Xposed Lollipop Solutions to Problems - Xposed General

DISCLAIMER: I'M NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANYTHING IN THIS THREAD
If Xposed isn't working, here are some things to try:
-Install and activate a module
-Using the app 'SELinux Mode Change', set SELinux as permissive and (soft) reboot.
-If it doesn't work after a reboot, then soft reboot. You might need to do this after every normal reboot/power on. This is because SELinux is being set as permissive to late in the booting process, but soft reboot keeps it as permissive. Flashing a kernel with SELinux permissive would help
Edit: Here's a fix http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=59188984
-Mount system in recovery
-Flash it a second time in recovery
-For low storage issue, wipe dalvik cache and cache partition
-Don't use on TouchWiz
-Only for Armv7+
-You might end up in a boot loop
-There's no zip to reverse it yet, so you'll need to restore a backup or system partition.
Edit: You can flash this reverse zip, but he's asking people to test it, so I wouldn't use it unless you have a boot loop where you need to undoe it, or you're sure you know how to recover from a brick. Best to wait until it's been fully tested.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=58966408&postcount=2273
Thanks to piskor for making me aware of this.
Edit 2: It seems the download link was removed. Either way, I'm not sure if it would work on alpha 2.
-To test, use XGELS, it works quite well on Lollipop.

tzzeri said:
...
-There's no zip to reverse it yet, so you'll need to restore a backup or system partition.
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
For testing by boot loopers as @CarvedArt said
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=58966408&postcount=2273

I couldn't get xposed on my Nexus 5 (5.0.2, stock, custom recovery) and every time I did flash the .arm file, I got into a bootloop.
So, I performed a factory reset, updated the TWRP from 2.8.1.0 to 2.8.5.2 version and everything worked like a charm.
I didn't need to install the selinux changer.

Related

[MM] [Flashable] Patcher to provide root access without /system modification

This patcher is now outdated. Use the new SuperSU instead. http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=64161125&postcount=3
This zip is a systemless version. That means that you'll get root and be able to use it normally, but your system partition will not be modified, like in normal root methods. Only for Marshmallow.
Keep reading for disadvantages and advantages
Chainfire had released a newer version of his SuperSU that doesn't need to modify the system partition to provide root access. This method doesn't have much of a practical application right now, but it allows you to flash OTA updates without having to unroot or flash the stock system partition.
HOW TO USE:
If you have rooted before, flash the system partition (or reinstall the ROM) before flashing this zip.
Download the attached zip, and flash it from a recovery (I tested it with TWRP).
Download SuperSU 2.56 from here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=63197935&postcount=2 (Just download the apk)
Reboot to TWRP. If it asks you whether you want system to be mounted as r/w, and if you want to take OTAs later, choose to keep system read-only (this will replace TWRP with stock recovery on reboot).
Flash SuperSU-v2.56-20151030013730.zip
Reboot
TWRP will say that you are not rooted, just ignore that. Do not tell it to root it.
This will work with all Marshmallow kernels, even the stock kernel.
Drawback : A factory data reset will remove superuser privileges. If that happens, simply flash SuperSU-v2.56-20151030013730.zip again.
TO RECEIVE OTA UPDATES :
Just make sure not to do anything that modifies /system. For example, no build.prop changes, and no system app removal. Or even if you do these, make sure to undo these changes before flashing an OTA. You can flash OTAs without unrooting now.
Flash the stock boot.img for your current Android version before flashing OTAs.
BUGS :
I didn't find any, yet, but Chainfire wrote the following on his thread:
Apps with hardcoded paths to su (seriously?) will bork
Factory reset unroots
Factory reset wipes pin
...
Bugs... Bugs everywhere!
ADDITIONAL INFO :
This zip will replace sepolicy as mentioned on Chainfire's thread (thanks to @metaspook for the patched sepolicy, which I extracted from his zip), so you'll be able to get root access even on SELinux enforcing kernels (only the stock MM kernels right now). Also, you can flash any other kernel (as long as it comes in a zip format, not as an img) before or after flashing this, and you'll still have root access.
out386 said:
Chainfire had released a newer version of his SuperSU that doesn't need to modify the system partition to provide root access. This method doesn't have much of a practical application right now, but it allows you to flash OTA updates without having to unroot or flash the stock system partition.
HOW TO USE:
Download the attached zip, and flash it from a recovery (I tested it with TWRP).
Download SuperSU 2.56 (or newer, if it supports systemless mode) from here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=63197935&postcount=2 (Just download the apk)
Flash SuperSU-v2.56-20151030013730.zip
Reboot
This will work with all Marshmallow kernels, even the stock kernel.
Drawback : A factory data reset will remove superuser privileges. If that happens, simply flash SuperSU-v2.56-20151030013730.zip again.
TO RECEIVE OTA UPDATES :
Just make sure not to do anything that modifies /system. For example, no build.prop changes, and no system app removal. Or even if you do these, make sure to undo these changes before flashing an OTA. You can flash OTAs without unrooting now.
Flash the stock boot.img for your current Android version before flashing OTAs.
BUGS :
I didn't find any, yet, but Chainfire wrote the following on his thread:
Apps with hardcoded paths to su (seriously?) will bork
Factory reset unroots
Factory reset wipes pin
...
Bugs... Bugs everywhere!
ADDITIONAL INFO :
This zip will replace sepolicy as mentioned on Chainfire's thread (thanks to @metaspook for the patched sepolicy, which I extracted from his zip), so you'll be able to get root access even on SELinux enforcing kernels (only the stock MM kernels right now). Also, you can flash any other kernel (as long as it comes in a zip format, not as an img) before or after flashing this, and you'll still have root access.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well done bro!
I'm just waiting for this
Help regarding installation
I am using MicroMax Android One with Marshmallow
Currently, I've not tired the phone.
When I open recovery, I see some options like Apply update from SD card, mount, cache wipe, factory reset, etc.
So which option should I use to flash the zip file.
out386 said:
Chainfire had released a newer version of his SuperSU that doesn't need to modify the system partition to provide root access. This method doesn't have much of a practical application right now, but it allows you to flash OTA updates without having to unroot or flash the stock system partition.
HOW TO USE:
Download the attached zip, and flash it from a recovery (I tested it with TWRP).
Download SuperSU 2.56 (or newer, if it supports systemless mode) from here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=63197935&postcount=2 (Just download the apk)
Flash SuperSU-v2.56-20151030013730.zip
Reboot
This will work with all Marshmallow kernels, even the stock kernel.
Drawback : A factory data reset will remove superuser privileges. If that happens, simply flash SuperSU-v2.56-20151030013730.zip again.
TO RECEIVE OTA UPDATES :
Just make sure not to do anything that modifies /system. For example, no build.prop changes, and no system app removal. Or even if you do these, make sure to undo these changes before flashing an OTA. You can flash OTAs without unrooting now.
Flash the stock boot.img for your current Android version before flashing OTAs.
BUGS :
I didn't find any, yet, but Chainfire wrote the following on his thread:
Apps with hardcoded paths to su (seriously?) will bork
Factory reset unroots
Factory reset wipes pin
...
Bugs... Bugs everywhere!
ADDITIONAL INFO :
This zip will replace sepolicy as mentioned on Chainfire's thread (thanks to @metaspook for the patched sepolicy, which I extracted from his zip), so you'll be able to get root access even on SELinux enforcing kernels (only the stock MM kernels right now). Also, you can flash any other kernel (as long as it comes in a zip format, not as an img) before or after flashing this, and you'll still have root access.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good work n thanks for mention bt can't understand why u created a patcher again where I'v already created one!
Its ok, good job.
Good.... Thanks for posting
metaspook said:
Good work n thanks for mention bt can't understand why u created a patcher again where I'v already created one!
Its ok, good job.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, well, I would never have reposted the same thing, so, I'm sorry if it seemed like that.
This one uses Chainfire's new systemless root method. Unlike other root methods that need modifications to /system, this method uses modifications to the boot image to set up and run the su daemon from a loop device on the /data partition and achieve root. Right now, that doesn't have much of an advantage except to make flashing OTAs easier. Chainfire made it because future devices might need it. I made the patch because someone on FB asked about it.
<accidental double post, sorry. Can't delete>
kalpitandroid said:
I am using MicroMax Android One with Marshmallow
Currently, I've not tired the phone.
When I open recovery, I see some options like Apply update from SD card, mount, cache wipe, factory reset, etc.
So which option should I use to flash the zip file.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You need to install a custom recovery first. Go to the Android One (First generation) General forums on this site. You'll find a how-to at the very top of the list of threads. Once you have a custom recovery, flash this using the "install zip" option.
out386 said:
Yes, well, I would never have reposted the same thing, so, I'm sorry if it seemed like that.
This one uses Chainfire's new systemless root method. Unlike other root methods that need modifications to /system, this method uses modifications to the boot image to set up and run the su daemon from a loop device on the /data partition and achieve root. Right now, that doesn't have much of an advantage except to make flashing OTAs easier. Chainfire made it because future devices might need it. I made the patch because someone on FB asked about it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmm... gotcha now.. Good work!
If u ever need any help just pm.
Thank you...
out386 said:
<accidental double post, sorry. Can't delete>
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

TWRP, System writing, Supersu, Impossible?

I have had my fair share of problems modifying android before but I have never had a phone flat out lie to me and say an operation was successful and actually nothing happened at all.
Have had my nexus 6 for a year or so now. Have had minor issues rooting / modifying marshmallow in the past but I figured out it was all caused by the system partition having basically 0 free space. Made a huge mistake and installed to the latest 7.0 OTA. Wanted to simply enable tethering and edit the thermal config to not shut cores down. Should be as simple as pulling the files, editing them, pushing them back to the phone in twrp with the system partition mounted and thats the end of it right? Wrong.
First of all twrp 3.0.2 refuses to let me touch the system partition without some giant prompt about how its going to make itself stick and offer to root the phone. Simple enough I have seen it in previous versions I say yes as usual except twrp proceedes to immediately spew a bunch of superuser files that do nothing throughout the system partition without asking me if I want root. Dumb but whatever. I mount /system as read write and I go edit and replace my two files like usual (build.prop and thermal config). No matter if I ADB push or use twrps built in file manager it claims the file replacement is successful. Reboot into android and not only have both files not been touched (Verified by adb pull) but the recovery gets overwritten with the factory recovery anyways. (NEVER had issues with twrp sticking on marshmallow. Now after every reboot it gets wiped out)
Second of all if I select yes to twrp mounting system as writable and it does its spewing as I mentioned before then installing SuperSU instantly causes the phone to not boot. Rewrite the boot.img to factory and it boots fine OR Rewrite the clean factory system image and the SuperSU boot works fine. But modifying /system with twrp and then running supersu at the same time is a no go. TWRP is obviously doing something stupid to system that pisses off supersu so undoing twrps mess or uninstalling supersu makes it bootable again.
I dont even want root! Everyone is claiming you need to run "settings put global tether_dun_required 0" as root along with adding the usual "net.tethering.noprovisioning=true" in the build.prop to get native tethering working again! On 6.X only the build.prop edit was needed to get it working.
So long story short. I just want native tethering to work and to tweak my /system/etc/thermal-engine-shamu.conf . Is there anyone here who has done this successfully on nougat? I feel like its all twrps fault but im far too tired and frustrated to try another version tonight.
You must be running an old version of TWRP. Update to the latest, as the latest no longer offers to root your device for you. The version of superuser included was ancient and caused the device to bootloop.
As to TWRP being overwritten Android 7.0 I believe does that on a stock system. If I recall, there is a script that needs to be modified to prevent it.
Strephon Alkhalikoi said:
You must be running an old version of TWRP. Update to the latest, as the latest no longer offers to root your device for you. The version of superuser included was ancient and caused the device to bootloop.
As to TWRP being overwritten Android 7.0 I believe does that on a stock system. If I recall, there is a script that needs to be modified to prevent it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's stated in the op he's using twrp 3.0.2.
Didgeridoohan said:
It's stated in the op he's using twrp 3.0.2.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I misread his post then. I wonder if perhaps he is running TWRP via fastboot instead of installing it.
Flashing recovery using "fastboot flash recovery XXX.img"

Starting clean: Magisk and Xposed Modules. How to install, order, etc.

Hello
Im going to wipe my entire Marshmallow ROM and go to Nougat.
I used Xposed modules a lot.
But Im intrested in some Magisk things as well so Id like to use both.
First thing after wiping is going to install Snapchat and log on. After that, I need Titanium Backup to freeze and make a backup copy which is where root and/or MagiskSU come in. I want to do it correctly and right so what is the correct way to go upon this in this scenario?
Thank you
riahc3 said:
Hello
Im going to wipe my entire Marshmallow ROM and go to Nougat.
I used Xposed modules a lot.
But Im intrested in some Magisk things as well so Id like to use both.
First thing after wiping is going to install Snapchat and log on. After that, I need Titanium Backup to freeze and make a backup copy which is where root and/or MagiskSU come in. I want to do it correctly and right so what is the correct way to go upon this in this scenario?
Thank you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The below order has worked fine for me in the past:
Wipe all partitions (I personally wipe internal storage as well) and format data
Reboot to recovery and copy the zips to the internal storage
Flash ROM
Flash GApps
Flash Magisk/SuperSU
Flash custom kernel
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot and setup the phone
Setup Snapchat and backup it's app+data using Titanium Backup once logged in
Reboot to recovery
Flash Xposed
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot
shadowstep said:
The below order has worked fine for me in the past:
Wipe all partitions (I personally wipe internal storage as well) and format data
Reboot to recovery and copy the zips to the internal storage
Flash ROM
Flash GApps
Flash Magisk/SuperSU
Flash custom kernel
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot and setup the phone
Setup Snapchat and backup it's app+data using Titanium Backup once logged in
Reboot to recovery
Flash Xposed
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Looks like a good solid order to get both Magisk and Xposed working on Nougat. Ill try to do that.
riahc3 said:
Looks like a good solid order to get both Magisk and Xposed working on Nougat. Ill try to do that.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can also install systemless Xposed through magisk manager. It's a magisk module. Then you can easily turn off Xposed if you need to pass safetynet.
You can do it after setting everything else up. Then go into magisk manager and install Xposed (for your correct API) and the systemless Xposed installer APK (it's in the description in magisk manager for Xposed magisk module) then reboot, wipe cache and dalvik, and boot system. Some have said they had to install Xposed APK after first boot after installing framework in magisk.
madbat99 said:
You can also install systemless Xposed through magisk manager. It's a magisk module. Then you can easily turn off Xposed if you need to pass safetynet.
You can do it after setting everything else up. Then go into magisk manager and install Xposed (for your correct API) and the systemless Xposed installer APK (it's in the description in magisk manager for Xposed magisk module) then reboot, wipe cache and dalvik, and boot system. Some have said they had to install Xposed APK after first boot after installing framework in magisk.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So:
Wipe all partitions and data
Reboot to recovery and copy the zips to the internal storage
Flash ROM
Flash GApps
Flash Magisk/SuperSU
Flash custom kernel
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot and setup the phone
Setup Snapchat and backup it's app+data using Titanium Backup once logged in
Open Magisk Manager
Install Systemless Xposed
Reboot to recovery
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot
Install my Xposed modules
Thats your recommendation?
riahc3 said:
So:
Wipe all partitions and data
Reboot to recovery and copy the zips to the internal storage
Flash ROM
Flash GApps
Flash Magisk/SuperSU
Flash custom kernel
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot and setup the phone
Setup Snapchat and backup it's app+data using Titanium Backup once logged in
Open Magisk Manager
Install Systemless Xposed
Reboot to recovery
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot
Install my Xposed modules
Thats your recommendation?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To make an very full clean flash to get:
- SU access
- Custom kernel
- GApps
- Magisk
- Xposed
- Snapchat
Yeah :good:
riahc3 said:
So:
Wipe all partitions and data
Reboot to recovery and copy the zips to the internal storage
Flash ROM
Flash GApps
Flash Magisk/SuperSU
Flash custom kernel
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot and setup the phone
Setup Snapchat and backup it's app+data using Titanium Backup once logged in
Open Magisk Manager
Install Systemless Xposed
Reboot to recovery
Wipe cache and dalvik-cache
Reboot
Install my Xposed modules
Thats your recommendation?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't forget the modified Xposed installer/manager APK. When you click on Xposed in magisk to get description the link for it is there. And I think you flash magisk zip after your custom kernel (because it modifies boot.img). And setup all your other stuff before Xposed (like opening magisk and make sure it's good). First boot after installing Xposed can take a while, it has to optimize pretty much everything. But everything else looks good.
Im just flashing a ROM (which I believe already has the custom kernel)
Very good list, but I have doubt about this order:
madbat99 said:
And I think you flash magisk zip after your custom kernel (because it modifies boot.img).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because in first post in Magisk thread is stated:
Magisk said:
If you plan to flash a custom kernel, flash it AFTER installing Magisk.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks

How to? MAGISK for Oreo Exynos

I failed similar times to root my phone with twrp 3.2.xx and 3.1.xx. I used Odin 3 v3.13.1.
Any ideas or thread links for the young padawan?
I appreciate your advice masters :good:
Using Odin Flash TWRP latest from the note 8 TWRP thread here on XDA, one on their site is not latest.
Install magisk manager app from play store.
Download magisk from the app.
Reboot to TWRP and flash the magisk file just downloaded.
Reboot and check magisk manager for root and hide.
Should be good.
Nope. Not working and still ends in a bootloop and it's unable to mount the internal storage.
Something went wrong, so.. my phone is unable to boot the system after that!
The issue is the version of TWRP and Oreo, its not yet compatible on this device, it needs porting over
If you want MAGISK you need to do it all in one hit.
Flash TWRP
Select Read Only Option.
Format Data
Reboot Recovery
Flash the DM Verify Encrypt file
Reboot Recovery, You could be able to flash files wihtout a Data mount error.
Now flash the files you want, i..e MAGISK
Once you have booted the ROM and return back to TWRP you are unable to mount Data.
This can cause various issue when flashing files
Funny you.. How can I format if the internal storage isn't able to mount?
"Select Read Only Option.
Format Data" <-- seems like a contradiction to format a missing
partition.
I think we need to wait until someone will port the twrp for Oreo. cheerio!
Because it needs to be done when you first flash it.
Once you have flash Oreo, Then TWRP, You boot into TWRP and format. You then Flash the DM Verify.
Data is accessible, its empty but accessible, Flashing any files like MAGISK work without any errors.
I have it all working on mine without any issues, I do know if i need to flash any additional files it wont work properly due to Data no longer mountable.
There is a updated version of TWRP that fixes this, but its not been ported over.

Android 4.2 and 4.4 Mediatek bootloop after installing Magisk 18.1

Hello everybody.
I've read that 18.1 supports 4.2+ so I've tried to install in two MTK6589T devices I've. One running 4.2, the other running 4.4
CMW/TWRP gave an error mounting system, so I mounted system manually and it started flashing. Firstly it detected old root installed and disabled the old root. But when it tried to find the boot, installation was aborted because installator claims cannot find the boot on both phones.
Then I though, okay, lets reboot back to android, I will try to install a few days later, maybe its buggy now, but both phones cannot boot.
I can easily fix them by flashing rom again I guess, but I would like to know where's the issue and also post it for more people could face the same problem.
Any idea where's the problem/how to fix without rom reflashing? I've tried magisk uninstaller but after mounting system in recovery it is also giving error.
Thanks
UPDATE: For now, if no other solution is found, bootloop can be bypassed by dirty installing the rom again. But it has to be an easier workaround...
We know now that the problem is caused because of two factors merging:
1- Using Magisk.zip installer through custom recovery
2-In the case that the custom recovery CMW/TWRP installed in the phone is very old (for instance, CMW automade for MTK6589X or TWRP 2.5.0).
While installing, Magisk tries to send commands to the custom recovery that cant be understood by it, leaving the installation incomplete after some modifications in /system (read below recovery log).
Acording to the recovery, it seems that Magisk did some modifications without running correctly survival script - Adding addon.d survival script ("Unrecognized option '-Xnodex2oat'") and .zip installer is not designed to revert actions in this case.
Also, Magisk couldn't reach the boot modification step, so boot is not damaged, therefore workarounds for restoring boot won't work.
Using Magisk Unistaller.zip is also not possible as the uninstaller is mainly designed for boot backup restoration, and again, this is not the case.
Currently needed: Find what's wrong in system due to the incomplete Magisk installation to revert it back to the original state (before faulty magisk.zip installation).
Recovery log:
************************
* Magisk v18.1 Installer
************************
- Mounting /system, /vendor
- Target image: /dev/bootimg
- Device platform: arm
- Removing system installed root
- Constructing environment
- Adding addon.d survival script
Unrecognized option '-Xnodex2oat'
up!
I' also having the same problem. My Samsung J2 Prime stuck at logo after updating to 18.1. Any tips on how to fix it without resetting my phone? Thanks.
Update: Bootloop fixed. I used TWRP to restore boot image. I then update Magisk by flashing zip file from TWRP. Everything went back to normal. Hope this help.
trol_sg said:
Hello everybody.
I've read that 18.1 supports 4.2+ so I've tried to install in two MTK6589T devices I've. One running 4.2, the other running 4.4
CMW/TWRP gave an error mounting system, so I mounted system manually and it started flashing. Firstly it detected old root installed and disabled the old root. But when it tried to find the boot, installation was aborted because installator claims cannot find the boot on both phones.
Then I though, okay, lets reboot back to android, I will try to install a few days later, maybe its buggy now, but both phones cannot boot.
I can easily fix them by flashing rom again I guess, but I would like to know where's the issue and also post it for more people could face the same problem.
Any idea where's the problem/how to fix without rom reflashing? I've tried magisk uninstaller but after mounting system in recovery it is also giving error.
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you have a backup of your boot image, you can just restore it using TWRP. But in case that you have no backup of boot image, you can try to get boot image from the internet and restoring using it. In my case, this is what I did.
1. Go to TWRP and then make backup of boot image of the faulty phone*. (Folder 1)
2. I used another J2 prime to create a boot image backup. (Folder 2)
3. Once that is done, copy and replace the files inside the Folder 2 into Folder 1.
4. Reboot to TWRP again then use that to restore the boot image on my stuck J2.
Tips: make backup in SD card so you can easily swap it in between the bad and good phone.
*This is to create a folder of the backup file. I did tried to directly copy and paste the backup boot image file from another good phone but TWRP didn't detect it. So this is the workaround that I come with. And it worked for me.
Thanks for your answer but I doubt your case is mine. Your device is much newer than mine and according to your comment, you've sucesfully installed previous version of Magisk without issues. This is not a problem while updating, as Magisk v. earlier than 18.1 was not compatible with android 4.2+. I think Magisk is not compatible with MT6589T even if they run 4.2 or 4.4.
I think that it cannot be a boot problem as TWRP/CWM displayed msg 'Boot cannot be found' while installing Magisk, so that I don't think boot was replaced or modified in any ways. Moreover, the bootloop is not in the boot loading, as phone can pass boot image without any problem, but it is stuck in android loading image. I'm thinking in some script or root modification that Magisk did before trying to unpack the boot, however I'm not that deep into the Magisk install to find the proper workaround.
I can restore boot backup and also I can take boot file from the original rom and flash, because in Mediatek-based devices, boot.img is inside de zip, but I dont think it will solve the problem. Anyhow I'll get back ASAP with the answer.
Any more ideas??
Nothing, boot/uboot restoration or flashing again just the boot won't fix the problem, so it's something that Magisk installator touch in /system or /data I guess, but what?
trol_sg said:
Nothing, boot/uboot restoration or flashing again just the boot won't fix the problem, so it's something that Magisk installator touch in /system or /data I guess, but what?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Have you read/tried this?
didgeridoohan(dot)com/magisk/MagiskIssues
Ato09 said:
Have you read/tried this?
didgeridoohan(dot)com/magisk/MagiskIssues
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, I've read them before I made the post. I've also looked for a solution in some of the threads and using search, but couldn't find a way.
Here I attach recovery.log if someone is interested to see the detailed problem.
Also, here below I attach the lines concerning the installation. All other is uninstallation tries and so on:
************************
* Magisk v18.1 Installer
************************
- Mounting /system, /vendor
- Target image: /dev/bootimg
- Device platform: arm
- Removing system installed root
- Constructing environment
- Adding addon.d survival script
Unrecognized option '-Xnodex2oat'
dalvikvm: [options] class [argument ...]
dalvikvm: [options] -jar file.jar [argument ...]
The following standard options are recognized:
-classpath classpath
-Dproperty=value
-verbose:tag ('gc', 'jni', or 'class')
-ea[:<package name>... |:<class name>]
-da[:<package name>... |:<class name>]
(-enableassertions, -disableassertions)
-esa
-dsa
(-enablesystemassertions, -disablesystemassertions)
-showversion
-help
The following extended options are recognized:
-Xrunjdwp:<options>
-Xbootclasspath:bootclasspath
-Xcheck:tag (e.g. 'jni')
-XmsN (min heap, must be multiple of 1K, >= 1MB)
-XmxN (max heap, must be multiple of 1K, >= 2MB)
-XssN (stack size, >= 1KB, <= 256KB)
-Xverify:{none,remote,all}
-Xrs
-Xint (extended to accept 'ortable', ':fast' and ':jit')
These are unique to Dalvik:
-Xzygote
-Xdexopt:{none,verified,all,full}
-Xnoquithandler
-Xjniopts:{warnonly,forcecopy}
-Xjnitrace:substring (eg NativeClass or nativeMethod)
-Xstacktracefile:<filename>
-Xgc:[no]precise
-Xgc:[no]preverify
-Xgc:[no]postverify
-Xgc:[no]concurrent
-Xgc:[no]verifycardtable
-XX:+DisableExplicitGC
-X[no]genregmap
-Xverifyopt:[no]checkmon
-Xcheckdexsum
-Xincludeselectedop
-Xjitop:hexopvalue[-endvalue][,hexopvalue[-endvalue]]*
-Xincludeselectedmethod
-Xjitthreshold:decimalvalue
-Xjitcodecachesize:decimalvalueofkbytes
-Xjitblocking
-Xjitmethod:signature[,signature]* (eg Ljava/lang/String\;replace)
-Xjitclass:classname[,classname]*
-Xjitoffsetffset[,offset]
-Xjitconfig:filename
-Xjitcheckcg
-Xjitverbose
-Xjitprofile
-Xjitdisableopt
-Xjitsuspendpoll
Configured with: debugger profiler hprof jit(armv7-a-neon) smp show_exception=1
Failed to initialize runtime (check log for details)
- Unpacking boot image
MagiskBoot v18.1(18100) (by topjohnwu) - Boot Image Modification Tool
Parsing boot image: [/dev/bootimg]
No boot image magic found!
! Unable to unpack boot image
- Unmounting partitions
E:Error executing updater binary in zip '/sdcard/Magisk-v18.1.zip'
Error flashing zip '/sdcard/Magisk-v18.1.zip'
@trol_sg I'm gonna guess it's got to do with the absolutely ancient TWRP you're using. It just can't handle everything that the Magisk installation script is trying to do...
Your best bet (if Magisk will work at all on your device) is to patch the boot image with the Magisk Manager and then flash the patched image manually. There are new and shiny installation instructions available here: https://topjohnwu.github.io/Magisk/
Didgeridoohan said:
@trol_sg I'm gonna guess it's got to do with the absolutely ancient TWRP you're using. It just can't handle everything that the Magisk installation script is trying to do...
Your best bet (if Magisk will work at all on your device) is to patch the boot image with the Magisk Manager and then flash the patched image manually. There are new and shiny installation instructions available here: https://topjohnwu.github.io/Magisk/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you so much for your answer. So it's the recovery, but can't find newer ones, sadly. Too old phones I know, but just curious if I could make Magisk working on them, lol.
I was going into the boot modification manually right now, but in order to patch the boot I need manager installed first, and phone couldn't boot so I did dirty flash of the rom to be able to boot into it again.
Lets see what happens then. I'll be right back.
Anyhow, this is not a solution to fix the problem of bootloop that I am requesting help in case someone could face the same and did not make a backup of the phone and didn't want to make dirty re-flash. Any idea?
Update: After I did dirty flash of the rom, and now Jiayu g3s android 4.4 booted.
UPDATE: So, after patching manually boot and installing (using restore in TWRP 2.5 as image flash is not yet implemented AFAIK), phone booted and yes Magisk is working.
Magisk installation .zip through a very old recovery is making the bootloop. So that, a thing learnt now.
But, for other people facing this bootloop, can we do a research to find what magisk.zip did to the phones to leave them in bootloop? Maybe we can revert without rom flashing easily if we knew what's the issue...
Thanks in advance!
Doing a bit more tests I found that magisk.zip did something in /system so that it is left in bootloop, but still no idea why/whats causing that...
There are delay complete boot like 4 5 second in j7 prime. I didn't love this version
any more help?? up!!
trol_sg said:
Yes, I've read them before I made the post. I've also looked for a solution in some of the threads and using search, but couldn't find a way.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Try this.
Quote:
Originally Posted by void74
I faced this problem too this morning.
I have a Redmi Note 5 with AOSiP ROM, I don't know if it's the right way to do it, but I solved the bootloop problem this way:
- volume up and then boot to TWRP
- copied magisk uninstall to phone memory
- installed magisk uninstall
- rebooted in fastboot/bootloader mode
- flashed original boot.img extracted from stock image zip file ("fastboot flash boot boot.img")
- rebooted to TWRP
- installed magisk 17.0 zip file
- rebooted to system, all OK!
Only problem is that I lost previous magisk configuration, but it's a snap to reconfigure it!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mangraviti
Here is what to do, if you HAVE NOT installed the new version:
1) Do not update via Magisk Manager.
2) Do not update via TWRP using the zip you can download via Magisk Manager.
3) Uninstall Magisk using Magisk uninstaller (ZIP).
4) Boot to Android.
5) Reboot to TWRP
6) Install V17 ZIP via TWRP and boot to Android.
If you HAVE INSTALLED and got a bootloop:
1) Download the uninstaller ZIP.
2) Enter TWRP during the bootloop.
3) Uninstall using the uninstaller ZIP.
4) Boot to Android.
5) Download V17.
6) Reboot to TWRP and flash the V17.
7) Boot to Android it it should be working.
-------------
Original post. https://forum.xda-developers.com/apps/magisk/bootloop-magisk-update-t3836904
Hope it help.
Ato09 said:
Try this.
Quote:
Originally Posted by void74
I faced this problem too this morning.
I have a Redmi Note 5 with AOSiP ROM, I don't know if it's the right way to do it, but I solved the bootloop problem this way:
- volume up and then boot to TWRP
- copied magisk uninstall to phone memory
- installed magisk uninstall
- rebooted in fastboot/bootloader mode
- flashed original boot.img extracted from stock image zip file ("fastboot flash boot boot.img")
- rebooted to TWRP
- installed magisk 17.0 zip file
- rebooted to system, all OK!
Only problem is that I lost previous magisk configuration, but it's a snap to reconfigure it!
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mangraviti
Here is what to do, if you HAVE NOT installed the new version:
1) Do not update via Magisk Manager.
2) Do not update via TWRP using the zip you can download via Magisk Manager.
3) Uninstall Magisk using Magisk uninstaller (ZIP).
4) Boot to Android.
5) Reboot to TWRP
6) Install V17 ZIP via TWRP and boot to Android.
If you HAVE INSTALLED and got a bootloop:
1) Download the uninstaller ZIP.
2) Enter TWRP during the bootloop.
3) Uninstall using the uninstaller ZIP.
4) Boot to Android.
5) Download V17.
6) Reboot to TWRP and flash the V17.
7) Boot to Android it it should be working.
-------------
Original post. https://forum.xda-developers.com/apps/magisk/bootloop-magisk-update-t3836904
Hope it help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello, thanks
This method won't work in my case as in the step:
- installed magisk uninstall = gives error
Note 5 is much newer phone with a recent recovery TWRP that allows all Magisk.zips commands, but unluckyly not this case.
Also, this method is for wrong boot installation/damaged boot. In my case what Magisk damage is /system, not boot.
I wish it could be boot, because that is very easy to fix (flashing through fastboot/SP Flash tools in the case of MTK, recovering boot twrp "backup" even if you didn't make backup...) as you mentioned.
Hope someone have a great idea to revert system to origin, then we could post the solution for those who would like to install Magisk in 4.2+ old phones, and instead of doing boot flash manually, they try to flash magisk.zip and they got bootloop.
Main post updated with all thread information. Up!
Nothing?? Up!!
trol_sg said:
Hope someone have a great idea to revert system to origin, then we could post the solution for those who would like to install Magisk in 4.2+ old phones, and instead of doing boot flash manually, they try to flash magisk.zip and they got bootloop.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The only part of the Magisk installation that actually touches /system is if it installs the addon.d survival script. The log you posted earlier shows that it's trying to do this, for some reason, and failiing. I'd start looking there...

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