Related
So, the situation is a bit weird. About a week and a half ago, some update came out for my AT&T Note 3, and after declining, later it forced me to install it. After installing, it seemed to have disabled root, but I still had the custom icon show up when it booted, and root functions were disabled. It was as if root was not uninstalled, but disabled. I've tried re-rooting the normal way, but that gives a fail when I try to use the OneClickBin application. I haven't tried skipping that and installing root for fear of bricking the phone on some incompatibility. If someone else has this problem or has solved it, please let me know what you did or give any advice you can. The ideal result would be for my phone to end up back in the stock firmware, updated and ready to root as if nothing was wrong. I'd also appreciate it if anyone can give me info on the update that broke it, so I can check for a root method which is compatible with it. Thanks in advance.
Ralkero said:
So, the situation is a bit weird. About a week and a half ago, some update came out for my AT&T Note 3, and after declining, later it forced me to install it. After installing, it seemed to have disabled root, but I still had the custom icon show up when it booted, and root functions were disabled. It was as if root was not uninstalled, but disabled. I've tried re-rooting the normal way, but that gives a fail when I try to use the OneClickBin application. I haven't tried skipping that and installing root for fear of bricking the phone on some incompatibility. If someone else has this problem or has solved it, please let me know what you did or give any advice you can. The ideal result would be for my phone to end up back in the stock firmware, updated and ready to root as if nothing was wrong. I'd also appreciate it if anyone can give me info on the update that broke it, so I can check for a root method which is compatible with it. Thanks in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You got the update to MJ5, try using Kingo Root.
I'm noticing that Kingo Root's version page does not list the SM-N900A model. We're sure it's supported, right?
Yup! I used it on mj5 update
Solarenemy68 said:
You got the update to MJ5, try using Kingo Root.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, that worked.
Hello,
I'm facing some small problem with my Xperia.
I own this device for 4 days, so please consider me noob (only for this device).
So I've unlocked my bootloader, rooted the phone and installed CWM, but the problem is that it is losing root after every reboot (I have to flash SuperSu libraries each time to fix it).
I've seen a thread about this, how to re-root my phone, however I can't find it anymore.
Could You help me to root my phone permanently?
Android phone user said:
Hello,
I'm facing some small problem with my Xperia.
I own this device for 4 days, so please consider me noob (only for this device).
So I've unlocked my bootloader, rooted the phone and installed CWM, but the problem is that it is losing root after every reboot (I have to flash SuperSu libraries each time to fix it).
I've seen a thread about this, how to re-root my phone, however I can't find it anymore.
Could You help me to root my phone permanently?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Flash a pre-rooted 4.3 rom is better
Ben Ling said:
Flash a pre-rooted 4.3 rom is better
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, I know that's the way but I kind of don't want to change my ROM now, as I would have to set up everything (I know I can leave data, but it may cause FC's).
I also tried existenZ ROM, but it was slower.
I've found some thread about this fix, but it didn't work
Hi,
I have the problem with à Samsung Galaxy i9305. :
http://forum.xda-developers.com/galaxy-s3/help-i9305/loosing-root-reboot-android-4-3-t2813568
Did you find a solution ?
Thanks.
I have rooted my N6 via adb, the supersu .bat file, TWRP, and the Nexus Toolkit. No matter what I do, after restoring my N6 and rebooting, I lose the NFC options under settings. If I do a factory reset I regain the options, but when I re-flash root I lose them again. NFC writing programs can't detect NFC ability on my phone, and ztest says I don't have it.
I am running the stock factory image.
NFC works fine before I root. I have rooted every Android device I've had, and never experienced this. Is this an N6 issue, a lollipop issue, or some special circumstance of my own creating?
Has anyone else experienced this?
TIA.
goodfellaslxa said:
I have rooted my N6 via adb, the supersu .bat file, TWRP, and the Nexus Toolkit. No matter what I do, after restoring my N6 and rebooting, I lose the NFC options under settings. If I do a factory reset I regain the options, but when I re-flash root I lose them again. NFC writing programs can't detect NFC ability on my phone, and ztest says I don't have it.
I am running the stock factory image.
NFC works fine before I root. I have rooted every Android device I've had, and never experienced this. Is this an N6 issue, a lollipop issue, or some special circumstance of my own creating?
Has anyone else experienced this?
TIA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rooted, and unlocked via NTK here. NFC works fine.
goodfellaslxa said:
I have rooted my N6 via adb, the supersu .bat file, TWRP, and the Nexus Toolkit. No matter what I do, after restoring my N6 and rebooting, I lose the NFC options under settings. If I do a factory reset I regain the options, but when I re-flash root I lose them again. NFC writing programs can't detect NFC ability on my phone, and ztest says I don't have it.
I am running the stock factory image.
NFC works fine before I root. I have rooted every Android device I've had, and never experienced this. Is this an N6 issue, a lollipop issue, or some special circumstance of my own creating?
Has anyone else experienced this?
TIA.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
what are you using to gain root? the latest supersu should not mess things up. the latest supersu is version 2.37 http://download.chainfire.eu/636/SuperSU/UPDATE-SuperSU-v2.37.zip
I've had no problems at all. I used the wugfresh toolkit over in the development section. Worked flawlessly and was pretty much the easiest root I've ever used. You just click buttons. Lol. Go back to full stock and use that.
I have used Wug's toolkit, and agree it's very easy. I have also tried every other method. I have only flashed the stock rom. Maybe it's something that's loading afterwards? Are any apps known to kill NFC? I literally lose the option to enable NFC (and also Android beam). It's just not there.
My process has been 1. Flash stock rom. 2. Restore from Google. 3. Flash root. Sometime after flashing root (and making sure I still have NFC) it disappears.
Again, I have rooted many phones over the years, and never had this problem. I am going to have to try to diagnose what step exactly causes me to lose NFC. I reflashed yesterday and had NFC, but today it's gone again.
I don't think I'm doing anything out of the ordinary, so I will post IF I find the culprit. I doubt I will be the only one to experience this.
goodfellaslxa said:
I have used Wug's toolkit, and agree it's very easy. I have also tried every other method. I have only flashed the stock rom. Maybe it's something that's loading afterwards? Are any apps known to kill NFC? I literally lose the option to enable NFC (and also Android beam). It's just not there.
My process has been 1. Flash stock rom. 2. Restore from Google. 3. Flash root. Sometime after flashing root (and making sure I still have NFC) it disappears.
Again, I have rooted many phones over the years, and never had this problem. I am going to have to try to diagnose what step exactly causes me to lose NFC. I reflashed yesterday and had NFC, but today it's gone again.
I don't think I'm doing anything out of the ordinary, so I will post IF I find the culprit. I doubt I will be the only one to experience this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
again, ill repeat myself, what file are you using to gain root? if you are using older files, they break things.
simms22 said:
again, ill repeat myself, what file are you using to gain root? if you are using older files, they break things.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I used 2.36. I'll try 2.37 to see if it makes a difference.
goodfellaslxa said:
I used 2.36. I'll try 2.37 to see if it makes a difference.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it doesnt matter, 2.36 is still good. the only thing i can tell you is root your phone the right way. you want to fastboot oem unlock the bootloader first, then fastboot flash a custom recovery, then flash the the supersu file via that recovery, then just reboot.
simms22 said:
it doesnt matter, 2.36 is still good. the only thing i can tell you is root your phone the right way. you want to fastboot oem unlock the bootloader first, then fastboot flash a custom recovery, then flash the the supersu file via that recovery, then just reboot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Is there an issue with the following method?
fastboot oem unlock
chainfire's autoroot in stock recovery
Just trying to understand if there is a reason why I should do it a different way. At this time, I don't need custom recovery (all I want root for at the moment is adaway - and that is working fine). I suspect i will end up flashing TWRP in the near future (when I need it).
jj14 said:
Is there an issue with the following method?
fastboot oem unlock
chainfire's autoroot in stock recovery
Just trying to understand if there is a reason why I should do it a different way. At this time, I don't need custom recovery (all I want root for at the moment is adaway - and that is working fine). I suspect i will end up flashing TWRP in the near future (when I need it).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yes, there very well could be. doing it right is just as easy as using any root toolkit, its a nexus and has the options to do it manually, no hacking. if you have the drivers to your computer installed, it takes about 3-4 minutes.
simms22 said:
yes, there very well could be. doing it right is just as easy as using any root toolkit, its a nexus and has the options to do it manually, no hacking. if you have the drivers to your computer installed, it takes about 3-4 minutes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Till Lollipop, I've always done it the manual way. With lollipop on my N5 and then, on my N6, the sticky's here didn't seem to provide any different method - it was autoroot.
Reading other threads showed that it was either custom kernel with relaxed permissions and supersu, or autoroot, or the toolkit.
I know that chainfire was testing a version of supersu that wouldn't need the modified kernel, but it was still in beta.
So, what method would you have recommended? (which did you use?) SuperSU by itself isn't sufficient (unless you went with the beta). Or is there a different guide/sticky thread that I missed?
jj14 said:
Till Lollipop, I've always done it the manual way. With lollipop on my N5 and then, on my N6, the sticky's here didn't seem to provide any different method - it was autoroot.
Reading other threads showed that it was either custom kernel with relaxed permissions and supersu, or autoroot, or the toolkit.
I know that chainfire was testing a version of supersu that wouldn't need the modified kernel, but it was still in beta.
So, what method would you have recommended? (which did you use?) SuperSU by itself isn't sufficient (unless you went with the beta). Or is there a different guide/sticky thread that I missed?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i recommend the way i did it, the right way. fastboot oem unlock, fastboot flash a recovery, and flash the latest supersu. what you are reading is now considered old. flashing the new supersu(beta) is all thats needed.
simms22 said:
i recommend the way i did it, the right way. fastboot oem unlock, fastboot flash a recovery, and flash the latest supersu. what you are reading is now considered old. flashing the new supersu(beta) is all thats needed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I guess I'll try it when the next update comes along. Get system partition back to stock by flashing appropriate system images, and then using the new supersu.
jj14 said:
I guess I'll try it when the next update comes along. Get system partition back to stock by flashing appropriate system images, and then using the new supersu.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
oh, i almost forgot. the n6 has a new option, before unlocking the bootloader, you have to go to developer settings and enable oem unlock.
simms22 said:
oh, i almost forgot. the n6 has a new option, before unlocking the bootloader, you have to go to developer settings and enable oem unlock.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks
Yeah, I knew that (I already unlocked bootloader and rooted)
Well, after reflashing and not rooting I still lost NFC (though it took several hours and a few reboots before it stopped), so I decided to try not using google restore, and setup as a new device.
After manually reinstalling 300+ apps, reconfiguring everything, and rooting (using 2.37), NFC appears to be working fine. I *think* that some setting that was being restored from previous google backups eventually killed NFC.
I'm not rooted... stock T-Mobile Nexus 6 running a nano SIM from my Droid Maxx on VZW. There are no NFC settings in the Wireless settings section.
I'm not unlocked or rooted... just took the over the air update that came right after the phone first powered up.
Is the nano SIM a factor? What exactly is the difference between the NFC nano SIM and the non-NFC nano SIM? The Droid Maxx has NFC, so I assume that its nano SIM supports NFC. Not sure what's going on here.
lkevinl said:
I'm not rooted... stock T-Mobile Nexus 6 running a nano SIM from my Droid Maxx on VZW. There are no NFC settings in the Wireless settings section.
I'm not unlocked or rooted... just took the over the air update that came right after the phone first powered up.
Is the nano SIM a factor? What exactly is the difference between the NFC nano SIM and the non-NFC nano SIM? The Droid Maxx has NFC, so I assume that its nano SIM supports NFC. Not sure what's going on here.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think its not a root issue. Did you restore a previous backup, or use the tap-to-import option? I think there is a setting that is being imported that causes this. Try resetting to stock, and when you go through the initial setup don't import a backup. That fixed it for me.
I used the original auto-root, and I still have NFC options available also. (and I never had to enable developer options. I unlocked the bootloader right out of the box).
Hmmm... was hoping to avoid doing the factory reset. I did try to the Tap to Go option but wasn't sure if it did anything. I'm mostly interested in getting my WiFi settings restored. I suspect your right about a restored setting mucking this up. I may have to do the reset anyway because of the other problem I'm having with Facebook that I posted about in an earlier thread.
#1-"com.tmobile.pr.adapt (10001) has been granted superuser permissions for an interactive shell" pops up on my screen every 30 seconds on the bottom of my screen in a grey box.
#2- i also noticed that i can accept and recieve calls but i can not hear, nor can the other person hear me. if i use hangouts video call, skype, etc it works fine.
#3-i also tried to get rom manager to make a recovery and it says it needs to get CWD recovery to install a new software, the first thing we need to do is install a up to date version, we will begin that process now... etc.. then it says to get started you must first sset up a custom recovery, it gives two options a samsung galaxy s3 on metro pcs or a samsung previal 2 on boost mobile, or device not listed, when i click that it says "SM-G920T does not have an officially supported CWDR yet. Have you installed a CWD based recovery manually?" so im not sure what to do from there, or if i even need that. i have been a iphone user since day one went to android after reading up a lot on it, although rooting is quite different than jailbreaking it seems, i am incredibly excited to get started if i can get past these little problems and get started and figure everything out. ANY advice, or anwsers to these problems would be Greatly appreciated! thanks!
Also i went to dev options in settings and noticed the "OEM unlocking- allow the bootloader to be unlocker" was turned off, i dont know if this is necessary to root if i did something wrong by not turning it on or what, or if it may fix any problems above if i turn it on now. thanks!
I have a samsung Galaxy S6 (SM_G920T) . i Rooted and did not trip Knox, Although i did just remember that my fingerprint sensor is not working either.
Thank you guys so much this si a incredible forum i have spent hours and hours reading and researching before making this post i appreciate it so much!
#1 Freeze that ****. Use some root tool to freeze that T-mobile apk, seems u gave it root permissions at some point. I believe there are a lot of apps that you will want to do the same.
#2 ? No idea. Stock rom/kernel?
#3 What is this I don't even. Don't do that. Go to TWRP's official web, get your zeroflte (SM-GT920T) twrp and flash it via ODIN, or else get the recovery.img and use flashify. All that assuming you want a custom recovery.
You will need to unlock the bootloader if you are on 5.1.1. I believe locked will prevent changes or wiping anything on the OS partitions, even recovery (can someone confirm?)
I believe jailbraking and rooting should be pretty much similar, if not the same, as both target to grant the user root access to do whatever he pleases on the OS.
Welcome to android btw.
How did you root? Sounds like you used the modified sboot which causes no sounds in calls and nonfunctional fingerprint scanner. If so, flash back to stock and use a different rooting method. The rest, pretty much what the above poster stated
Root
I rooted using the version that I found the only one that works it seemed like, went to Odin put my phone In download mode and then put the boot loader download in BL and the. Put a something unikernel.sbin I believe, whatever the guide said also then it was done. I thought you couldn't use the twrp or custom recovery etc on tmobile one yet but I just read a thing about xtrestolite odex pure v2 which says it's for 5.1.1 and my model of phone but in the guide it says to root using CF auto root and a link there to it but the link doesn't have my phone on the list that the guide that clearly is my phone says to use I don't know if I'm missing something but I want to use it I understand most of it but I don't know if I need to unropt first and re root then use Odin and flash twrp that's supported on my phone then use that to recover the rom. Etc. The kernel that says is used in the guide is the same one I downloaded so do I need to remove it all then let it do that or?
Sorry if this didn't make sense I'm halfway there between confused and understood I have spent the last 10 hours reading and trying to figure this out though lol. Thanks guys!
Also
Sorry for adding more but also how do I flash back to stock? Search for the download to the stock image of my phone? Also I could only find one way of rooting everything else said it wasn't working yet or am I missing a big portion of something here?
Just flash the 5.1.1 firmware to return to stock. To root, flash unikernel with Odin. The other method you used was to not trip knox, but as you experienced has side effects. I had to Odin back to 5.1.1 myself. Can't have those issues
thanks!
so how do i flash back to 5.1.1? find the ling to completely stock 5.1.1 and flash through odin in the same spot and same way i flashed the kernel to root? also.. i rooted with " s6_UniKernel_v2-0003-ODIN.tar" is that not the one you were talking about?
CjetOKC said:
so how do i flash back to 5.1.1? find the ling to completely stock 5.1.1 and flash through odin in the same spot and same way i flashed the kernel to root? also.. i rooted with " s6_UniKernel_v2-0003-ODIN.tar" is that not the one you were talking about?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, flashing to 5.1.1 works exactly like that. You need to get the version for your model (very important on this one) and then simply place that file in the AP field of ODIN while the device is in recovery mode. It is normal for ODIN to freeze for 2 minutes while verifying. Make sure to use a MD5 checker tool on the firmware before flashing.
Rooting has historically required more technical savvy and balls than jailbreaking, but PingPong made rooting the S6 brain-dead simple. CF-Auto root is still pretty painless, but you must make sure you have the right zip for your device.
Anyhoo, the quickest & easiest way to restore phone calls & fingerprint scan is to use Odin to get back to bone stock.
Next, use PingPong to root. After rooting, "com.tmobile.pr.adapt" will ask for root access. That is T-Mobile's "phone home" app and sends info about your device (probably including root status). Deny it root access and make sure you check "Remember my choice", and it won't bother you again. You will not lose any functionality by denying it root, so terminate that crap.
Don't bother with rom manager. CWM is archaic. If you want a custom recovery, use TWRP. You can install TWRP either using Odin or TWRP Manager app (it's free).
Good luck and have fun with your S6
CjetOKC said:
Sorry for adding more but also how do I flash back to stock? Search for the download to the stock image of my phone? Also I could only find one way of rooting everything else said it wasn't working yet or am I missing a big portion of something here?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you still rooted? If so, and if you are experiencing the call audio issue, go flash AOU's kernel. He has made a kernel for the tmo s6. that should eliminate your call audio issue. The finger print scanner is the only issue with flashing his kernel. Also, I rooted with the modded sboot, his TWRP and kernel, and I didn't trip knox
http://forum.xda-developers.com/tmo...recovery-twrp2-8-6-0-g925t-5-1-1-of6-t3143002
First of all, I have been using custom kernels and later rooting since Pocket PC 2002/Merlin, and I now have bought my first Sony (after just about every other brand of Android phone, no particular reason why I never had a Sony since the SE T68) because it's the only phone I can use with salt water spray on the screen and wet fingers. I do a lot of lobster, crayfish and crab fishing with traps and use an app called Fishing Poins to keep track of my pots and what I get where. Coming from Samsung (S5 was the latest I had) the rooting of a Sony seems rather cumbersome, but I have a few apps that need root access. LIke Air Audio to play music through an Airplay system. DLNA is useless to me, I want to stream the audio that I'm using on the phone directly to the whole house systen.
So can somebody please tell me what I do to get root access on Nougat (which my phone upgraded to before I saw that's what was happening, and no, I'm not big on reading long explanation screens, if it's a new phone and an official upgrade I am used to just doing it before I root on Samsung phones, since I have to unroot to install them later) and nothing else? For now I don't want to use any custom kernels or recovery, if I can avoid it. Just stock, rooted, like I could on my S5 (and Note 2, S4 Active and so on), please!
I did attempt the KingRoot app, but it didn't work. Also I have read a bit about that app that doesn't seem to good (Chinese spy fator app), so I did a full reset after the failed attempt. But if there's something similar that would be the perfect way of doing this. Of course I'm no stranger to ADB, so hooking it up to my pc is not a problem either.
1. Downgrade to any version of stock Marshmallow firmware with Xperifirm and Flashtool. Wipe everything and Exclude nothing (but *.ta - if any). Do not use FSC script! << FSC is now mandatory!
2. Backup your device's TA partition with Universal TA Backup tool.
3. Flash Nougat firmware (again with Xperifirm and Flashtool). Wipe everything and Exclude nothing (but *.ta - if any).
4. Unlock your device's bootloader
5. Follow this instructions to create/flash a custom kernel with root, and also DK.ftf (to fully reactivate sony's drm keys, which is wiped when bootloader is unlocked).
Anyway, try it at your own risk!
Thanks! So that's the method, which of course means deleting everything I've set up on the phone. Is there a chance there may be an easier, less destructive way during the next month or so? I can do without root access for that long.
oh, btw, by "custom kernel" do you mean that it will not be the original setup for the phone? I've been betatesting kernels on many devices, but nowadays I only want a phone that works without any hitches, and I want access to the official updates. That was easy on the Samsung phones, but maybe Sony is more different than I thought?
Oh, btw, maybe it is explained in the long post you directed me to, but I recently had an eye operation, and I would appreciate a shorter answer, before I get to the "how to", which takes me a while to read right now...
NEVER MIND THIS MESSAGE! Now I understand what Xperfirm is...
Also where would be a safe place to download ROMs from? Both the downgrade ROM and the Nougat ROM? I now really wish I hadn't let the thing upgrade before I took the TB backup (I'm still a bit unsure as to why I need that, I don't use any media with any form for DRM, but I guess better safe than sorry).
Mastiff said:
NEVER MIND THIS MESSAGE! Now I understand what Xperfirm is...
Also where would be a safe place to download ROMs from? Both the downgrade ROM and the Nougat ROM? I now really wish I hadn't let the thing upgrade before I took the TB backup (I'm still a bit unsure as to why I need that, I don't use any media with any form for DRM, but I guess better safe than sorry).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As far as I know there's no danger to download through Xperifirm, you need TA for guarantee reasons (if your phone need repair, not everywhere but for safety)
THanks, yeah. I have managed to read a bit and found out that Xperifirm downloads from the official Sony servers. Pain in the ass downloading, it breaks the download every couple of minutes. But that's probably Sony's servers, not the program. As for warranty, that's no problem in Norway since we have very strong consumer rights here. If an error can not be prooven to stem from rooting or other software stuff, it will be fixed. If I remember correctly Apple tried really hard to battle with the consumer rights officials about jailbreaking, but they had a very bloody defeat.
Seems like I have a problem. The Telenor Nougat ROM doesn't have a loader, according to Flashtool. Neither do the two other ROMs I have downloaded so far, but I'm trying again with a third, which doesn't have the "customised" moniker. So I hope that has a loader. But how do I upgrade again to Nougat, with the Norwegian version, when the Telenor ROM doesn't have a loader?
Mastiff said:
Seems like I have a problem. The Telenor Nougat ROM doesn't have a loader, according to Flashtool. Neither do the two other ROMs I have downloaded so far, but I'm trying again with a third, which doesn't have the "customised" moniker. So I hope that has a loader. But how do I upgrade again to Nougat, with the Norwegian version, when the Telenor ROM doesn't have a loader?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
if your phone is locked(Bootloader),fix it using Xperia Companion..that way it upgrades automatically to Nougat.
if not,lock it using Flashtool first.
Well, the message was kind of badly worded, because I need to downgrade first of all. So I'm at the moment trying to get it to MM without messing up the TA partition. So anyway, this thread has been followed by others, I think this can be considered solved since there is only one way to get root on these phones.
What would be the best approach to rooting if you unlock your bootloader before learning about TA backup? I have since downgraded, done TA backup, upgraded, flashed TWRP, flashed SU/Magisk/phhSu, and saw two green checks in Magisk. Tried to continue to get the three checks by installing Sony framework v1 through Magisk and then Andros plus kernel, but got stuck on Sony screen on boot up. So I repeated steps and stopped after I got two checks, however after long use and simple phone restart, I lost root. Please HELP!