Xposed always boot loop - Xposed General

Hi. I updated CM11 to M10 from M8 on my Xiaomi Mi2.
On M8 Xposed worked really fine, now I can't use it. If I try to update the framework, I got a boot loop. If I try to delete the framework I got a boot loop. And tried to flash xposed-recovery-disabler.zip, got a boot loop too.
Root works.
What can I do?

Solved by deleting data.!
The easiest way is always the right way :laugh:

Related

Uninstalling Xposed stuck

Hi, I have an HTC one m7 with stock firmware, 5.0.2.
I have installed superSU, and afterwards xposed. All working, modules too, but now I need to uninstall it because come apps won't work. I downloaded the uninstaller zip from the xposed thread, installed it via twrp, but when I reboot the phone it gets stuck on booting with the HTC one logo.
I removed all the modules before uninstalling xposed.
When I install again xposed the phone boots normally.
How can I solve this?
Davicode said:
Hi, I have an HTC one m7 with stock firmware, 5.0.2.
I have installed superSU, and afterwards xposed. All working, modules too, but now I need to uninstall it because come apps won't work. I downloaded the uninstaller zip from the xposed thread, installed it via twrp, but when I reboot the phone it gets stuck on booting with the HTC one logo.
I removed all the modules before uninstalling xposed.
When I install again xposed the phone boots normally.
How can I solve this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you disable the framwork in the xposed installer app before you tried to uninstall it?
In on marshmallow, anyone can't do it, can't even press remove
Davicode said:
Hi, I have an HTC one m7 with stock firmware, 5.0.2.
I have installed superSU, and afterwards xposed. All working, modules too, but now I need to uninstall it because come apps won't work. I downloaded the uninstaller zip from the xposed thread, installed it via twrp, but when I reboot the phone it gets stuck on booting with the HTC one logo.
I removed all the modules before uninstalling xposed.
When I install again xposed the phone boots normally.
How can I solve this?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Restore your /system nandroid backup you (should) have made before flashing Xposed. Worst case, you'll have to re-flash your rom.
Solved it by wiping dalvik, thank you!

How to boot loop on Vodafone smart tab 3G after installing an Xposed module?

I have a rooted Vodafone smart tab 3G (alcatel_OneTouch_I215X-2MVDEU1) tablet with Android 4.4.2 kitkat installed on it. I'm trying to use some xposed modules on it. I have successfully managed to install xposed and it's framework and reboot it. But after i install one module, and then reboot it again, my phone stucks in a boot loop until i restore the factory version of my phone/wiping all the data using recovery mode. How can i successfully install modules without getting stuck in a boot loop? I really want to use xposed modules.
*How to get past boot loop

[SOLVED] BRICKED S7 (G930FD) when going from v14.0 to v15 using updater in Magisk app

I had Magisk v14.0 running on my phone, which was installed using the patched_boot.img method. I had the stock recovery, stock ROM and kernel. But... a Magisk module I wanted to install required me to update Magisk, which I did using the in-app updater. On rebooting, the phone hung with a pulsating Samsung logo. I left it overnight to ensure it wasn't just a very long boot up.
I have seen a number of threads with people with the same solution. A fix appears to be to flash the latest Magisk-uninstaller zip then move back to Magisk 14.0. In order to do this, I flashed TWRP after reading the official thread but didn't swipe right (step 9 of the official guide) to allow system modifications and I didn't install SuperSU. I figured this may interfere with Magisk's systemless root. I did immediately flash no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 after flashing TWRP but I was still stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo. Since flashing TWRP, I have tried uninstalling Magisk, flashing no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 and reinstalling v14.0, v15.3, or removing Magisk completely. Doing combinations of these in the various sequences as suggested by those who have solved the issue from reading this thread and similar ones.
Should I allow TWRP to modify the system by swiping right and try the steps above again?
Assuming it's my boot.img that's cuasing this, I have tried signing but boot image with Chainfire's .zip that's mentioned here but that zip stopped flashing with an unexpected error.
The last thing I tried was to flash the original unpatched boot.img via TWRP. This gave a boot loop initially but when I reflashed it and immediately flashed no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0, it progressed a bit further but got stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo again.
This thread shows someone who fixed the issue by installing a custom kernel. I haven't tried that yet. Is this a good idea?
I would be very grateful if you can suggest a way to repair my phone.
ssteward said:
I had Magisk v14.0 running on my phone, which was installed using the patched_boot.img method. I had the stock recovery, stock ROM and kernel. But... a Magisk module I wanted to install required me to update Magisk, which I did using the in-app updater. On rebooting, the phone hung with a pulsating Samsung logo. I left it overnight to ensure it wasn't just a very long boot up.
I have seen a number of threads with people with the same solution. A fix appears to be to flash the latest Magisk-uninstaller zip then move back to Magisk 14.0. In order to do this, I flashed TWRP after reading the official thread but didn't swipe right (step 9 of the official guide) to allow system modifications and I didn't install SuperSU. I figured this may interfere with Magisk's systemless root. I did immediately flash no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 after flashing TWRP but I was still stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo. Since flashing TWRP, I have tried uninstalling Magisk, flashing no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 and reinstalling v14.0, v15.3, or removing Magisk completely. Doing combinations of these in the various sequences as suggested by those who have solved the issue from reading this thread and similar ones.
Should I allow TWRP to modify the system by swiping right and try the steps above again?
Assuming it's my boot.img that's cuasing this, I have tried signing but boot image with Chainfire's .zip that's mentioned here but that zip stopped flashing with an unexpected error.
The last thing I tried was to flash the original unpatched boot.img via TWRP. This gave a boot loop initially but when I reflashed it and immediately flashed no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0, it progressed a bit further but got stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo again.
This thread shows someone who fixed the issue by installing a custom kernel. I haven't tried that yet. Is this a good idea?
I would be very grateful if you can suggest a way to repair my phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try flashing magisk 15.3 + no verity stuff as suggested on that thread...
Sent from my MI 5 using Tapatalk
ssteward said:
I had Magisk v14.0 running on my phone, which was installed using the patched_boot.img method. I had the stock recovery, stock ROM and kernel. But... a Magisk module I wanted to install required me to update Magisk, which I did using the in-app updater. On rebooting, the phone hung with a pulsating Samsung logo. I left it overnight to ensure it wasn't just a very long boot up.
I have seen a number of threads with people with the same solution. A fix appears to be to flash the latest Magisk-uninstaller zip then move back to Magisk 14.0. In order to do this, I flashed TWRP after reading the official thread but didn't swipe right (step 9 of the official guide) to allow system modifications and I didn't install SuperSU. I figured this may interfere with Magisk's systemless root. I did immediately flash no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 after flashing TWRP but I was still stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo. Since flashing TWRP, I have tried uninstalling Magisk, flashing no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 and reinstalling v14.0, v15.3, or removing Magisk completely. Doing combinations of these in the various sequences as suggested by those who have solved the issue from reading this thread and similar ones.
Should I allow TWRP to modify the system by swiping right and try the steps above again?
Assuming it's my boot.img that's cuasing this, I have tried signing but boot image with Chainfire's .zip that's mentioned here but that zip stopped flashing with an unexpected error.
The last thing I tried was to flash the original unpatched boot.img via TWRP. This gave a boot loop initially but when I reflashed it and immediately flashed no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0, it progressed a bit further but got stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo again.
This thread shows someone who fixed the issue by installing a custom kernel. I haven't tried that yet. Is this a good idea?
I would be very grateful if you can suggest a way to repair my phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Dont flash unpatched boot images using twrp
flash unpatched boot image or v14 boot image(that you made earlier) using pc ODIN/ any other prefered tool. Just flash the boot.img nothing else or you can use fastboot to only flash boot.img, it works 100% all times,after flashing it should boot normal
then make a new patched boot image for v15.3 from magisk app just as you made for v14 and flash using pc,then it should boot normally
many phones seem to show stuck at boot logo after moving from v14 to v15(especially v15.1 and v15.2) and also some some devices with f2fs storage seems working weirdly with audio mods.
teddy0209 said:
Try flashing magisk 15.3 + no verity stuff as suggested on that thread...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm pretty sure that's one of the permutations I tried before but having just flashed those two zips again, after making sure any previous Magisk installations had been removed, I get the same result - stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo.
If someone can tell me what parts of the system the problematic in-app upgrade from v14.0 to v15.0 would have affected then I could perhaps have a better idea of what I need to fix to get my phone starting up again.
ssteward said:
I'm pretty sure that's one of the permutations I tried before but having just flashed those two zips again, after making sure any previous Magisk installations had been removed, I get the same result - stuck at the pulsating Samsung logo.
If someone can tell me what parts of the system the problematic in-app upgrade from v14.0 to v15.0 would have affected then I could perhaps have a better idea of what I need to fix to get my phone starting up again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Have you tried flashing your stock boot image or even dirty flashing your entire system with ODIN (as suggested above)? Magisk only edits the boot image, nothing else.
Supreme Genius said:
Dont flash unpatched boot images using twrp
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, my mistake. I did flash boot.img via Odin. It was the original boot.img file that I fed into Magisk v14.0 so it could create patched_boot.img.tar that originally worked. I'm going to try that again now.
Didgeridoohan said:
Have you tried flashing your stock boot image or even dirty flashing your entire system with ODIN (as suggested above)? Magisk only edits the boot image, nothing else.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's good to know, thanks. I do have the full system from sammobile from which I extracted boot.img, so could try that if the 'lighter touch' approaches fail.
UPDATE:
After using TWRP to uninstall Magisk v15.3, which restores the stock boot.img, the phone hangs with a pulsating Samsung logo.
Using Odin to flash boot.img.tar (which I extracted from stock ROM) in the AP slot, I get a different behaviour - a boot loop which shows the "Samsung Galaxy S7 | powered by android" screen momentarily before going black and repeating.
So, even with a stock boot.img (assuming I've got the correct .img, which I'm pretty sure I have) and that I flashed it correctly, again, I think I have) then there seems to be more going on than just a corrupted/incorrect boot.img.
What next? A dirty flash of the stock rom?
ssteward said:
UPDATE:
After using TWRP to uninstall Magisk v15.3, which restores the stock boot.img, the phone hangs with a pulsating Samsung logo.
Using Odin to flash boot.img.tar (which I extracted from stock ROM) in the AP slot, I get a different behaviour - a boot loop which shows the "Samsung Galaxy S7 | powered by android" screen momentarily before going black and repeating.
So, even with a stock boot.img (assuming I've got the correct .img, which I'm pretty sure I have) and that I flashed it correctly, again, I think I have) then there seems to be more going on than just a corrupted/incorrect boot.img.
What next? A dirty flash of the stock rom?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Probably try that... Hope it's not a corrupt boot partition...
Sent from my MI 5 using Tapatalk
ssteward said:
UPDATE:
After using TWRP to uninstall Magisk v15.3, which restores the stock boot.img, the phone hangs with a pulsating Samsung logo.
Using Odin to flash boot.img.tar (which I extracted from stock ROM) in the AP slot, I get a different behaviour - a boot loop which shows the "Samsung Galaxy S7 | powered by android" screen momentarily before going black and repeating.
So, even with a stock boot.img (assuming I've got the correct .img, which I'm pretty sure I have) and that I flashed it correctly, again, I think I have) then there seems to be more going on than just a corrupted/incorrect boot.img.
What next? A dirty flash of the stock rom?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
did you flash the previous v14 patched boot image again using ODIN? this should work
same boot loop problem prevailed on my s7 active and lenevo k8 and flashing the v14 patched boot image and then making new v15.3 boot image gave a perfectly working magisk, although my redmi 3 was showing same boot loop problem and i have to flash the stock rom ( used twrp to restore nandroid backup but boot loop was not solved )
It seems your lots of permutations and combinations have damaged post_fs config of the kernel so you have only option left is to dirty flash the ROM.
teddy0209 said:
Probably try that... Hope it's not a corrupt boot partition...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sounds ominous. How would I recognise this and fix it?
Supreme Genius said:
did you flash the previous v14 patched boot image again using ODIN? this should work.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't seem to be able to find the patched_boot.img.tar that I used originally with Odin. I've checked a few different machines and on various SD cards but I only have the unpatched boot.img.
ssteward said:
Sounds ominous. How would I recognise this and fix it?
I don't seem to be able to find the patched_boot.img.tar that I used originally with Odin. I've checked a few different machines and on various SD cards but I only have the unpatched boot.img.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Then you need to flash the ROM , if you got another device then you can make a patched v15.3 image and flash it
I used another phone to created a patched_boot.img.tar for v15.3 and flashed that with Odin but that gave me a boot loop. Trying this again but flashing no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0 afterwards allowed me to get to the pulsating Samsung logo. So giving up on this approach, I dirty flashed my stock ROM and this worked but I was left looking at a pulsating Samsung logo for a nerve-racking 5 mins or more.
Thank you everyone for your help. I have my phone booting up again!
Now I need to work out install the latest Magisk successfully. If I try using the patched_boot.img.tar method with v15.3 then I'm back to the pulsating Samsung logo. Again. Using TWRP to flash the v15.3 zip gives the pulsating Samsung logo. I did select 'Preserve AVB 2.0/dm-verity. I also tried again with a clean stock ROM install and flashed the v15.3 zip and no-verity-opt-encrypt-6.0, as suggested by someone who'd successfully installed v15.3. I'm at a bit of a loss.
One clue, TWRP couldn't see the internal SD card data (iow /data). I wasn't able to check this option in the 'Mount' menu in TWRP either. I think this points to /data being encrypted. TWRP could see it yesterday, so perhaps I've inadvertently encrypted this. I was careful to uncheck 'Preserve force encryption' in Magisk Manager. I guess now that I've unbricked my phone, I should start another thread for this magisk install issue but any help or pointers to relevant threads that I may have missed would be great.
Thanks again for all your help.

Stuck at boot screen after twrp install MIUI 9

the problem im having is after upgrading to the latest 9.2.3 firmware when i try to install TWRP everything goes fine but the phone refuses to go past boot screen. I i can boot into TWRP with no problem at all but if i try booting the phone it just gets stuck at the boot logo.. So then i reverted back to the 9.1.1 firmware and now the problem has started there as well. anyone have any idea what im doing wrong?
PS: iv used 3.0.3, 3.1.1 and 3.2.1 none work
Hey after flashing TWRP your supposed to flash lazyflasher.zip if your running MIUI or you'll be stuck at the MI logo. This is a completely normal problem, nothing to worry about. Boot into TWRP and flash the lazyfalsher zip and your MIUI will be up and running. You can download it here
Bro after flashing twrp. Go inside twrp, options/settings, advanced, click on fix boot/disable verification something like that. Thats all It will boot.
hey thank man i just followed what you said and its working fine now
hey thanks for the reply i got it working
Glad it worked. Happy flashing!

Can't flash Xposed framework.

Hello guys!
Sorry for bothering you but I am trying to get the framework to work.
After I flash it with TWRP I can't reboot my phone (Samsung galaxy s6 edge) (64-bit) to normal mode anymore, it is stuck on a bootloop to TWRP.
When I try to get out off it I get stuck at the Samsung logo.
I tried different methods of installing the framework but none off them seems to work.
Can I get help please?
Try to install Magisk and Magisk version of Xposed.

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