Getting Droid Wall working on CyanogenMod 5.0.4.1 [WIP....] - Nexus One Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

While using cyanogen's rom, Droid wall gives an error when you apply the settings. Here's what i did to get it to work the first time(only):
Connect phone via usb
Open command-prompt
Type adb devices - you should see your phone's serial number
Type adb remount - should say remount succeeded
Type adb shell
Type chmod 755 /system/bin/iptables
Type exit
Type adb reboot​After the reboot you can install Droid Wall and apply the settings successfully.
still figuring out.....

rodrigo.zr said:
What ROM are you using? It is possible that the iptables bundled with your ROM does not support the "owner" module which Droid Wall makes use.
You can try a few things:
Restart your phone and click on "Show rules" again to see if anything has changed.
If that doesn't work:
Start an "adb shell".
type:
iptables -A OUTPUT -o rmnet+ -m owner --uid-owner XXXXX -j ACCEPT
(replace XXXXX by the number displayed by Droid Wall right before the the browser - 10028 on mine)
Check the iptable output for any errors.
If your iptables don't support this module you can probably update it and check if that works.
Cheers!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Droid Wall author discussion here

Pending issue
Cyanogen's google code website has a listed issue regarding this for the N1. But it's been marked closed.

Related

Please help me

I have a problem. I can not come in in "Telnet" - therefore I can not put another ROM .
Here's what I did ..
I decided to "unroot" My T-Mobile G1 as I put the original. Nbh file. Everything went as it should .. and included the phone. Enter into "Market" downloaded "Telnet" install and tried to enter, but did not allow me. I painted the following (Error while connecting to server: localhost/127.0.0.1: 23 - Connection refused) (Error while receiving from server: null). If someone can give a plan on how to fix this mess I would be very grateful!
You can't just open just open telnet and point it to local host. You need to create an instance (I think I've got that right) of telnet with root permissions.
After your phone starts up, hit the enter key twice, type "telnetd" and press enter. (Yes, it will start up a contact search, don't worry. Just type it.)
Download an Android "Telnet" application from the Market and connect to localhost.
If you connect successfully, you will have a root prompt "#".
Type the following into Telnet (these commands will give you root access easier in the future):
* mount -o rw,remount -t yaffs2 /dev/block/mtdblock3 /system
* cd sdcard
* flash_image recovery recovery.img
* cat recovery.img > /system/recovery.img
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks a lot! Happened as he said

ssh into the Note over USB

Anyone been able to ssh in through the USB connection?
I've done it with other Android phones, but here when I connect the USB cable, it doesn't even bring up the usb0 interface on my GNU/Linux PC, so don't know what's wrong...
Anyone doing it?
You need usb debugging active in settings. You will use adb shell command, not ssh (at least not without an android ssh server app).
Right, it does seem no android ssh server app is available to work over USB.
I was able to do, after redirecting ports from the local PC to the phone via adb, as per http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=20104928&postcount=71
However, interestingly, I cannot ssh in via wifi, as per symptoms in the above posts, i.e. the Galaxy Note will not initiate the connection, although using the same software on a Motorola Droid 3 will connect, so it must be some peculiar setup about the Note. In the thread many other users, notably it seems of Galaxy2 note the same inability to connect.
Anyone been able to connect through ssh via wifi? What am I missing?
any updates on this? I can't connect as well. I'm using sshdroid.
I gave up on SSH via USB, seems it's messed up under android. Just using the wifi method as per above.
There might be some hope with CM9, using the latest kernel, will see...
I tried using the earlier post by 白い熊 (!) which is basically noed's tip and it working beautifully. I think noed made a typo.
This is how it works for me :
1) Installed busybox/droidsshd
2) Connected to the windows pc which had drivers (kies)
3) Issued adb forward tcp:22 tcp:2222 (this is because droidsshd listens at 2222, when i changed that to 22, it worked also)
4) putty to 127.0.0.1 worked (I enabled root and set password in droidsshd prefernces -> Service and Authentication)
Due to busybox, i could run natural linux commands like ps, grep, find. top also worked showing what application bogging cpu - droidsshd for me
Yeah, the problem with this is the adb part... Running it in a Linux box, after a while adb consumes most of the memory, I have to kill it and restart, the connection gets dropped often too. Just a very poor experience, not the solidity you need for sshfs for instance...
Download a cyanogenmod 7 rom and extract dropbear, dropbearkey and dropbearconvert from the /system/xbin/ directory. Dropbear is a lightweight alternative to sshd. Copy them over to the phone, move them to /system/xbin/ and give them the permissions and ownership they had in the archive.
Generate an ssh key for your desktop if you don't have one already: ssh-keygen -t rsa
Copy the public key to the phone: adb push .ssh/id_rsa.pub /sdcard/authorized_keys
Set up your keys on your phone via adb shell:
mkdir /data/dropbear
chmod 755 /data/dropbear
mkdir /data/dropbear/.ssh
chmod 700 /data/dropbear/.ssh
mv /sdcard/authorized_keys /data/dropbear/.ssh/
chown root.root /data/dropbear/.ssh/authorized_keys
chmod 600 /data/dropbear/.ssh/authorized_keys
dropbearkey -t rsa -f /data/dropbear/dropbear_rsa_host_key
dropbearkey -t dss -f /data/dropbear/dropbear_dss_host_key
Run dropbear on your phone in a terminal or using adb shell: dropbear -s -F -v -p 2222
Connect from your desktop: ssh -i .ssh/id_rsa -p 2222 -l root 127.0.0.1

How to install ubuntu on the Droid 4

How to install ubuntu on the Droid 4
Note to mods: this thread is a branch off of this thread
Huge thanks to zacthespack for creating the ubuntu installer app and original boot script and to zeroktal for modifying the script to work on the D4 and helping me get it working on my device.
I decided to take my experience in setting this up and put it into a how-to so that others could enjoy the experience of having ubuntu on the Droid 4. If zackthespac or zeroktal have any problems with me making and putting this guide up, please let me know and I will remove it.
Knowledge Required:
working knowledge of command line
working knowledge of vi
OR the ability to learn how to use both
Tools Required:
A rooted Motorola Droid 4
BusyBox (Android Market)
Terminal Emulator (Android Market)
Android VNC Viewer (Android Market)
Ubuntu Installer App (Android Market)
zeroktal's ubuntud4.zip file (attached to this post and mediafire)
Vi Cheat Sheet (lagmonster.org)
Step by Step:
Install BusyBox, Terminal, and Android VNC Viewer
Install and run Ubunutu Installer App
Follow the on-screen instructions and click next
Download either the Small or Large image to your phone, (use zeroktal's ubuntud4.zip file instead of the boot script provided in the guide) after the image downloads (will take a while because the file is HUGE) click next
For this screen, the instructions differ from the app.
1. With your D4 plugged into your PC in USB Mass Storage, create a directory (folder) called ubuntu in the EXTERNAL sdcard's root*
2. Extract the image you downloaded to that directory
3. Download and extract the attached .sh (ununtud4.zip) to that directory
4. Disconnect your phone from your PC
5. Open terminal and run the following commands:
su [ENTER]
mount -o remount,rw,exec,suid /dev/block/vold/179:1 /mnt/sdcard-ext [ENTER]
cd /mnt/sdcard-ext/ubuntu [ENTER]
sh ubuntud4.sh [ENTER]
960x540 [ENTER]**​If you get an error message: ubuntud4.sh: 45: syntax error: end of file unexpected (expecting "then") see troubleshooting section below.​killall -TERM Xtightvnc [ENTER]
vncserver :1 -geometry 960x540 [ENTER]**​6. Open androidVNC app and enter the following settings:
Nickname: Anything you want
Password: ubuntu
Address: localhost
Port: 5901
Color Format: 24-bit color (4 bpp)
7. Hit connect
8. Hit your menu soft button and then set input mode to touchpad
9. You have ubuntu on your Droid 4!
To "shut down" ubuntu:
press the menu button, select disconnect in VNC
In terminal type this command 3 times (terminal will close itself when you are done):
exit [ENTER]
To "start up" ubuntu again:
Follow steps 5-8 above
Troubleshooting:
If you get the error message: ubuntud4.sh: 45: syntax error: end of file unexpected (expecting "then") you are about to have fun with vi at the command line.
Do the following from inside terminal:
su [ENTER]
cd /mnt/sdcard-ext/ubuntu [ENTER]
vi ubuntud4.sh [ENTER]​If you see ^M or ^ at the end of any line (remember to scroll all the way to the right to see the end of long lines) remove it. once you do that, everything should work just fine. (See the Vi Cheat Sheet above for help with Vi)
Note: Vol Up + E is [ESC] by default in this terminal emulator
Notes:
* It does not have to be on the external SD, but if you put it on the internal SD you will have to modify things as needed-- if you dont know what needs to be changed, just put it on the external SD.
** Screen size can be whatever you want it to be, but 960x540 is the size of the D4 screen.
*** This is a fairly involved process... especially when it comes to editing the .sh file in vi things can get very frustrating and hard, but just take your time and you will get it. As always, doing anything with root access on your phone, especially on the command line has risks. I am not responsible if anything goes wrong with your phone... proceed at your own risk!
greekchampion04 said:
Notes:
* It does not have to be on the external SD, but if you put it on the internal SD you will have to modify things as needed-- if you dont know what needs to be changed, just put it on the external SD.
** Screen size can be whatever you want it to be, but 960x540 is the size of the D4 screen.
*** This is a fairly involved process... especially when it comes to editing the .sh file in vi things can get very frustrating and hard, but just take your time and you will get it. As always, doing anything with root access on your phone, especially on the command line has risks. I am not responsible if anything goes wrong with your phone... proceed at your own risk!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I actually got it up and running on my internal sdcard partition. Pretty much just have to modify the Mount remount command, and a few lines in the script.
Here's the original command
Code:
mount -o remount,rw,exec,suid /dev/block/vold/179:1 /mnt/sdcard-ext
And the modified one
Code:
mount -o remount,rw,exec,suid /dev/block/vold/179:57 /mnt/sdcard
Only things you have to change are the device location(179:57) and mount location(drop the -ext after sdcard)
Now, after that you also have to modify the script a bit. Just go through it, and anywhere that you see sdcard-ext, drop the -ext off the end.
thanks for putting that up for everybody! like i said, if you know what you are doing its not a hard swap to make.
Is anyone else getting just a gray screen when they remote in? What could be causing this?
i had that same problem at first... did you use zeroktal's ubuntud4.zip file? or did you use the ubuntu.sh file included in the app?
I used the sh file included. I did however fix the problem, when mounting at the start i confused vold with void. I did not get the file system mounted properly. This method does work!! however I am currently trying to get bash on my droid to replace sh as the shell. I've checked the forums but have not found anything yet about someone installing bash on the droid 4. With no way for nandroids I feel i should wait before I kill sh.
Sent from my DROID4 using XDA App
If you mod your init.sh in your root directory to the following, your vnc will work on startup without issue. It will also shutdown vnc on exit.
#!/bin/bash
#############################################
# Asks User to screen size and saves as REZ #
#############################################
#echo "Now enter the screen size you want in pixels (e.g. 800x480), followed by [ENTER]:"
#read REZ
##############################################
# Pick which desktop environment to use, this#
# is done by having a xstartup file for each #
# desktop, then renaming the one you want to #
# use to 'xstartup' before boot #
##############################################
echo "Please select which Desktop environment you want to use, type the number to select it then press [ENTER]"
echo "1 - LXDE"
echo "2 - Gnome"
echo "Make your Selection:"
read DESKTOP
if [ $DESKTOP == 1 ]
then
mv /root/.vnc/lxstartup /root/.vnc/xstartup
fi
if [ $DESKTOP == 2 ]
then
mv /root/.vnc/gxstartup /root/.vnc/xstartup
fi
###########################################
# Tidy up previous LXDE and DBUS sessions #
###########################################
rm /tmp/.X* > /dev/null 2>&1
rm /tmp/.X11-unix/X* > /dev/null 2>&1
rm /root/.vnc/localhost* > /dev/null 2>&1
rm /var/run/dbus/pid > /dev/null 2>&1
############################################################
# enable workaround for upstart dependent installs #
# in chroot'd environment. this allows certain packages #
# that use upstart start/stop to not fail on install. #
# this means they will have to be launched manually though #
############################################################
dpkg-divert --local --rename --add /sbin/initctl > /dev/null 2>&1
ln -s /bin/true /sbin/initctl > /dev/null 2>&1
###############################################
# start vnc server with given resolution and #
# DBUS server, (and optionally an SSH server) #
###############################################
dbus-daemon --system --fork > /dev/null 2>&1
/etc/init.d/ssh start
vncserver :1 -geometry 960x540
echo
echo "If you see the message 'New 'X' Desktop is localhost:1' then you are ready to VNC into your ubuntu OS.."
echo
echo "If VNC'ing from a different machine on the same network as the android device use the 1st address below:"
##########################################
# Output IP address of android device #
##########################################
ifconfig | grep "inet addr"
echo
echo "If using androidVNC, change the 'Color Format' setting to 24-bit colour, and once you've VNC'd in, change the 'input mode' to touchpad (in settings)"
echo
echo "To shut down the VNC server and exit the ubuntu environment, just enter 'exit' at this terminal - and WAIT for all shutdown routines to finish!"
echo
###############################################################
# Spawn and interactive shell - this effectively halts script #
# execution until the spawning shell is exited (i.e. you want #
# to shut down vncserver and exit the ubuntu environment) #
###############################################################
/bin/bash -i
#########################################
# Disable upstart workaround and #
# kill VNC server (and optionally SSH) #
# Rename used xstartup to its first file#
#########################################
killall -TERM Xtightvnc
/etc/init.d/ssh stop
Also save the follow lines between ### as remount.sh on your system partition. Then chmod 755 /system/remount.sh. Now you can just run run from a terminal /system/remount.sh and voila it remounts correctly and starts ubuntu(with the above fixes). Im still working on the unmounts.
####### for the internal sd card
mount -o remount,rw,exec,suid /dev/block/vold/179:57 /mnt/sdcard
/mnt/sdcard/ubuntu/ubuntu.sh
######
OR
####### for the external sd card
mount -o remount,rw,exec,suid /dev/block/vold/179:1 /mnt/sdcard-ext
/mnt/sdcard-ext/ubuntu/ubuntu.sh
#######
great stuff!
feel free
Feel free and take, modify, repost or edit anything I touch.
QUESTION:
After I delete all the ^M and ^ what do i do next? I try to hit the command ":x" to exit and save changes but it just creates another line. Also when I press VOL UP + E to escape nothing happens.
PhanTuhC said:
QUESTION:
After I delete all the ^M and ^ what do i do next? I try to hit the command ":x" to exit and save changes but it just creates another line. Also when I press VOL UP + E to escape nothing happens.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In vi, the command to save and exit is :wq (probably short for write and quit).
remember, read up on the vi quick-reference guide: http://www.lagmonster.org/docs/vi.html
OK I fixed it but now its not letting me connect with androidVNC. All the settings entered is correct but when I try to connect it says:
"VNC connection failed!" localhost/127.0.0.1:5901 - Connection refused"
ok, i've gone thru this a few times (slowly and deliberately) and must be missing something...the directions seem pretty straightforward! here's what i know...
busy/terminal/vnc are all installed
small 2.5gb image is unzipped in /sdcard-ext/ubuntu directory
the attached .sh file from page 1 is in the same directory
i removed all ^M using vi
but when I try sh ubuntud4.sh i get an error...
"mkdir failed for /data/local/mnt/ubun, No such file or directory"
(plus a few other errors)
should the directory be "ubun" or "ubuntu"? am I typing something incorrectly?
copy and paste new script
Copy and paste the new scripts I posted. They will fix your problem. Remember to use the remount script from /system/ the rest will work perfectly if you are root. I'll check back later on your progress.
Ok, well I started from scratch (deleted both .img and .sh files) and it's still not working.
I have all the apps installed (and yes rooted, SU works just fine)
I used Ubuntu Installer app to download the image zip (tried both the large and small img)
I downloaded the .sh file from the first post
The /sdcard-ext/ubuntu/ folder now has two files: "ubuntu.img" and "ubuntud4.sh"
All ^M characters have been removed from .sh file
Still no joy...
Ideas? What am I missing?
In terminal, I can set SU permissions and the mount/cd commands work just fine...it's the last sh command that spits out a bunch of errors about not being able to create/find the directories.
I'm going to format the sdcard and try again...any help is appreciated.
Update: Even after re-formatting the SD and following the steps exactly, no luck!
Did you remember to remount the sdcard with exec and suid permissions?
Andbuntu will work much better than this method. It works on every single phone with modification to the "environmental variables".
http://code.google.com/p/andbuntu/
Follow the directions in the script to make the process much easier than the first post.
instructions:
generate an image with rootstock on an ubuntu computer.
put it on /sdcard/ubuntu/ubuntu.img
run the script on your phone with "sh /path/to/script"
Here is the script. http://andbuntu.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/uboot
Also, run "firstRun" to make things like terminals work properly.
Adamoutler: That didnt work for me. The permissions were incorrect on the mounted partitions.
Sent from my DROID4 using XDA App

[webtop] Using cellular network without jumping through hoops

Upfronts: I'm using NottachTrix 1.3.1 with the 2.3.6 Webtop. I'm also a programmer and a network administrator, so I might be a little more comfortable poking around in things that might break my phone than other users. Don't do anything you aren't comfortable with! I'm just reporting my findings. Your phone, your comfort level, your business!
I wanted to get my new lapdock to use the cellular network without jumping through any "enable/disable mobile hotspot" hoops. I finally got all the webtop2sd stuff running, including a working lxterminal and synaptic. I was running synaptic as root from a bash shell ("sudo bash" to give me a root shell, other commands as needed). I noticed that synaptic worked without wifi but firefox didn't. I could also ping various websites with no trouble under the root shell, but the adas user could not. adas COULD ping IP addresses, though, so it seemed like there was a firewall in place that was blocking adas from resolving domain names.
As it turns out, there is a firewall in place that is blocking the adas user from resolving domain names.
Webtop seems to be using iptables to restrict access to the default login user. I typed "iptables -L" to view all the iptables-based firewalling that was going on. Sure enough, three entries existed to block network traffic for the user "adas". After an "iptables -S" to get the commands that were used to turn on the filtering, I was able to reverse the process. (Hint: -A adds a rule, -D deletes one)
From here, I could do a lot of things -- create a script to disable iptables on demand, block the commands from running in the first place, dance a happy little jig... I won't embarrass myself by revealing which I actually did, but hopefully there's enough in this post that will help others resolve their problems in a similar manner!
(By the way, every time the phone is docked, it re-blocks network access, apparently using a file called "syslog-restart".)
If you could fix this would be great, I have the same rom and everything and I use my LapDock in my business and it is always a pain to make it connect and most of the times it fails to connect for me.
Cheers
The following presumes a working lxterminal and synaptic (or apt-get). If you haven't run the webtopscripts to fix the broken dependencies, now's a good time to poke that bear*.
(Type the stuff that's in bold -- comments are in italics)
In lxterminal:
sudo apt-get install nano (Command-line text editor)
iptables -S (generates a list of rules that iptables is currently using)
copy any lines in the "-P OUTPUT ACCEPT" section that start with "-A"
create a new file in nano by typing nano fwdisable.sh
at the top of the new document, type #!/bin/bash and press Enter
paste the copied lines into the resulting screen
insert iptables at the start of each line and change "-A" to "-D" (A for add, D for delete)
once the file looks the way you think it should, exit the program with CTRL-X, saving the file when it asks
at the command prompt, type chmod 755 fwdisable.sh
run your new shell script with sudo ./fwdisable.sh
open up a web browser and enjoy!
* Please don't poke any bears. While they may look fluffy, they react poorly to being poked. There's probably a good metaphor about messing around in the internals of your phone in there somewhere, but for the life of me I just can't find it!
Did you guys can edit a ROM that has it all in a matter of WebTop, I can not make it work on my Atrix in any way.
I do not have the device only the HDMI cable.
Trying to save fwdisable.sh nano give me following error
"Error writing fwdisable.sh Read-only file system"
Please advise
pederb said:
Trying to save fwdisable.sh nano give me following error
"Error writing fwdisable.sh Read-only file system"
Please advise
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sounds like you're not root or su
Sent from my MB860 using Tapatalk 2
Ok the drive was write protected, but now I get
" ./fwdisable.sh: line 2: -D: command not found"
" ./fwdisable.sh: line 3: -D: command not found"
I was not able to get it to work with Nano so I used gedit instead but should not make a difference, right?
Any idea?
maybe someone can create a flashable fix so that its easy for some of us noobs lol
studean said:
The following presumes a working lxterminal and synaptic (or apt-get). If you haven't run the webtopscripts to fix the broken dependencies, now's a good time to poke that bear*.
(Type the stuff that's in bold -- comments are in italics)
In lxterminal:
sudo apt-get install nano (Command-line text editor)
iptables -S (generates a list of rules that iptables is currently using)
copy any lines in the "-P OUTPUT ACCEPT" section that start with "-A"
create a new file in nano by typing nano fwdisable.sh
at the top of the new document, type #!/bin/bash and press Enter
paste the copied lines into the resulting screen
insert iptables at the start of each line and change "-A" to "-D" (A for add, D for delete)
once the file looks the way you think it should, exit the program with CTRL-X, saving the file when it asks
at the command prompt, type chmod 755 fwdisable.sh
run your new shell script with sudo ./fwdisable.sh
open up a web browser and enjoy!
* Please don't poke any bears. While they may look fluffy, they react poorly to being poked. There's probably a good metaphor about messing around in the internals of your phone in there somewhere, but for the life of me I just can't find it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Follow this guide guys, it is ridiculously easy, no flashing needed.
I also added a button to the AWN dock with the command:
sudo ./fwdisable.sh
Which will give you one click disabling of the firewall. It will restart the firewall each time you dock/undock it appears, so just dock it, click the firewall disable button and you are good to go.
Norcalz71 said:
Follow this guide guys, it is ridiculously easy, no flashing needed.
I also added a button to the AWN dock with the command:
sudo ./fwdisable.sh
Which will give you one click disabling of the firewall. It will restart the firewall each time you dock/undock it appears, so just dock it, click the firewall disable button and you are good to go.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I'm still getting my error no matter how many time I try it again
man i cant even get webtop2sd to work. as soon as i run it on my phone it force closes. i havent even got it to open longer then super user request yet.
fingers crossed on a cwm flashable lol.
Thanks for this. I was wondering why apt-get update would work but adas couldn't ping out properly over 3g.
Also, thank you for the walk through in editing iptables there. Interesting that they chose to use that over something more proprietary, or well hidden.
I had this problem at first, too -- I think it was busybox-related. There's a busybox updater or two in the Market (I mean, "Play Store") that will bring you up to speed and let you install webtop2sd.
Sorry it's been so long since my last post! It appears that you didn't insert an "iptables " before the "-D". Check to make sure that each line after the "#!/bin/bash" starts with "iptables -D" instead of just "-D" and see if that takes care of the problem. (Also make sure you execute the script with a "sudo" -- iptables won't work properly as a regular user...)
studean said:
Sorry it's been so long since my last post! It appears that you didn't insert an "iptables " before the "-D". Check to make sure that each line after the "#!/bin/bash" starts with "iptables -D" instead of just "-D" and see if that takes care of the problem. (Also make sure you execute the script with a "sudo" -- iptables won't work properly as a regular user...)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
should it be,
iptables -D
or
-D iptables
[email protected]:/$ sudo iptables -S
-P INPUT ACCEPT
-P FORWARD ACCEPT
-P OUTPUT ACCEPT
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
-A OUTPUT -d 127.0.0.1/32 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 8086 -m owner ! --uid-owner adas -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
-A OUTPUT -d 127.0.0.1/32 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 8085 -m owner ! --uid-owner adas -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
This is how it looks before editing
It should be "iptables -D". Based on the output from your "iptables -S" command, the file should look like this:
Code:
#/bin/bash
iptables -D OUTPUT -d 127.0.0.1/32 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 8086 -m owner ! --uid-owner adas -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
iptables -D OUTPUT -d 127.0.0.1/32 -p tcp -m tcp --dport 8085 -m owner ! --uid-owner adas -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
I also had a third line (that escapes me at the moment -- I'm on a different machine) that further blocked access, but apparently there is a bit of variation in the configuration... At any rate, create the file using whatever text editor you feel most comfortable using, then "chmod 755" the file to make it executable. If you call it "fwdisable.sh", then you should type "chmod 755 fwdisable.sh" in lxterminal and run the file with "sudo ./fwdisable.sh" to disable the firewall.
Good luck! If you want to know more about the workings of this stuff, google "bash scripting guide" and (for a general overview) read the wikipedia page for "iptables". It will help you understand what's up with all these seemingly weird commands...
That worked, but now I get these error messages?
[email protected]:/$ sudo ./fwdisable.sh
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
[email protected]:/$
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Please advice
Cheers
You should be okay with those error messages. I'm not entirely sure WHY it's looking for that file, but it's "normal" output. If you'll remember, it's the same output you got in the "iptables -S" command... Something about accessing iptables causes the system to look for that file. (I just haven't been bothered enough over it to check yet...)
To verify, run "sudo iptables -S" again to see if there is anything left. You should just see three lines:
Code:
-P INPUT ACCEPT
-P FORWARD ACCEPT
-P OUTPUT ACCEPT
Anything more than that and you might need to edit your script as you did before. If the output from "iptables -S" looks like the above, though, fire up firefox and give it a whirl!
studean said:
You should be okay with those error messages. I'm not entirely sure WHY it's looking for that file, but it's "normal" output. If you'll remember, it's the same output you got in the "iptables -S" command... Something about accessing iptables causes the system to look for that file. (I just haven't been bothered enough over it to check yet...)
To verify, run "sudo iptables -S" again to see if there is anything left. You should just see three lines:
Code:
-P INPUT ACCEPT
-P FORWARD ACCEPT
-P OUTPUT ACCEPT
Anything more than that and you might need to edit your script as you did before. If the output from "iptables -S" looks like the above, though, fire up firefox and give it a whirl!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
[email protected]:/$ sudo iptables -S
-P INPUT ACCEPT
-P FORWARD ACCEPT
-P OUTPUT ACCEPT
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
FATAL: Could not load /lib/modules/2.6.32.56-MB860-faux123-GB-024/modules.dep: No such file or directory
-A OUTPUT -o ppp0 -m owner --uid-owner adas -j REJECT --reject-with icmp-port-unreachable
[email protected]:/$
Excellent! This means you're almost there! As before, copy/paste that line into your shell script, change the "-A" to "iptables -D" and that SHOULD be the end of it.
No, really. This time for sure. Just re-run the script when you're done (ignoring the "fatal" stuff) and you'll be browsing in no time!

[APP] DropBear Server II // ssh/scp (root only)

I wanted to enable SCP and SSH using DropBear II ... for some reason DropBear Server II doesn't install scp & ssh binaries, you can get them from github and symlink it into system. Here's what I did...
DropBear archive (1M): https://www.dropbox.com/s/h2guipuvdltiden/dropbearii.zip
Feel free to mirror that if you want.
These directions allow you to ssh into the system as root, be very careful. I recommend not leaving the service running if you are not using it.
I take no responsibility if you brick your unit while mucking around as root.
Back Up
Download dropbearii.zip and unzip on your local file system.
From your local filesystem install the APK and push scp & ssh to tmp.
Code:
adb install DropBearServer2.1.apk
adb push scp /data/local/tmp/scp
adb push ssh /data/local/tmp/ssh
From the OUYA GUI install the DropBearServerII service... Select Make -> Software -> DropBearServer II -> Install
Shell into your OUYA and make /system writable.
Code:
adb shell
su
mount -o rw,remount -t ext4 /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/APP
Move scp & ssh into DropBear II directory
Code:
mv /data/local/tmp/scp /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/
mv /data/local/tmp/ssh /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/
Change the permissions
Code:
chmod 6555 /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/scp
chmod 6555 /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/ssh
Create the symlinks
Code:
cd /system/bin/
ln -s /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/scp ./scp
ln -s /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/ssh ./ssh
Change /system back to read-only (optional) and exit.
Code:
mount -o ro,remount -t ext4 /dev/block/platform/sdhci-tegra.3/by-name/APP
exit
exit
Reboot the OUYA (optional)
Code:
adb reboot
Notes/testing
Windows users can use Putty to ssh & scp get them here.
To ssh into the system:
Code:
ssh [email protected]_ADDRESS
To scp a file to the sdcard:
Code:
scp ./some_file [email protected]_ADDRESS:/sdcard/
To get to settings push the U circle button one time.
If you turn on "Start on boot" in the settings menu and reboot, the service will be turned off. Though it will be left on in the standard standby mode.
I recommend using pubkey rather than password. Basically generate a public key and push it into /sdcard/ then install it from the DropBear II app.
Unix Hosts can do:
Code:
ssh-keygen -t rsa
Windows using PuttySSH follow these directions, I haven't tested them though.
If you don't want to be bothered with pubkey, please change the default password it is set to 42.
If you already know about pubkey, you can cat them into: /data/data/me.shkschneider.dropbearserver2/app_data/authorized_keys
Unchecking "Allow Password" doesn't work properly.
Why would I want to do this? I didn't really like the Wireless ADB disappearing after the OTA upgrade, this may be less annoying if the next OTA doesn't nuke it.
I'm getting an error that busybox is not installed when trying to start the service. Is there anything special you had to do with busybox to get this to run? I installed it via the apk.
Edit: Nevermind. I didn't realize the busybox apk was an installer and I didn't find the icon when I looked. Just checked again and found the busybox installer icon and did a smart install. Dropbear ssh is running now.
I ran it manually with
Code:
dropbear -E -s -P /data/dropbear/dropbear.pid -r /data/dropbear/dropbear_rsa_host_key -d /data/dropbear/dropbear_dss_host_key
and it looks ok when idling but when connection it gives me
Aiee, segfault! You should probably report this as a bug to the developer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This could be CM10.1 environment issues (libc). The built-in SSHd doesn't work properly as well. Some binaries give strange errors when executed with SSHd (like sqlite3).
I can't install the DropBearServer II from the Make option, comes up with "operation failed". Tried to make the system rw to see if that might have been the problem but still no luck. Anyone else had that problem?
andlid said:
I can't install the DropBearServer II from the Make option, comes up with "operation failed". Tried to make the system rw to see if that might have been the problem but still no luck. Anyone else had that problem?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I installed it via adb.
For others I was able to install using IncognitoMan's -=StockPlus=- ROM -- http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2347214
You may need busybox installed, I'm not 100% sure, I haven't tried without busybox.
SSH command line on android
The link is broken
Could someone please reupload this? would be awesome
Thank you so much
BIade said:
Could someone please reupload this? would be awesome
Thank you so much
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
bump - upload again please
You can also get static binaries from dropbear or ssh server apks in playstore by simply unpacking the apk.

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