - having root by default in adb is just a scary thing!
thanks for the information. I tried doing that but I encountered various problems. Eventually, after trying to do it manually, I totally screwed up the device. Now it won't boot.. I still have access to adb. I need to flash this thing. Do you know what the stock ROM is?
mfurlend said:
Do you know what the stock ROM is?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No...I can give you the Kernel version info (3.0.36+ [email protected] #48) and build number (rk3168_k11_4.2.2_v20131230), but other than that no clue.
OK, I just got an Amazon Fire HD 6 for free from a friend brand new so I figured this would be a great thing to learn rooting android and other things. No cost = no loss if I screw it all up.
Basically my goal is jut to root it to get it to be more like a regular old android tablet and not to have all the Amazon crap constantly running in the background sending all my info to Amazon every minute of every day. From reading here this seems possible. Please tell me if It's not.
Background:
I know quite a bit about PCs running Windows since 3.0 and have dabbled with Linux and Apache off and on over the years but I am by no means an expert. Advanced amateur might be better.
The tablet is running Fire OS 5.1.2. I don't know what it had when I first turned it on but I had no idea what I was going to do with it so I let it update itself until it got to the current 5.1.2.
I tried reading some of the tutorials but they seem way over my head as they seem to assume a knowledge of certain acronyms that I am not yet familiar with.
This is what I think I know so far. Please tell me if I'm wrong...
1. It is not possible to root 5.1.2. I probably should have left it at whatever it was when I got it which was probably 4.5.x.
2. Because of #1 above the only way for me to root this is to downgrade to 4.5.x.
Do I have that right so far? Because if I don't have at least that right then I am way off, so let's start there.
My goal would be for this thread to become a real "how to root your HD 6" for real total newbs like me. Step by step on what to download, from where, what is a TWRP what do you use it for, what is an ADB and what do you use it for, from turning the thing on to ending up with a nicely rooted tablet.
In case anyone else wants to know what happened and how I accomplished all, the answers are in page 6 of this topic ...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/fire-hd/help/help-thread-question-noob-friendly-t3206776
Here is a full tutorial in one place...
First off these instructions are for the Amazon Fire HD 6 gen4 running Fire OS 5.1.2 only. Will it work on other things? Who knows. Will it work on another of the exact same tablet? I have no idea. Would it work on this same tablet if I had to do it over again? Could be ... but then again, ya never know. So proceed at your own risk. All I know is that it worked for me here today on this particular tablet at this time and I hope I never have to do it again.
All of these instructions can be found at the following link at about page 6 of that topic.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/fire-hd/help/help-thread-question-noob-friendly-t3206776/page6
1: First I installed the USB driver from Amazon at the following link:
https://developer.amazon.com/appsan...etting-up-your-kindle-fire-tablet-for-testing
and then I downloaded the ADB SDK tools from links from this tutorial:
http://www.howtogeek.com/125769/how...roid-debug-bridge-utility/?PageSpeed=noscript
After enabling USB debugging on the device I had ADB ability.
2. Downloaded the Kingroot version 4.8.5 apk from here and ran it:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/android/apps-games/one-click-root-tool-android-2-x-5-0-t3107461
Let it go to town doing it's thing. Afterwards it claimed success and said that I was rooted.
3. Ran the following commands given by DoLooper from above xda post to disable OTA update:
Open a CMD window from folder with adb.exe by right clicking in that folder and holding down the shift key. Then run these commands one at a time:
adb -d shell "su -c 'pm disable com.amazon.otaverifier'"
adb -d shell "su -c 'pm disable com.amazon.device.software.ota'"
adb -d shell "su -c 'pm disable com.settings.systemupdates'"
Tried to rename OTA file from DoLooper instructions using Simple Explorer with root priviledges (not ES) - fail - does not seem to want to rename the file for some reason.
So at this point I was successfully rooted. But I basically had a virus running on my tablet called Kingroot . I checked using another app and I saw that it was constantly connected to China. Bad? I don't know but certainly does not making me feel all warm and fuzzy so next step was to get rid of Kingroot. Problem is that if you uninstall it it sets you back to unrooted default. So ... read on.
4. Installed Terminal Emulator for Android from http://www.apkmirror.com/
6. Uploaded the 4 files from the zip file from wolfdroid from second link in sd_shadow post in that same topic. Can be found here:
http://www.w0lfdroid.com/2015/05/How-to-Remove-Replace-KingUser-KingRoot-with-SuperSU.html
7. ran the 2 commands from wolfdroid website using terminal emulator.
This removed Kingroot and left me rooted. Then I found an updated version of SuperSU and updated it too. So now I have a tablet that is rooted and I can install apps that require root access. Also I was able to uninstall some Amazon apps, disable others and basically stop it from phoning home.
BTW, I didn't recommend disabling com.settings.systemupdates. They do this on the 2015 Fires, but I have not used it on either the 2014s or 2015.
Yes, I apologize. You are correct. You did not suggest that one. That one I did get from the other topic. However, I did it and I don't see any negative effects so far.
But you know more than I so is there any reason you could see toward not doing that one?
Hello ive not done any guides before but since i had to search all over to try find out what i was looking for and stumbled across a lot of good information and thought id share it. None of this was my findings but there isn't anything clear on how to actually accomplish this on a Fire stick.
Im going to attempt to share how i have managed.
This guide assumes you already know how to transfer files to your stick.
First off, current Fire stick os is 5.2.1.0 and is rootable with Kingoroot.
https://root-apk.kingoapp.com
1. Download Kingoroot and ADB to your Fire stick, do this whichever way you normally get apk/files onto your Fire stick.
2. Download Kingoroot superuser and ADB to your Fire stick.
3. Run the Kingoroot tool and let it finish, when you have root, install Kingo roots Superuser. (If you install this before rooting it wont make any difference).
Now you should have a rooted Fire stick on 5.2.1.0 with Kingoroots SuperUser.
Now its time to downgrade your Fire stick. This file was provided by AFTVnews over at another thread and cuki3r3k83bln accomplished downgrade on the thread also so please leave thanks for them as before he posted the file and information i had no idea it was possible. Im suggesting to download the 5.0.5 file as i did because this was when firestarter worked with home button detection.
Download Fire Stick os 5.0.5
http://amzdigitaldownloads.edgesuit...te-kindle-montoya-54.5.3.7_user_537174420.bin
Once you have it downloaded rename the downloaded file to update.bin.
Im going to explain how i did it, i know there is many other variations on how to accomplish this and im not too familiar with adb commands but the way i will show is the way it worked for me.
We need to transfer the downloaded and renamed update.bin to the Fire stick so if you would like to transfer it with apps to fire or through command or any other variation thats fine but ill show commands used from windows laptop using adbLink.
Please note, if your using a different method to transfer you will have to slightly modify step 5 on where your update.bin is stored so cd /sdcard/download. if your update.bin is stored in download folder.
Another note is to make sure your file name is correct, mine was named update.bin.bin rather than update.bin this was fine just make sure to name it correctly or you will have to modify step 6 and step 8.
1. Open up adbLink and connect your device.
2. Push the update.bin to the sdcard. (this takes quite alot of time as your pushing 311mb file so be patient)
3. Once pushed you need to open up ADB Shell.
4. Run the command: su
5. Run the command: cd /sdcard
6. Run the command: mv ./update.bin /cache/
If you get an error about no space on device do the following:
Run the command rm -f /cache/*.bin
Run the command rm -f /cache/*.zip
Run the command exit
Run the command exit then reopen ADB Shell in adbLink repeat step 6.
7. Run the command cd /cache/recovery
8. Run the command echo --update_package=/cache/update.bin > command
9. Run the command reboot recovery
Your Fire stick should automatically start the downgrade and take 10 minutes or so.
As soon as its finished go back to your Kingoroot app and re-root your Fire stick. Then block updates (method 1) using AFTVnews guide at:
http://www.aftvnews.com/how-to-block-software-updates-on-the-amazon-fire-tv-or-fire-tv-stick/
You should now be on 5.0.5 rooted and have updates blocked
All your apps should be still intact. Make sure you uninstall appstarter/firestopper and reinstall firestarter 3.2.3 (if you use it)
Then follow AFTVnews guide on how to re-enable it here:
http://www.aftvnews.com/how-to-cont...v-and-fire-tv-stick-software-version-5-0-5-1/
Please give the credit deserved to @AFTVnews.com and @cuki3r3k83bln
Its suggested all over to hold off before doing anything that could brick the device until rbox releases a recovery.
Please do not use any type of Su modifying tool/script/apk eg: SuperSume as these do not work and you will end up with a small brick.
Also its been pointed out to me by @deanr1977 that if your going to use this guide and decide to update Fire Stick os in the future, it maybe safer to unroot it first.
With that out of the way please excuse the bad layout of the guide as im no expert and would like to just share my experience.
Would I be able to go back to 5.2.1.0 once custom recovery and rom is released?
FireTho1 said:
Would I be able to go back to 5.2.1.0 once custom recovery and rom is released?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i cant see any reason why not, either grab the 5.2.1.0 .bin file and follow the guide using that or let it automatically update after re-enabling updates.
Are there any reasons for downgrading to 5.0.5? Does it have any advantages?
Bierfreund said:
Are there any reasons for downgrading to 5.0.5? Does it have any advantages?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As far as im aware upto now, it seems that Firestarter home button detection works as it should, and firmware after this Firestarter will not work with home button detection.
Which is a big thing for me personally as i only use Firestick for netflix and kodi and its much easier to launch from within Firestarter.
Its good to know that the process of upgrading/downgrading is applicable to Fire stick as you never know what Amazon will try to take from you.
You sir are my hero. Kudos for the tutorial!
sconnyuk said:
i cant see any reason why not, either grab the 5.2.1.0 .bin file and follow the guide using that or let it automatically update after re-enabling updates.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its not recommended to let it auto update from root, unroot first then re-enable the update progress.
Also please can you note in your guide that its not recommended to try to swap the Su for Chainfires Su with the Super Sume or Super Sumepro app because so many people on this forum have bricked with this method & if any new users try your way & after want to unroot/swap method after the first boot they could have a non working device.
Ive not tried this guide myself (i dont need too) but if its working fine this info would be good to have here.
deanr1977 said:
Its not recommended to let it auto update from root, unroot first then re-enable the update progress.
Also please can you note in your guide that its not recommended to try to swap the Su for Chainfires Su with the Super Sume or Super Sumepro app because so many people on this forum have bricked with this method & if any new users try your way & after want to unroot/swap method after the first boot they could have a non working device.
Ive not tried this guide myself (i dont need too) but if its working fine this info would be good to have here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Fair point about pointing out about the brickable and dangerous su swapping methods with supersu me etc.
I will add a mention about it after the line that reads:
'Its suggested all over to hold off before doing anything that could brick the device until rbox releases a recovery.'
As for not recommended to auto update while rooted, ive had 2 sticks and a Fire Tv 2 auto update from 5.0.5 to 5.0.5.1 and then to 5.2.1.0 when my router was reset, (im sure im not the only one from what ive read either).
But since im a helping type of guy ill add this also.
Ok mate, just going by what's been said from the AFTVNews & Amazon Firestick forums. Glad you are including this thanks, Its just some only skim through the threads & read only the parts they want to so if this is included it may cut down on the "I've bricked my Amazon device please help threads" which clog up the forum.
Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk
i'm trying to downgrade to the point where display mirroring worked on windows devices, this is before 5.0.5, can i use this method to downgrade to another bin before 5.0.5?
sins07 said:
i'm trying to downgrade to the point where display mirroring worked on windows devices, this is before 5.0.5, can i use this method to downgrade to another bin before 5.0.5?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Id take a stab and say if your stick originally came with a firmware below 5.0.5 but I honestly do not know as ive not tried but I cant see why it wouldnt work. You can go from 5.2.1.0 to 5.0.5.1 or to 5.0.5 so id imagine so.
What features have been removed by 5.0.5? Im interested myself and may try this myself if there is features I could use.
Amazing! I can't believe this was hard to find as all the news out there say you can only root the stick using a hardware mod.
I downgraded and rooted both my Sticks. Installed Firestarter 3.2.3, installed Seeder, removed unneeded processes from running and these things are super quick now. You still have to load the crappy slow Amazon launcher to keep the settings but oh well. Nicely done, now I hope a recovery option comes out and I can mess around further . Heatsink and overclocking anyone? lol
@vulcan4d recovery & prerooted rom is being worked on at the moment by rbox in this forum
Sent from my SM-G900F using Tapatalk
vulcan4d said:
Amazing! I can't believe this was hard to find as all the news out there say you can only root the stick using a hardware mod.
I downgraded and rooted both my Sticks. Installed Firestarter 3.2.3, installed Seeder, removed unneeded processes from running and these things are super quick now. You still have to load the crappy slow Amazon launcher to keep the settings but oh well. Nicely done, now I hope a recovery option comes out and I can mess around further . Heatsink and overclocking anyone? lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can I ask what processes you removed/stopped and how you accomplished this?
Id like to do the same on 2 of my sticks.
sconnyuk said:
Can I ask what processes you removed/stopped and how you accomplished this?
Id like to do the same on 2 of my sticks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would like to give credit to this post for removing unneeded services:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/fire-tv/help/root-disabling-apps-services-bloat-t3325333
I only found a few from the list but that list was meant for a Fire TV so I'm sure there is more running. Just launch ADB Shell in ADBFire/Link and type pm disable <service_name>
vulcan4d said:
I would like to give credit to this post for removing unneeded services:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/fire-tv/help/root-disabling-apps-services-bloat-t3325333
I only found a few from the list but that list was meant for a Fire TV so I'm sure there is more running. Just launch ADB Shell in ADBFire/Link and type pm disable <service_name>
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks ive disabled them as per the guide you linked to. Can I further ask what the program seeder does and whether to have it set to aggressive or not?
Thanks for the info.
@sconnyuk i've downgraded successfully kingo root'ed stick 5.2.1->5.0.5 . But funny thing was under root shell command "wipe data " .It wiped device clean but root still stays on . Got OTA disabled and my other king root 5.0.5 stick will have similar treatment .
nicefile said:
@sconnyuk i've downgraded successfully kingo root'ed stick 5.2.1->5.0.5 . But funny thing was under root shell command "wipe data " .It wiped device clean but root still stays on . Got OTA disabled and my other king root 5.0.5 stick will have similar treatment .
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You will need to unroot it for root to go.
Kingoroot has the option to do this if its what you want.
You need mouse toggle for fire tv to navigate to the 'in app' menu icon if not plug fire stick into pc and run Windows version of Kingoroot to unroot.
Interesting, I just bought a 3rd Amazon stick to root. After running KingRoot, I've noticed I did not need to install KingUser at all. If you launch KingRoot again it allows you to launch KingoUser which is the same thing. I'm assuming that KingUser is just an updated version of what KingRoot already installs.
Sconnyuk, I checked all the boxes and chose Moderate. This was also mentioned in the XDA forums however sadly I cannot find the post anymore. Seeder is an application that has been around for a while which improves the response time on Android devices. There is a lot of technical details into how it works, but the point is the Amazon stick is not the fastest thing in the world and anything helps. Give it a try and see for yourself.
sconnyuk said:
Id take a stab and say if your stick originally came with a firmware below 5.0.5 but I honestly do not know as ive not tried but I cant see why it wouldnt work. You can go from 5.2.1.0 to 5.0.5.1 or to 5.0.5 so id imagine so.
What features have been removed by 5.0.5? Im interested myself and may try this myself if there is features I could use.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Miracast display mirroring became non-compliant with windows systems, it still works fine with android.
Hi,
I need to root a Zebra TC56 to install some other apps that require rooted Android. There is very little information in the way of rooting the Zebra TC56. I 'm pretty set on using Chainfire's superSU, but I cannot find any information on whether it will work on this hardware. Does anyone know if the superSU works on this device with Android 6? If not, is there another Root Tool that will work.
Any advice appreciated.
THANK YOU!
VK
1. Install BusyBox applet-suite what contains the SU-binary
2. Install latest SuperSU APK
jwoegerbauer said:
1. Install BusyBox applet-suite what contains the SU-binary
2. Install latest SuperSU APK
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BusyBox installed fine.
SuperSU will not install all the way. When I select to root, it says root not detected and then, "How to Root", which launches my browser to a site that no longer exists.
Now what?
Thank You!
edit: Still stuck at this point. I read about TWRP, KingoRoot and some other random apps. I cannot brick this touch computer; it is $1600; that would be a very expensive brick. :crying:
So, I have no idea if I am right, but maybe I need to open the terminal emulator and "su" install the SuperSU apk. But I have no idea and I don't want to experiment. Hopefully, someone can help me.
@vidarr_kerr
Don't confuse things:
SU is the super user who unrestrictedly can perform any operation on Android OS. As soon as SU got installed Android is rooted! Again: BusyBox you successfully installed contains the su applet.
SuperSU is merely a root-manager app: it maintains a database where is stored what app can act as super user. SuperSU app doesn't grant super user rights.
BTW:
TWRP has nothing to do with rooting device's Android, as this is also true with Magisk.
The device is still not rooted after the "BusyBox Installer (No Root)", from your link, was installed.
I installed BusyBox, I followed the directions to then copy a command, then open a terminal, paste the command in and hit enter, then nothing happened. SuperSU was not installed with it.
So, as you told me, I then installed the latest SuperSU APK from your link. It says it installed, but when I run it, it says root not detected and then has a link named, "How to Root", which launches my browser to a site that no longer exists.
I followed what you said. Where did I go wrong?
Thank You!
You didn't get it. Sorry to say this.
jwoegerbauer said:
You didn't get it. Sorry to say this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Didn't get what?
I installed the BusyBox you gave me the link to.
I semi-installed the SuperSU you gave me the link to.
SuperSU did not fully install, because the Android is NOT rooted..
BusyBox had no SuperSU as part of it --the file you said to use even says "BusyBox Installer (No Root)".
(That should have tipped me off right away you had no clue, but I thought maybe you knew something.
So, you gave me the links for both of those files and it doesn't work.
I don't think you have any idea what you are doing; and shouldn't be explaining things you do not understand.
The "no root" BusyBox, does not include SuperSU.
If it did, why did you give me the link for the separate SuperSU file?
All the "no root" BB did was install a terminal emulator (with no su abilities).
The SuperSU didn't install, because the Android is NOT rooted.
If the Android WAS rooted, SuperSU would run and allow me to grant su privilges to the apps that require it to work.
You basically just wasted my time.
I would have just said "thank you" and moved on, but you are rude.
You don't know what you are talking about either.
Hopefully, this will help others, to not do what you say to do.
vidarr_kerr said:
Didn't get what?
I installed the BusyBox you gave me the link to.
I semi-installed the SuperSU you gave me the link to.
SuperSU did not fully install, because the Android is NOT rooted..
BusyBox had no SuperSU as part of it --the file you said to use even says "BusyBox Installer (No Root)".
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're right: BusyBox (No Root) doesn't come with SU-binary. Wasn't aware of this. I misinterpreted APK's title. Pitty.
ERRARE HUMANUM EST ( To err is human ).
Installing BusyBox containing SU-binary requires your device's bootloader got unlocked before, because Android's /system partition gets modified. Hence manage to unlock device's bootloader as 1st thing of all things. Good luck.
DL BusyBox latest: https://github.com/meefik/busybox/releases/download/1.31.1/busybox-1.31.1-46.apk
My last 2 cents here: SuperSU and SU binary are totally different things.