Related
I have been talking this over with Condemned Soul but wanted to see if anyone else has ran into this problem since he & I are both confused.
My fiances phone has been force closing a lot lately aka com.android phone not responding. I saw the first force close when I tried flashing Tazzs cm7 on his phone so thats when I first put on gsb 1.2
I switched his over to Sheds GSB on the 8th and it was great everything was fine but then I decided to try to improve on a few settings and when I restarted the phone it decided to start force closing.
I reflashed the rom and the gapps and everything seemed fine but then I wanted to put cs skull theme on his phpne since we had it on Kaos v9 but then when I restarted the phone after flashing the theme it force closed again.
So then I reflashed the rom and gapps again and got all his apps and settings all back how he had it and decided to do a Nandbackup so that we wouldnt have to keep reflashing the rom again and once I restarted the phone after the nandbackup it force closed again.
Long story short I reflashed the rom and gapps and now am in the process of getting his apps and settings back how he had it once again.
Am I doing something wrong to make it keep force closing? I would like to make a nandbackup at least for him so that we wont have to keep setting up his phone.
Thank you for any help
When you say you flash the ROMs, do you also do a wipe beforehand? If not, try doing a wipe and then install and see if that changes anything.
Yes I wiped both the factory and dalvk sorry I thought I mentioned that. lol.
labnjab said:
Yes I wiped both the factory and dalvk sorry I thought I mentioned that. lol.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its a problem that happens on certain ROMs with certain themes. Not sure there's a fix for it, I just got around it by not applying the phone.apk theme.
zerocool79346 said:
Its a problem that happens on certain ROMs with certain themes. Not sure there's a fix for it, I just got around it by not applying the phone.apk theme.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
phone.apk wasn't changed in the theme. Strange part is it's only on the one phone and haven't heard of it on any of the others.
CondemnedSoul said:
phone.apk wasn't changed in the theme. Strange part is it's only on the one phone and haven't heard of it on any of the others.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is odd.
Update:
This is still causing issues. Going to try and format the sd like tazz suggested, but moving my phone.apk to his didnt work, and yesterday he had to restart his phone and it did it again and needlessto say hes not very happy with his phone. Says its not reliable at all. If anyone else has anything else I can try it would be a big help. I have tried searching on google but dont find a whole lot of information. I just wish I could figure this out its got to be something I did or something stupid that I am missing.
There are a couple of next steps you can take.
If the problem is a software configuration issue, then it is possible that you will see the reason for the FC in the logcat.
The system logcat is designed as a "circular buffer" (in a way that it has a maximum size) - once you fill it to capacity, each new record which is added to the end causes information at the beginning to be lost. But, this also means that if a FC occurs, so long as you "dump the logcat" within a reasonable period of time after the FC happens, you will capture the moment in time that the FC occurred,
Generally, the "logcat" buffers get filled to capacity quite quickly at boot time (because there is lots and lots of "android" app activity), and quite a bit slower after the phone has been completely booted. If you are trying to capture a logcat event during the first boot, you need to continuously capture output to a file on your PC (it will be quite large) - but once the phone has completed booting, so long as you "run a logcat" within 5 or 10 minutes after a FC occurs, the relevant event(s) will be in the logcat.
If you want to capture it during the first boot cycle of a freshly flashed ROM, probably you ought to have a PC attached and dump the prodigious output to a file on the PC, as in
Code:
C:\MyWindozePC> adb shell logcat -v time > LogcatFileOnMyPC.txt
So long as the ROM you have flashed has "USB debugging" turned on by default, you can run the above command about 10-15 seconds after you see the 3 skating droids, and it will continuously place output into the local file on your PC. You need to interrupt the above command (Control-C) to get it to stop; you would usually do that a few seconds after you saw the FC, and then you would know that the log entries you are looking for at the end of the file.
(Note that logcat dumps are usually huge - don't bother trying to look at them with a text file viewer on the phone - they suck at handling large files... well, at least the ones that I have tried).
You could also instrument this on the BF's phone in a way where he can capture the info to the SD card anytime he is using the phone during the day with a couple taps of the screen, and then you could look at the logcat(s) later at your leisure - for instance by using Gscript Lite, and a simple script like this:
Code:
#! /system/bin/sh
_LOGDIR='/sdcard/logcats'
if [ ! -d ${_LOGDIR} ]; then
mkdir ${_LOGDIR}
fi
_tstamp=`date +%Y%m%d-%H%M`
logcat -v time -d > ${_LOGDIR}/logcat_${_tstamp}.txt
With this method, you just need to train him like a monkey to press the right keys after a FC occurs. If he's a clever monkey, you could even train him to send the logcat files to you via e-mail.
If the problem is due to an intermittent hardware issue with the phone, that will be tougher to identify. About the best you can do to make that determination is to return the phone software to stock and use the phone without installing any apps for a reasonable period of time and see if the problem continues to occur.
cheers
bftb0
Thank you for the detailed reply bfbt0 I was about to msg you when you responded.
I will have to give what you mentioned a try.
Is the gscript lite what I use for the adb shells or do I need another app as well. I have never done anything with adb or if I have it was something simple.
To clarify I would have to get his phone to fc again which is easy to do and then run a logcat. It sounds easy through the pc I just want to make sure I do it right. I would make a folder dedicated to where the logcats would be stored and then run it in the gscript lite? Meaning run the first code you posted.
Update ~ Never mind I found you had to have android sdk on your pc Im downloading that now. I still may need help tho.
labnjab said:
Update ~ Never mind I found you had to have android sdk on your pc Im downloading that now. I still may need help tho.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
GScript Lite is a free app on the market. It was put together by XDA member "rogro", and he has a paid version as well if you want to throw a couple bucks his way.
Using the script above with Gscript (Lite or Pro), you don't need to be tethered to a computer nor set up the SDK and drivers. (Only when you want to capture a full first ROM boot do you need to use a PC (because the logfile grows so big in that specific case).
If you can force the FC to occur, then using the Gscript Lite script I showed above will capture the information you want.
bftb0
PS There is a brief outline of how you load a script into Gscript Lite in that "Universal Root for Dummies" thread over on AF.
cheers
Thank you I will try that tonight and hopefully can figure out what the issue is
labnjab said:
To clarify I would have to get his phone to fc again which is easy to do and then run a logcat. It sounds easy through the pc I just want to make sure I do it right. I would make a folder dedicated to where the logcats would be stored and then run it in the gscript lite? Meaning run the first code you posted.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That code I posted checks to see if a folder exists, and if not creates it - /sdcard/logcats
No need for you to do it manually; the first time the script runs it creates that folder
But, yeah - wait for the FC to happen and then run that script within the next couple of minutes (no real hurry). It is also useful to make note of the time the phone displays when the FC occurs - it will be easier to find things in the logcat file by timestamp if you do that.
bftb0
Thank you I will do that as well. Thanks also for taking the time to help me.
I did the code on my phone to make sure I did it right and it gave me an error
says cannot create/logcat_20110222-1558.txt read only file system
did I do something wrong, just want to make sure that I can get it right before attempting it on his phone tonight. Thanks in advance.
labnjab said:
I did the code on my phone to make sure I did it right and it gave me an error
says cannot create/logcat_20110222-1558.txt read only file system
did I do something wrong, just want to make sure that I can get it right before attempting it on his phone tonight. Thanks in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you typed that script in by hand, you made a typo.
I checked it by cutting and pasting it - and then I tested it afterward, and it worked.
Probably you bolluxed up the _LOGDIR variable, or you inserted a space in the logcat command where there should not be one.
I would suggest that you cut and paste, rather than type.
Hmmmm... it occurs to me that those little "scrolling CODE text boxes" don't render correctly on the phones browser. Here's the same script, but without enclosing it in [ CODE ] [ /CODE ] tags:
#! /system/bin/sh
_LOGDIR='/sdcard/logcats'
if [ ! -d ${_LOGDIR} ]; then
mkdir ${_LOGDIR}
fi
_tstamp=`date +%Y%m%d-%H%M`
logcat -v time -d > ${_LOGDIR}/logcat_${_tstamp}.txt
Thank you for all your help. I got it to work and come to find out I didnt even need to use that program because it hasnt forced closed yet. He said he wiped the phone a bunch of times the other day when he was trying to get it back up and running when it forced closed on him while at work and now i rebooted it and backed it up and that usually caused a problem, so far so good.
I am tho going to format the sd card and redo the rom again just to be sure this problem doesnt happen again. Thank you again for all the help.
On some builds (even though it shouldn't be required) it is necessary to wipe multiple times. On Tazz's earlier builds of GB, people reported having to wipe 3x or more to get it running smooth. Always make sure you do a nand backup before flashing in the future lol. Hopefully the phone stays running good! If not, people are always here to help!
Sent from my Ginger Tazz using XDA App
I am by no means an expert, i just dove into this project 4 days ago, and since then, I've had to reformat my SD card about 8 times before I figured out how to get it stable. But now I have it running pretty stable, there are some issues still, but it at least runs linux pretty well. I'm mainly posting this because this would have saved me a lot of digging 4 days ago, and I figured I would help out any n00bs that just got a lapdock and just started playing with webtop.
*Disclaimer* I am not an expert, if you have a problem with any of these steps, please do not post them here, but in their respective threads. I take no credit for developing any of this, im just posting a list of steps from multiple sources. Also, if you break something, its not my fault*
The Guide
By the end of this guide, you will have a more functional linux as your webtop, with the XFCE4 interface. This uses webtop2sd, so if you break anything, you should be able to start over.
You will need a rooted Atrix, a lapdock (or other external device for using webtop on), and a microSD card, I suggest 2GB or bigger. I have a 32GB PNY class 10 card, for example.
1. Lets format/partition the SD card. Sogarth explains here how to do that. I highly suggest NOT doing this on your phone,and use a PC instead.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=15109152&postcount=5
2. Here, he explains how to install it after you partition your SD card. The app you need is in the bottom of the first post.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=15109140&postcount=4
3. Now plug it in to your lapdock, and it should boot up into the new webtop. You should see 2 icons in the middle, the awn-dock config tool, and the webtop config tool. We just need to focus on the latter one. Open that up, click on Administration on the left,and click on Install by lxterminal. Try clicking on the terminal icon on the dock, if it comes up, you are gold. If it acts funky, like your screen goes black but doesn't open the terminal, open up the webtop config tool again, and the button to install it should be lit up again. You know its installed if you click install,close out the config tool, and reopen it to see Install grayed out.
4. If all goes well, you should be at a terminal. The first thing we want to do, is fix a really annoying and OS breaking bug, regarding the tzdata package. It seems to be corrupted, so we want to make sure it doesn't get in the way of installing other packages. This issue was the bane of my existence for 3 days.
following these steps, we will fix it
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=18465066&postcount=3
type this into the terminal to bring up the said file so you can edit it
Code:
sudo leafpad /var/lib/dpkg/info/tzdata.postinst
then put exit 0 on the 3rd empty line
I would reboot your phone after doing this, just for good measure
5. When you get back into the webtop, lets run the Webtop Scripts, the files and instructions are here for that. This will fix many broken dependencies. Arvati did a great job with these fixes!
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1192488
just put that file in your downloads folder, then run the commands from that first code box, and I just said yes everytime it asked you what you wanted to do. I would reboot your phone again after this.
6. Now lets start installing stuff! Lets start with synaptic, which works a lot better if you install via command line instead of the webtop config tool.
So run this from the terminal:
Code:
sudo aptitude install synaptic
7. Open up synaptic by typing 'sudo synaptic' into the terminal. Lets install XFCE4 now, just search for that there,and install the XFCE4 package, it should install all of the other required packages to run the new interface.
8. Once it is installed,we need to disable the webtop interface,and enable xfce4. I referenced this thread to do that:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1054213
Type this into the terminal to edit the right file
Code:
sudo leafpad /osh/usr/local/bin/start-oshwt-2.sh
put a # in front of
sfalv -i "awm-autostart"
sfalv -i "webtop-wallpaper"
so it looks like
#sfalv -i "awm-autostart"
#sfalv -i "webtop-wallpaper"
then add these 2 lines
sfalv -i "xfce4-session"
sfalv -i "xfce4-panel"
save it then reboot your phone. Hopefully you should be in XFCE4 now!
OPTIONAL:
*To fix an issue with mounting USB storage devices:
I had the same problem, got it to work by adding this to /etc/PolicyKit/PolicyKit.conf
Code:
<config version="0.1">
<match action="org.freedesktop.hal.storage.mount-removable">
<match user="myaccountnamehere">
<return result="yes"/>
</match>
</match>
</config>
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://www.linuxquestions.org/quest...b-storages-debian-squeeze-723251/#post3537149
* To Fix mounting Windows network shares
Chimpdaddy has posted a way to get Samba file shares to work, this requires having a custom kernel though:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=22018703&postcount=67
Chimpdaddy said:
Firstly you need to have a kernal, like Faux's, that supports CIFS.
Then install Samba4, via synaptic package manager if you like.
Probably an idea to reboot.
Then create a folder (using terminal) where you want yr share, 'sudo mkdir /media/SHARE' for eg..
then run this;
sudo mount -t cifs -o username=guest //YOURSHAREIP/SHARE /media/SHARE
if you get no errors yr golden
If you want it to mount on startup edit /etc/fstab to include
//YOURSHAREIP/SHARE /media/SHARE cifs username=guest,_netdev 0 0
check this with 'mount -a'
That should do you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OR
You could use an app like ESFileExplorer on your phone to drag and drop files, this is what I have been using,and it works pretty well for both direct windows shares and FTP. The Mobile View is great for having a window open for secondary tasks like this.
EXPERIMENTAL:
This can be buggy,so use at your own risk!
To install chromium browser, follow these steps. This is said to have better performance than the built in firefox, but for me, it crashed a lot, I went back to firefox
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1374567
ISSUES STILL PENDING:
*currently no major issues*
LIST OF SUGGESTED APPS:
OpenOffice.org
Qalculator
XChat IRC
This looks good. I just got my lapdock on Thursday and I have been putting togther all of the Docs to get it the way I want, but this is pretty much the results I wanted. I will try your instructions and get back with you.
Thanks.
Which ROM are you running on?
stock ROM.....
Thanks for the guide.
There is one link that appears to be broken though,
On step 5, the thread goes nowhere. That's where I'm stuck right now
my bad,fixed
i actually managed to do all this on my own, but just recently came into a unexpected problem. i'm kind of a linux noob, and it seems like the file manager button on xfce4-panel doesn't lead to the stock file manager i was using before (doesn't lead to anything), does anyone have any suggestions for a good file manager to replace it with?
Thanks for the fix, I've completed all steps and it was working for about an hour. Until I installed chromium.
I have a weird problem where the lapdock doesn't detect webtop and says no hdmi input detected. Not sure if you know anything about that, but just wanted to let you guys know (might be a defect on my lapdock). I'm trying to figure out a fix for that now.
I would suggest starting over if that happened,sounds like something broke
as for an XFCE4 file manager, it should install Thunar by default
teeth_03 said:
I would suggest starting over if that happened,sounds like something broke
as for an XFCE4 file manager, it should install Thunar by default
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
sudo apt-get thunar fixed the problem for me, thanks though
followed your steps and it works great ,i've been messing with this for over a week trying to get this to work ,that ztdata bug fix did the job.. THANK YOU.....
toe451 said:
followed your steps and it works great ,i've been messing with this for over a week trying to get this to work ,that ztdata bug fix did the job.. THANK YOU.....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
dont thank me, thank the guy who figured out how to fix it
webtop2sd app crashes on first run...any ideas?
Here's the answer
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=19993891&postcount=671
bigworm50 said:
webtop2sd app crashes on first run...any ideas?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To the point of installing XFCE4, and synaptic just sits on preparing packages forever... I let it sit for 30+ minutes last night and going on almost 60 minutes currently...is something wrong or does it take that long?
you might want to cancel that, reboot your phone and try again, it should not take that long
can you do one on how to install Chrome instead of Firefox for a noob like myself. Thank you.
there is already a link to the chromium browser thread in the OT
I would caution that its kind of experimental, I installed it and it kept on crashing for me, so when I re-did my webtop after that,I just decided to use firefox
For step 1, can we partition this as ext4 as faux kernels support it?
added info on fixing an issue with mounting USB drives, and a note about chrome
I have tried following these directions to temporarily get the Advanced menu back for the CM10.2 nightlies so I can enable dock audio. I keep getting the following error:
Error type 3
Error: Activity class {com.cyanogenmod.device/com.cyanogenmod.device.DeviceSettings} does not exist
It seems to work on other VZW Note 2 Android 4.3 based roms, but I cannot get it to work on our nightlies.
Is there an additional file or entry missing somewhere?
Thank you for any assistance.
Hopper8 said:
Ok, for anyone who is missing the 'Device settings' or 'Advanced Settings' menu (since it was left out of CM10.2. See here for more details.) These settings include mDNIE screen settings and backlight control. I for one use them.
Anyway: To get these settings back, follow these steps.
1. Download attached apk (I took it from Rootbox 4.2.2, but it works just the same on 4.3).
2. Paste it into /system/app, set permissions to rw-r--r-- and reboot.
3. Enter terminal Emulator, and type:
Code:
su [enter]
am start -n com.cyanogenmod.settings.device/.DeviceSettings [enter]
(obviously don't type [enter], press the enter key....)
4. Device Settings will open up, set whatever you desire
Note: to re-open the app, you will have to do it throught Terminal Emulator again. There's no other way of launching it that I could find, even Titanium Backup doesn't recognise it as able to run.
Big thanks to Unisexist6969 and Markox89 for helping figure this out
Edit: most users of a launcher such as nova or similar should be able to add a homescreen shortcut using nova activities shortcut. Personally this doesn't work for me, I'm not sure why. The method above will work regardless of using a different launcher, or if someone (like myself) doesn't have the option to add a shortcut, or if they plain don't want a homescreen shortcut (also like myself).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
mising said:
I have tried following these directions to temporarily get the Advanced menu back for the CM10.2 nightlies so I can enable dock audio. I keep getting the following error:
Error type 3
Error: Activity class {com.cyanogenmod.device/com.cyanogenmod.device.DeviceSettings} does not exist
It seems to work on other VZW Note 2 Android 4.3 based roms, but I cannot get it to work on our nightlies.
Is there an additional file or entry missing somewhere?
Thank you for any assistance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm running the Eclipse ROM (which I believe is based off of CM 10.2), and I had this issue before I restarted the phone. After restarting, it fixed the problem. If this issue persists after restarting your phone, maybe someone else can chime in?
Sorry I couldn't be of more assistance.
SonOfUncleSam said:
I'm running the Eclipse ROM (which I believe is based off of CM 10.2), and I had this issue before I restarted the phone. After restarting, it fixed the problem. If this issue persists after restarting your phone, maybe someone else can chime in?
Sorry I couldn't be of more assistance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rebooting didn't help, I am back on a TW ROM for the moment since I use my dock everyday, but plan on trying Eclipse or PAC this weekend.
Sbrissen said he is going to put the option back in the settings once they figure out where they want to put it, so I just keep flashing the nightlies every few days to check.
Thank you for your input though.
All, I have found a solution to get this P-WAL-107-ELC-02 unlocked and usable!
Original post:
I acquired a used Outcome Health (Contextmedia) Wallboard. There have been other posts previously about unlocking the 10 and 13inch tablets, but the steps and procedures used did not work with this wallboard.
The model number is P-WAL-107-ELC-02, and is similar to the item found here: https:// fccid.io/ 2AI6X-PWALELC
It is running on Android 4.4.4
I can open the "secret" configuration menu built into the app, but all the functions are password protected. I've had no success accessing the default android settings menu either. If you close the app, it launches again immediately, and the status bar seems to be locked down so that it can't be expanded.
EDIT: I've tried using a USB keyboard, and used the settings hotkey but no luck with this either. Using the home button pushes a message at the bottom of the screen "Override Launch." I also tried generic passwords in the various menus, but nothing has worked so far.
Any suggestions or experience with these items is greatly appreciated, thank you!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Disclaimer:
This is a collection of the methods that worked successfully in my case. I am assuming anyone using this has an understanding of the use of ADB and shell commands. If not, please do your research to better understand the use of the command line, otherwise you may cause more damage then actual repair. Perform the actions followed at your own risk.
Rebooting into safe mode and removing contextmedia applications:
With the help of information in this thread: https://forum.xda-developers.com/android/help/android-4-4-4-context-media-10-tablet-t3670769 I got it working.
With the wallboard connected to the pc, I restarted the device and repeatedly pressed the power button until it finished booting and it started in safe mode! I was able to open the android settings, uninstall the contextmedia app and the zygote app, access dev options and enable debugging.
Connected to the PC and in debugging mode run the following to remove the synop and the remainder of the contextmedia applications.
adb reboot root //Worked in my case, confirmed root access.
adb shell
[email protected]:/ $ su //Root permissions in shell
[email protected]:/ # rm data/dalvik-cache/[email protected]@[email protected]
[email protected]:/ # rm data/dalvik-cache/[email protected]@[email protected]
[email protected]:/ # rm -r data/data/com.contextmediainc.system.synop
After that, it should let you simply uninstall or disable everything else.
With that removed, you should be able to install any compatible launcher (I used nova launcher at the time of writing this) with the adb install commands.
Flashing TWRP recovery and installing open Gapps:
I finally got a working TWRP recovery using the TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32.img, using the method show here https://blog.matt.wf/flash-your-recovery-image-via-adb-shell-on-android/
Generic RK32 with SDcard - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_SDcard.img
Generic RK32 with Unified Storage - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_DATAMEDIA.img
Turns out the manufacture is Rockchip and the series is an rk3288.
Flash your recovery image via adb shell on android
JANUARY 16, 2017
//edit: You need a rooted device for this kind of flashing
Hi, ever wondered about how you can flash a recovery.img via adb shell?
A lot of posts suggest flashing it via fastboot. Well my ****ty Samsung phone is not detected by fastboot. Then there is the option to install a dubious binary file which is called flash_image.. thank u internet!
Well damn I have the recover.img whats so hard to use dd and flash it with a single shell command? For those who don't know much about linux commands here we go;
Enable your USB debugging bridge in switch via adb to the terminal:
./adb shell
Then you should be able to find your recovery partion with:
DEV=$(ls /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/recovery); echo $DEV
that should output something like this:
/dev/block/platform/7824900.sdhci/by-name/recovery
If this is the case you only have to put the recovery.img on your sd-card or the internal storage and you are one command from flashing:
dd of=$DEV if=/external_sd/recovery.img
Thats it! No binaries you have to install. No ****ty fastboot udev rules :S
You can enter into your new recovery system with:
./adb reboot recovery
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
With that, I could flash the gapps from the recovery and now the play store and services are working seamlessly. With the exception of the home and recent buttons not doing anything, this one is completely usable now.
Install SuperSu if you want to maintain permanent root on the device!
Download links:
Generic RK32 with SDcard - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_SDcard.img
Generic RK32 with Unified Storage - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_DATAMEDIA.img
Nova Launcher - https://nova-launcher.en.uptodown.com/android
SuperSu - https://supersu.en.uptodown.com/android
Recovery Reboot - https://apkpure.com/recovery-reboot/gt.recovery.reboot
Droid Hardware Info - https://droid-info.en.uptodown.com/android
Open Gapps - Platform: ARM Android: 4.4 Variant:Nano - https://opengapps.org/
No suggestions, but what a cool find. I'm surprised that hospitals use Android smart TVs! Or is it a giant tablet?
Sent from my LM-V350ULM using Tapatalk
jwrezz said:
No suggestions, but what a cool find. I'm surprised that hospitals use Android smart TVs! Or is it a giant tablet?
Sent from my LM-V350ULM using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It seems more like a giant tablet. I saved it from the dumpster hoping it could be turned into a nice web surfing machine for the garage.
slaysher62 said:
It seems more like a giant tablet. I saved it from the dumpster hoping it could be turned into a nice web surfing machine for the garage.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That would be awesome.
Sent from my LM-V350ULM using Tapatalk
bump
How often do I click the power button when it is booting, to get into safe mode? It just keeps going back to the home screen for me. Also, which USB did you have connected to the PC while doing this?
I am having the same issue
Any further update or progress on this from anyone? This would be perfect for a garage (or wherever) media center.
Any idea where I can find the recovery file? I tried to obtain one via TWRP and no luck.
I was able to install nova laucher and delete the files in data using adb shell. I'm just stuck at the recovery image part.
---------- Post added at 01:11 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:20 AM ----------
Freak-tab .de website is down. Can someone please send me the image recovery file? Thanks in advance.
slaysher62 said:
bump
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm able to get mine to the Recovery System but I cant run adb shell as I get exec '/system/bin/sh' which is no root. But I can't get into Safe Mode. I have the 32" Wallboard too but mine is ELC-01. What power button combo did you use to get into Safe Mode?
Plug in power and then just mash the power button? When do you stop mashing it?
Mash it as you plug in power and keep mashing?
Plug in power as you hold the power button down?
Stop mashing when it flickers or the screen is white?
Can’t get in to the settings.
ttiimmmmyy said:
How often do I click the power button when it is booting, to get into safe mode? It just keeps going back to the home screen for me. Also, which USB did you have connected to the PC while doing this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can’t get into settings. Tried the power button variations, with and without mini usb plugged in to the pc.
Wallboard
There are some typos in the original post commands. I wasn't having any luck with the "rm" commands to remove "zygote" and "sysop" apps, so I used the "ls" and "cd" commands to see what the file names were.
Removing the second file should be "[email protected]:/ # rm data/dalvik-cache/[email protected]@[email protected]" , the third should be "[email protected]:/ # rm -r data/data/com.contextmediainc.system.sysop"
When you type the command "DEV=$(ls /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/recovery); echo $DEV" you'll get an output, type that output into the next command. ex: dd of="output of previous command".
If you just drop the TWRP onto the USB mass storage drive that appears when you connect the tablet, it will be in "/sdcard" folder. The final command will be something like: dd of="output of previous command" if=/sdcard/RK32.img. If you don't have root access it will tell you "permission denied", so make sure you use the command "su" after "adb shell".
Lastly, I accidentally found that when I performed a factory reset via TWRP recovery menu that the Home button started working. It may also work via the settings menu, but I didn't try it that way.
Anyway, hats off to OP for posting this as it gives use to these massive android tablets.
The secret password is cat10dog
Kinda stuck...
Hey Slaysher62. I'm kinda stuck. Was wondering if you could help me out. I have a few of these due to our hospital just not needing them anymore and telling me I could either keep them or throw them away. I've tried for weeks to replicate your success but I feel like I'm missing a few steps. If you could Message me or something that'd be great.
Thanks,
Pinball Wizard
slaysher62 said:
All, I have found a solution to get this P-WAL-107-ELC-02 unlocked and usable!
Original post:
Disclaimer:
This is a collection of the methods that worked successfully in my case. I am assuming anyone using this has an understanding of the use of ADB and shell commands. If not, please do your research to better understand the use of the command line, otherwise you may cause more damage then actual repair. Perform the actions followed at your own risk.
Rebooting into safe mode and removing contextmedia applications:
With the help of information in this thread: https://forum.xda-developers.com/android/help/android-4-4-4-context-media-10-tablet-t3670769 I got it working.
With the wallboard connected to the pc, I restarted the device and repeatedly pressed the power button until it finished booting and it started in safe mode! I was able to open the android settings, uninstall the contextmedia app and the zygote app, access dev options and enable debugging.
Connected to the PC and in debugging mode run the following to remove the synop and the remainder of the contextmedia applications.
adb reboot root //Worked in my case, confirmed root access.
adb shell
[email protected]:/ $ su //Root permissions in shell
[email protected]:/ # rm data/dalvik-cache/[email protected]@[email protected]
[email protected]:/ # rm data/dalvik-cache/[email protected]@[email protected]
[email protected]:/ # rm -r data/data/com.contextmediainc.system.synop
After that, it should let you simply uninstall or disable everything else.
With that removed, you should be able to install any compatible launcher (I used nova launcher at the time of writing this) with the adb install commands.
Flashing TWRP recovery and installing open Gapps:
I finally got a working TWRP recovery using the TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32.img, using the method show here https://blog.matt.wf/flash-your-recovery-image-via-adb-shell-on-android/
Generic RK32 with SDcard - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_SDcard.img
Generic RK32 with Unified Storage - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_DATAMEDIA.img
Turns out the manufacture is Rockchip and the series is an rk3288.
With that, I could flash the gapps from the recovery and now the play store and services are working seamlessly. With the exception of the home and recent buttons not doing anything, this one is completely usable now.
Install SuperSu if you want to maintain permanent root on the device!
Download links:
Generic RK32 with SDcard - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_SDcard.img
Generic RK32 with Unified Storage - http://www.freak-tab.de/abdul_pt/TWRP/Generic/TWRP_2.8.7.0_RK32_DATAMEDIA.img
Nova Launcher - https://nova-launcher.en.uptodown.com/android
SuperSu - https://supersu.en.uptodown.com/android
Recovery Reboot - https://apkpure.com/recovery-reboot/gt.recovery.reboot
Droid Hardware Info - https://droid-info.en.uptodown.com/android
Open Gapps - Platform: ARM Android: 4.4 Variant:Nano - https://opengapps.org/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Help with recovery
Recently acquired 3 of these 32-inch screens at first I wasn't able to get into safe mode but I deleted everything off the sd card and restarted the screen after that spamming the power button worked and I was able to get the app uninstalled and Nova launcher installed but what I'm having an issue with is getting TWRP to install also I noticed mine isn't a RK3288 its a RK3188
I've tried to flash all the TWRP RK3188 recoveries I could find but none of them work just puts the screen into a boot loop until removing power and restarting
any update from android 4.4
was anyone able to get any operating system installed on this besides andriod4.4? trying to decide if I am going to just use the screen and install a new mini board to install android 10 or chrome os
---------- Post added at 07:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:36 PM ----------
to get to the secret menu . power on "tablet", wait till the program is running . you will see a logo close to the bottom right hand corner. keep pressing it until the menu pops up. to get into the actual settings I can't remember what it was called but I should be something like device admin or such on the right hand sign. click it. it will ask for password ( cat10dog ) from there you should be able to follow the instructions above
Uit232b-u03
Thought I'd chime in; I have one of these wallboards, model # UIT232B-U03, nominally equipped with an RK3188. Here's what I've found:
Misc. Device Info
RIL Ver: KitKat ril-rk29-dataonly v3.3.00
Build No.: Z05-outform-32-B4.21-20160324
Build Fingerprint: rockchip/rk3188/rk3188:4.4.4/KTU8Q/eng.root.20151208.162319.eng/test-keys
Board / Chipset: rk30sdk / RK30board
As you might notice from the Build Fingerprint, this model appears to be running an engineering build of Outcome/ContextMedia's KitKat ROM; this screen was pulled from a working clinic, but USB debugging was already enabled and connecting via adb shell automatically dumps you into a root shell. There's nothing more you need to do to gain that access.
The device info (courtesy of Droid Info) references three different RK chips in a few places: RIL Ver. (rk29); board & chipset (rk30); and everywhere else (rk3188, specifically). I don't know what to make of that. Maybe something to do with it being an engineer build? Could be an engineering sample board, too -- I need to check for that info.
Personalization
As mentioned, it looks like this unit (and maybe other UIT2xx-xxx revisions) appears to come pre-rooted with USB debugging already enabled. There's no need to authorize any given machine on the tablet when connecting over ADB for the first time, either. If you still want/need to access the system settings, three-finger-tap on the application logo in the bottom-right of the screen (tapping multiple times will just cause a credits list to pop up). The password to leave the application for the Android system settings is cat10dog, as has been noted elsewhere.
Before I loaded anything new, I went ahead and factory reset it to see what it looked like. Upon doing so, the only system application was Zygote -- it looks like it's a modified version which is serving as the "launcher" for this tablet, and which forcibly reloads the application whenever it is closed for whatever reason. From factory reset, it will launch into a first-time setup screen, where it looks like you can configure the application and get connected to wifi/ethernet and download the remaining system apps (this is my impression; I didn't go through with it, but I imagine the application will want to verify a license or something). Uninstalling the modified Zygote seems to not kill the first-time setup screen (makes sense -- it's meant to stay resident and likely has everything it needs loaded into RAM at the time), but you can install Nova Launcher 5.3 (last version to support KitKat 4.4.4) and then Zygote fully disappears and you won't get bothered about setup anymore. (I have no idea what happens if you remove Zygote and then don't install a launcher. You can probably still connect over ADB, but I've never seen a launcher-less Android.) Other apps can be installed at this time, too.
As noted elsewhere, the Home and Recents soft buttons still do not work. I'm not 100% sure, but I think that's something stuffed in the ROM itself and may not be configurable (maybe through the commandline?). But, you can just use the Back button to go back to the home page at any point.
I have not had any success installing TWRP: It turns out, despite the chip being labeled in all ways as an RK3188, it is in fact a lower-specced RK3188T (1.4Ghz top speed). Every version of TWRP for the RK3188 I've tried has resulted either in a bootloop (unplug from power and plug back in to return to system), or a black screen, or the TWRP splash screen but which never progresses beyond that step. (This reminds me, I need to check on the black screen instances to see if the recovery executable is running at all, and what happens when I try to manually start it.)
On the off-chance anyone has a TWRP build for the RK3188T for me to try, I'd definitely appreciate it! Or indeed any ARMv7-based build, if I'm just going to be blindly loading recoveries to see what happens. (If anyone has any advice for debugging the recovery loading process, I'm rather a noob at this and could use any information about where to look for logging info, or to make it output a log at all if it doesn't by default.)
OH, and uh... if anyone has a stock version of the recovery partition, could you send it to me? I didn't back it up before writing over it...
Other than not getting to install TWRP and get all experimental with ROMs, it is usable in its current state as an old-but-servicable, pre-rooted-for-your-convenience-no-supersu-required, massive Android tablet. Too bad Pocket Camp requires Android 5 since a few builds ago...
Edits for grammar, spelling, extra info.
theugly_bear said:
was anyone able to get any operating system installed on this besides andriod4.4? trying to decide if I am going to just use the screen and install a new mini board to install android 10 or chrome os
---------- Post added at 07:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:36 PM ----------
to get to the secret menu . power on "tablet", wait till the program is running . you will see a logo close to the bottom right hand corner. keep pressing it until the menu pops up. to get into the actual settings I can't remember what it was called but I should be something like device admin or such on the right hand sign. click it. it will ask for password ( cat10dog ) from there you should be able to follow the instructions above
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
device configuration and also just to clarify what he meant was tap on that flower looking logo repeatedly until you get the secret device configuration then on top right corner theres 3 lines select network settings and it should ask for a password which is cat10dog
And now I'm stuck
If anyone could give me direction/etc to get past where I'm at, I'd appreciate it.
I bought one of these bad boys from an auction and thankfully found this post and started the task of customizing it. I got to the point to where I deleted the apps listed, all through adb reboot recovery (used Generic RK32 with SDcard).
However, on reboot, it didn't go into recovery and had the Context Health splash to a nature backdrop and an Error: Wallboard not installed message. USB debug wasn't persistent, and trying everything that worked previously, I can't seem to get into Safe Mode, and I haven't found any other ways to get into Settings.
I did find the "reset" hole on back, which otherwise functions as a hardware 'Volume Up', but have yet to find any [Boot to Recover] methods involving only Volume Up and Power that work.
Any ideas of things to try?
Thank you
Update 1: Still no luck overall, but somewhat of progress, I hope: Plugging in the DC automatically boots up everything. If I hold down the hardware volume up/reset while adding power AND have USB plugged in, I get a listing in Device Manager; however, the screen stays black. Otherwise, as far as getting my PC to notice it, this is the only means to do it. There is no connection when powered on normally, rather I plug in USB before or after providing power. Also, spamming the power button while booting in order to get into Safe Mode had worked initially. Now doing it causing a freeze on the second or third splash screen refresh.
So I have recently acquired a bunch (50+) of these 32" screens. They were pre-rooted as @dwkindig had mentioned. I was able to remove all of the Context media apps and unlock the functionality as a basic android tablet pretty quickly. Threw Nova launcher on it and they work great. Has anyone had success in getting anything above Android 4.4 on these? I have a ton and can pull any files that would be of help to do some digging here, so please let me know. I would love to at least get Lollipop on these so that Android Webview could be upgraded and I could use the Wallpanel app for dashboard use on these. Any suggestions or help I can offer?
First time posting and I wanted to say thank you to all the excellent talent here on XDA! None of this would have been done without the work of so many people.
I have a Moto G Play (2021) (XT2093-4) that I recently purchased (Best Buy - $159 US/Carrier Unlocked) and I wanted to document my adventure in to rooting, making '/system' RW, and fixing the missing LED notification light (hint: I used the charging light) (hint^2: It's not required to make '/system' RW in order to fix the LED notification light - I just wanted more control over my phone).
First, "OEM unlocking" was greyed out for me, but became available after several days of having the phone online with a SIM card.
I followed the instructions here to unlock the bootloader and root with Magisk (Non-TWRP). Along with these instructions.
Once bootloader is unlocked, you will need the 'boot.img' file from your stock firmware. I used the "Rescue and Smart Assistant" utility to grab a copy of the stock firmware (GUAMNA_RETAIL_QZAS30.Q4_39_35_9_subsidy_DEFAULT_regulatory_DEFAULT_CFC.xml) and extracted the "boot.img" file for the next steps.
Continue installing Magisk (Filenames may be different! Don't just copy and paste.):
Code:
adb install Magisk-v23.0.apk
adb push boot.img /sdcard/Download
(Follow the instruction on your phone to patch 'boot.img' in Magisk)
adb pull /sdcard/Download/magisk_patched-23000_aKKMt.img
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot flash boot_a magisk_patched-23000_aKKMt.img
fastboot flash boot_b magisk_patched-23000_aKKMt.img
You should now have a working, rooted Moto G Play. You can just stop here and have fun with your phone, but I noticed that even with root, the system partition was not RW.
I followed these instructions to make '/system' writable (Note: you will need the 'sysrw_repair.zip' that's included in the bundle and a Linux system):
Code:
adb push systemrw_1.32_flashable.zip /data/local/tmp/
adb shell
su
cd /data/local/tmp/
unzip systemrw_1.32_flashable.zip
cd systemrw_1.32/
chmod +x systemrw.sh
./systemrw.sh in=`ls -l /dev/block/by-name/super | awk '{print $NF}'` out=/data/local/tmp/systemrw_1.32/img/super_original.bin size=50
The phone doesn't have enough space to complete 'lpmake' on the device and will end with an "Error 73" code. Running the "sysrw_repair_v1.32" tool on a Linux machine was a workaround because it pulls the '*.img" files to your local machine then combines them in to a single '.bin' file. But, before I did that, and because it's really annoying, I made some room to stop the phone from complaining about a lack of space:
(Still on the phone's adb)
Code:
rm ./img/super_original.bin
Now, on the Linux machine, I unzipped 'sysrw_repair_v1.32_proper.zip' then commented out line 39 (where it calls the "flash()" function) of the script (sysrw_repair.sh) because I wanted to flash the "super" partition myself.
(On another Linux terminal)
Code:
cd /path/to/unzipped/sysrw_repair/dir/
chmod +x sysrw_repair.sh
./sysrw_repair.sh
This results in a new folder (img) with a rather large bin file (super_original.bin).
(Back on the phone adb)
Code:
exit # Exit root
exit # Exit adb
adb reboot bootloader
Now it's time to flash the fixed bin file to the "super" partition:
Code:
cd /path/to/unzipped/sysrw_repair/dir/
fastboot flash super ./img/super_original.bin
fastboot reboot
You should be able to login and have a writable '/system':
Code:
adb shell
su
mount -o rw,remount /
No errors should appear.
Last, I like having an LED indicator that tells me that I have an SMS/MMS notification waiting. Motorola thought it would be wise to eliminate that feature altogether instead of having the option to enable it. So, I forced it back on using a startup script that dumps the notifications and greps for some key words. And, if it finds something, it "breaths" the charging LED. The script loops until the notification is gone, then keeps checking for new notifications every 30 seconds. (Note: the "/data/adb/service.d/" directory is used by Magisk like an INIT service):
(Still root on the phones adb)
Code:
cd /data/adb/service.d/
cat <<EOF > ledfix.sh
#!/bin/sh
while true; do
if dumpsys notification | egrep NotificationRecord | egrep sms > /dev/null
then
if [[ $(cat /sys/class/leds/charging/breath) == 0 ]]
then
echo 1 > /sys/class/leds/charging/breath
sleep 2
continue
else
sleep 2
continue
fi
elif egrep 'Charging' /sys/class/power_supply/battery/status > /dev/null
then
if [[ $(cat /sys/class/leds/charging/breath) -ne 0 && $(cat /sys/class/leds/charging/brightness) -ne 0 ]]
then
echo 0 > /sys/class/leds/charging/breath
echo 255 > /sys/class/leds/charging/brightness
elif [[ $(cat /sys/class/leds/charging/breath) == 0 && $(cat /sys/class/leds/charging/brightness) == 0 ]]
then
echo 255 > /sys/class/leds/charging/brightness
else
continue
fi
else
echo 0 > /sys/class/leds/charging/breath
echo 0 > /sys/class/leds/charging/brightness
fi
sleep 30
done
EOF
chown 0.0 ledfix.sh
chmod 0755 ledfix.sh
reboot
Now, the charging light will fade off and on about every 2 seconds if there's an SMS/MMS notification waiting. And will check for notifications every 30 seconds. I'm sure someone can come up with a better way of doing this, but this was a nice quick-and-dirty way to get what I wanted.
Hope this helps!
I created an account to say thank you for this, I have already done a good portion, having unlocked the bootloader, the problem is the Rescue Smart Assistant, it won't let me log in, it keeps telling me it can't connect, and the GUI is different because of an update, there is no download button inside the program, only a greyed out rescue button. How did you manage to make the backup Boot.img? Maybe you are using a different OS, and/or version of the program (Not the app, that is already auto-installed), I'm using Windows 10, are you on Linux? I might just need to try from Linux, maybe in a VM.
I was trying to do this before I found this post, and have already installed ADB, the SDK, fastboot, and Motorola Drivers, I just need a way to get the Boot.img, and to patch it, also figure out how to flash it. The last android I rooted with a custom rom was the HTC EVO 4G with Oreo/Jellybean, so I'm a little rusty, but am able to understand technical jargon.
If anyone could help, that would be awesome. I've reinstalled different versions of Rescue Smart Assistant as well, they always upgrade on boot, same problem. I've added exceptions to my firewall and everything.
UPDATE: Was about to post this when I had updated from android 10 to 11 and decided to try logging in again a little closer to my router, to see if the connection was timing out, I think that was the cause, as I can now sign in, and the GUI seems correct from the first appearance. I don't see why I should have any trouble following the rest of the guide, but feel I should share my trials and frustrations anyways, for anyone else experiencing the same,
Thanks again.
PROFSLM said:
I created an account to say thank you for this, I have already done a good portion, having unlocked the bootloader, the problem is the Rescue Smart Assistant, it won't let me log in, it keeps telling me it can't connect, and the GUI is different because of an update, there is no download button inside the program, only a greyed out rescue button. How did you manage to make the backup Boot.img? Maybe you are using a different OS, and/or version of the program (Not the app, that is already auto-installed), I'm using Windows 10, are you on Linux? I might just need to try from Linux, maybe in a VM.
I was trying to do this before I found this post, and have already installed ADB, the SDK, fastboot, and Motorola Drivers, I just need a way to get the Boot.img, and to patch it, also figure out how to flash it. The last android I rooted with a custom rom was the HTC EVO 4G with Oreo/Jellybean, so I'm a little rusty, but am able to understand technical jargon.
If anyone could help, that would be awesome. I've reinstalled different versions of Rescue Smart Assistant as well, they always upgrade on boot, same problem. I've added exceptions to my firewall and everything.
UPDATE: Was about to post this when I had updated from android 10 to 11 and decided to try logging in again a little closer to my router, to see if the connection was timing out, I think that was the cause, as I can now sign in, and the GUI seems correct from the first appearance. I don't see why I should have any trouble following the rest of the guide, but feel I should share my trials and frustrations anyways, for anyone else experiencing the same,
Thanks again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can also get the firmware from
Lolinet Mirrors
https://t.me/MotoUpdatesTracker
Search for Firmware by codename, software channel, Software Version, and build #
So I wasn't going crazy when I could swear a LED notification light in the upper right side above the screen blinked once whenever I rebooted the phone?
Why would Motorola include such a thing and not utilize it for more than merely a boot up indicator? Like I dont even get to see it come on while charging, it literally only blinks once during boot and that's it.
mario0318 said:
So I wasn't going crazy when I could swear a LED notification light in the upper right side above the screen blinked once whenever I rebooted the phone?
Why would Motorola include such a thing and not utilize it for more than merely a boot up indicator? Like I dont even get to see it come on while charging, it literally only blinks once during boot and that's it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know!
I don't know what triggers that light to come on. I even waited until the battery was at 6% and the light still never came on.
So, I updated the script above to make the light go full brightness if the battery is charging. The order matters, so if a notification comes in while charging, it'll "breath" the LED. Also, if the battery is full, then the light will turn off. Kind of telling you that it's time to unplug.
I followed these steps and my touch screen stopped working. I had previously installed twrp already on it while trying to learn how to root it, and when i boot into fastboot it goed through twrp, i also used the boot.img file from lolinet, not sure which of these caused the issue. Interestingly though, the touch screen does work whilst in twrp. any suggestions on how to fix or what would be causing it? Phone does work with usb mouse over OTG
jorduino said:
I followed these steps and my touch screen stopped working. I had previously installed twrp already on it while trying to learn how to root it, and when i boot into fastboot it goed through twrp, i also used the boot.img file from lolinet, not sure which of these caused the issue. Interestingly though, the touch screen does work whilst in twrp. any suggestions on how to fix or what would be causing it? Phone does work with usb mouse over OTG
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you absolutely sure you used the correct boot.img from an image version exactly matching your phone variant version?
mario0318 said:
Are you absolutely sure you used the correct boot.img from an image version exactly matching your phone variant version?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Im not completely sure how to get the right file, but I think the first time it was the wrong one, but then when i got what i thought was the right one, it just didn't work at all and I had to recovery flash it. I had just updated so maybe the correct image wasn't available yet. Im going to try again though
Oh! Hello @latentspork. Thanks for your interest in my SystemRW project. I just came across this thread randomly...
I'm happy you got my script to work on your Motorola device by using the included sysrw_repair script
Please feel free to send me your log files from script folder. Thanks. It's useful for further development of the script
latentspork said:
The phone doesn't have enough space to complete 'lpmake' on the device and will end with an "Error 73" code. Running the "sysrw_repair_v1.32" tool on a Linux machine was a workaround because it pulls the '*.img" files to your local machine then combines them in to a single '.bin' file. But, before I did that, and because it's really annoying, I made some room to stop the phone from complaining about a lack of space:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's not 100% accurate. Lpmake error 73 means CAN'T_CREATE and has nothing to do with error 70 (insufficient space).
To this day I still don't know exactly what causes error 73 on some devices (mostly Motorola and others) but it looks like some kind of kernel panic. If anyone knows how to avoid this error 73 in Android please let me know! Thanks!
Yes that's true the included sysrw_repair script (Linux only) pulls the image files from the phone to your computer and attempts to run the same lpmake command with the same arguments that just failed with error 73 on the phone itself and now all of a sudden it just works in Linux. Go figure.
latentspork said:
(Still on the phone's adb)
Code:
rm ./img/super_original.bin
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why would you delete the super_original.bin ? That's your stock read-only super image which by default is automatically dumped by script for backup purposes in case you ever get a bootloop.
And if you launch the script by specifying a custom input value (in=x) like in your example above then you won't even have a super_original.bin file to begin with because script will skip the whole dumping of original super image process.
latentspork said:
This results in a new folder (img) with a rather large bin file (super_original.bin).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think you mean super_fixed.bin
latentspork said:
Now it's time to flash the fixed bin file to the "super" partition:
Code:
cd /path/to/unzipped/sysrw_repair/dir/
fastboot flash super ./img/super_original.bin
fastboot reboot
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here in your instructions you are manually flashing the wrong file. Shouldn't you be flashing super_fixed.bin to your super partition?
Usually I only flash the super_original.bin to get back out of a bootloop...
latentspork said:
Now, on the Linux machine, I unzipped 'sysrw_repair_v1.32_proper.zip' then commented out line 39 (where it calls the "flash()" function) of the script (sysrw_repair.sh) because I wanted to flash the "super" partition myself.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
See that's why I included that automatic flash() function in the repair script. Then you don't have to worry about manually flashing the wrong file to your super partition
Enjoy a fully read/write-able device!
Great news! New SystemRW version coming soon!
@lebigmac
I really appreciate the reply and the tool! It did work really well on my model (XT2093-4).
That's not 100% accurate. Lpmake error 73 means CAN'T_CREATE and has nothing to do with error 70 (insufficient space).
To this day I still don't know exactly what causes error 73 on some devices (mostly Motorola and others) but it looks like some kind of kernel panic. If anyone knows how to avoid this error 73 in Android please let me know! Thanks!
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Click to collapse
I only assumed that "Error 73" was caused by insufficient space, because the phone really did run out of space. I noticed that the phone was out of space because I got a home screen notification warning, asking me to free up space. I confirmed it with a "df -h" at the shell. Apparently, the OS takes up almost 15GB. When you add the ".img" files, there's only about 5GB left. There wasn't enough room to complete the ".bin" file. Maybe I could have used an SD card or something.
You're probably correct in that "Error 70" is the correct error for that, but on my phone, I never saw that error. I did notice that the tool was still trying to write data as the phone ran out of space, then it would throw the "Error 73". Maybe it didn't register the lack of space, or just an oddity with my model? No idea.
Why would you delete the super_original.bin ?
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This is the file that was created when I initially ran the "./systemrw.sh" command on the phone. The result of running the command on the phone were several ".img" files and a very large "super_original.bin", but it was incomplete because the command threw an "Error 73". I was following your instructions, and I noticed that the output name of the file was "original" instead of "fixed". I probably could of outputted it to a new name to reduce confusion, but I didn't really care too much about the name as long as I had a working file.
I think you mean super_fixed.bin
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Shouldn't you be flashing super_fixed.bin...
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Normally, yes. But the Linux script also outputted the filename "super_original.bin". Again, as long as it worked, I was okay with it. The commands I used above were the exact commands that I ran at the time. I copied them from the terminal consoles I was using. So I don't know why it wasn't outputting the correct filename (again, I was following your instructions and was a little confused that the names came out differently - I just figured I was doing something wrong like not use the proper output command or something).
Then you don't have to worry about manually flashing the wrong file to your super partition...
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I was really just being cautious because my previous phone broke and I didn't have a fallback.
But, at no point were there two bin files (original and fixed), so there wasn't much confusion. Where I originally had just ".img" files before running the script, I now had a single ".bin" file. I knew that was the file I needed.
But again, thank you for all the hard work on this tool! I was reading that it's worked on lots of different model phones, and it's always good to see the open source community doing things that help all kinds of people.
For moto notification for this phone at least use https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=br.com.itsmeton.motoledreborn or moto led reborn from the play store it just works
Hi, sorry. This can be removed. I put it in place because I was having issues with the xda app. For whatever reason, every time I tried to share this particular post, it would share a link for the post which I used originally, rather than the current post. I knew that if I commented I could get back here easily on my PC.
So what is the place holder for