"Too many attempts" trying to access lock settings... - Razer Phone 2 Questions & Answers

So this is a weird one. I cannot access my lock settings anymore, it fails with "too many attempts" even if the pattern is correct.
No, I haven't forgotten my pattern as I can still use it to boot the phone and unlock it. Weirdly, the same message pops up briefly in a popup dialog after unlocking the device.
What gives? Even weirder is entering the wrong pattern correctly states "wrong pattern".
Tried searching but there's too much noise from generic "I forgot my password" topics.

vintagepc said:
So this is a weird one. I cannot access my lock settings anymore, it fails with "too many attempts" even if the pattern is correct.
No, I haven't forgotten my pattern as I can still use it to boot the phone and unlock it. Weirdly, the same message pops up briefly in a popup dialog after unlocking the device.
What gives? Even weirder is entering the wrong pattern correctly states "wrong pattern".
Tried searching but there's too much noise from generic "I forgot my password" topics.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
From the TWRP file manager (if you have it installed), delete "/data/system/locksettings.db" and see if that helps.

That seems to have fixed it. Thanks!

Related

Kaiser Prompts For Password

Hi,
Every now and then i'll wake up in the morning with my Tytn II II prompting me to enter a password, i've tried entering everything and checked all security features and made sure the "prompt for password when not used" has not been selected but nothing works, my only choice is to reset the device.
My main problem is the alarm clock does not work when it enters this mode which means I have to set another alarm clock just incase the phone enters the "enter password" mode over night.
I've hard reset the device but still this doesn't help.
Any suggestions?
I also have this crazy problem. Every now and again every 1-2 days I'll switch on my phone and be prompted for a password. I've never set any and the only answer is to soft reset and then all is fine until it happens again. The only other notable thing is that after about 5 failed guesses is tells me to input a1b2c3. Has anyone any idea what's going on - it's driving me nuts!!!
(ps I've tried zenyee but still no joy)
Wow, that would be annoying. Sorry, no help here as I use a password after one of my former devices "mistepeared"
Along these lines, I get prompted for my password everytime I connect to my Vista machine at home. I have yet to find a way to turn this off either. good thing it isn't my work machine as it would drive me crazy. At least le me enter the password on the main computer's keyboard instead of forcing me to open up my phone and type it in...
Shafty said:
I also have this crazy problem. Every now and again every 1-2 days I'll switch on my phone and be prompted for a password. I've never set any and the only answer is to soft reset and then all is fine until it happens again. The only other notable thing is that after about 5 failed guesses is tells me to input a1b2c3. Has anyone any idea what's going on - it's driving me nuts!!!
(ps I've tried zenyee but still no joy)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is well weird.. Someone gets the same thing with an HP iPaq here: http://forums11.itrc.hp.com/service...47626+1201639304018+28353475&threadId=1190832
Unfortunatly theres no solution offered there either..
edit: I just had a play round after reading something and I think its something to do with the encryption for the SD card.. are either of you using it? If not are you synced to a work exchange server? Remote Device Wipe uses this code as well by the looks of it.. Have a read of this: http://blogs.msdn.com/windowsmobile...ows-mobile-6-storage-card-encryption-faq.aspx
The comments are where it mentions that code but the whole thing is worth a read.. theres also a document linked that tells you about device wipe if you havent heard of it.. I suspect this is related to your problem (in fact im sure it is)

If You're Concerned about Security Read This

If like me, you lock your Android phone with a PIN (in case it gets lost, and you don't want whoever finds it to have access to... well, pretty much every sensitive piece of information you have) you need to take one precaution before doing the same on a rooted Nook Color running a custom ROM like Phiremod.
If you set a PIN in Phiremod (and I assume, other ROMs, too), you will find, much to your chagrin, that when you lock your device and try to unlock, the keypad for entering your pin is not shown in its entirety on your screen. You will only see a couple of buttons and will most likely be unable to enter your full PIN (and unable, in any case, to click OK when done). So you'll find you've locked yourself out of your nook and have to reflash to get back in (unless there's a hack I'm unaware of).
So before you go doing something dumb like this, be sure to go into "Spare Parts" and disable "Compatibility Mode." Once you do this, the unlock PIN keypad will show up full screen in its entirety and you'll be "good to go."
Or you could reboot and it will be fine.
That happened to me and I thought I was in trouble, but I turned it off and back on and it was fine.
danbutter said:
Or you could reboot and it will be fine.
That happened to me and I thought I was in trouble, but I turned it off and back on and it was fine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you saying that when you rebooted, the OS auto-adjusted? That would have been nice to know.
Same thing happened to me with Pattern Lock. Luckily my pattern was only using the top circles.

Disable pin on start up?

I have lock set up for pin as I am using my android wear device as a trusted device, so it gets bypassed when my watch is near.
When I have to reboot/power on phone, the boot animation starts and then will ask for my pin. Once the pin is entered the boot animation starts again and completes the start up to lock screen. Does anyone know a way to disable that initial pin? It's pretty annoying... especially if having to do a reboot have changes take effect etc.
Edit: nevermind. I disabled my pin and then re-enabled and now I see the option to have a pin at start up or not.
It turns out that you can turn off PIN on boot but it's enabled by default and it's not obvious how to do it. You have to turn off the PIN (set your security type to None), then re-enable a PIN. At that point it will ask you if you want a PIN on boot or not.
[email protected] said:
It turns out that you can turn off PIN on boot but it's enabled by default and it's not obvious how to do it. You have to turn off the PIN (set your security type to None), then re-enable a PIN. At that point it will ask you if you want a PIN on boot or not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Interesting, I never knew this.
Actually you dont need to remove it then re-do it again
just setting>security>screen lock> type PIN> PIN
then you will see Secure start-up ( Require PIN to start device/ No Thank you)
Thanks, couldn't figure it out on Nexus 6P. All good now.
[email protected] said:
Actually you dont need to remove it then re-do it again
just setting>security>screen lock> type PIN> PIN
then you will see Secure start-up ( Require PIN to start device/ No Thank you)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks!!!! I have the G5 and was googling this very same issue!
Pressing the pin option, as to select it (whether you have it set up already or not) will present that toggle. Many thanks again.
jasonftfw said:
I have lock set up for pin as I am using my android wear device as a trusted device, so it gets bypassed when my watch is near.
When I have to reboot/power on phone, the boot animation starts and then will ask for my pin. Once the pin is entered the boot animation starts again and completes the start up to lock screen. Does anyone know a way to disable that initial pin? It's pretty annoying... especially if having to do a reboot have changes take effect etc.
Edit: nevermind. I disabled my pin and then re-enabled and now I see the option to have a pin at start up or not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Guess what? You no longer have encryption worth anything. Your data is protected only by password "default_password". If you have TWRP you can verify for yourself.... you can access and read all your files without ever once entering your pin.
More details here
https://www.reddit.com/r/Nexus6P/comments/47uj5r/twrp_is_decrypting_my_encrypted_data_partition/
The bottom line: if you want the security benefits of encrypted data, you need to enable pin on boot.
i disabled "require password to start device" because if my phone gets lost and runs out of battery and the finders charge it up again and thus Android boots up again, i want my lock screen to be visible so they can see my email to contact me to return it. also - i want to be able to call the phone if lost. this "lost phone" scenario greatly outweighs my need for greater security beyond the normal lockscreen password protection.
Nexus 6P + AT&T GoPhone
Gekko2 said:
i disabled "require password to start device" because if my phone gets lost and runs out of battery and the finders charge it up again and thus Android boots up again, i want my lock screen to be visible so they can see my email to contact me to return it. also - i want to be able to call the phone if lost. this "lost phone" scenario greatly outweighs my need for greater security beyond the normal lockscreen password protection.
Nexus 6P + AT&T GoPhone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your lock screen message is shown when prompted for the password to start the device. No need to disable security for that reason...
Didgeridoohan said:
Your lock screen message is shown when prompted for the password to start the device. No need to disable security for that reason...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i stand corrected!
Didgeridoohan said:
Your lock screen message is shown when prompted for the password to start the device. No need to disable security for that reason...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
BUT i still want to be able to CALL my phone if LOST and phone calls will not work if set as "require password to start device" upon reboot. hence - i still disabled for that reason.
Gekko2 said:
BUT i still want to be able to CALL my phone if LOST and phone calls will not work if set as "require password to start device" upon reboot. hence - i still disabled for that reason.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, fair enough. I consider my data more valuable than the phone though, so I keep it enabled for that reason.
Didgeridoohan said:
Your lock screen message is shown when prompted for the password to start the device. No need to disable security for that reason...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Didgeridoohan said:
Ok, fair enough. I consider my data more valuable than the phone though, so I keep it enabled for that reason.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
my sensitive data is all encrypted in an MS Word 2013 Encrypted Password Protected Document within a password protected Dropbox App with a password protected Phone. they have to get through 3 heavy layers to get to my sensitive data.
also - don't forget about "Find My Phone" with Android Device Manager and Lookout. both would be not work if "require password to start device" upon reboot.
Gekko2 said:
my sensitive data is all encrypted in an MS Word 2013 Encrypted Password Protected Document within a password protected Dropbox App with a password protected Phone. they have to get through 3 heavy layers to get to my sensitive data.
also - don't forget about "Find My Phone" with Android Device Manager and Lookout. both would be not work if "require password to start device" upon reboot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I know it's an older post, but I had to reply on this.
You see "3 heavy layers". I see 0 security layers.
First of all, a password protected phone doesn't stop anyone to hook up your phone to a computer and extract all the data they want from your partitions with adb commands. There goes the "1st layer".
Secondly, a password protected Dropbox app doesn't mean anything if you already downloaded the files on your phone. See the above. You have to download if you want to view and edit the document you mentioned. It will only protect your online data. Here goes your "2nd layer"
And the last one, a password protected Word document? Really? Brute forcing tools are wide avaible to crack Office documents. Security is a joke on this one. There goes your "3rd layer".
Anyhow I do share the same thought with you to let the phone boot into Android in order to call and track a lost phone. But only because I use Cerberus which survives factory resets. Most thieves are not knowledgeable in my opinion, so chances are high I could keep tracking my phone. Anyone who has the knowledge can re-format the phone anyway, so just hoping on the first category petty thieves
Wavealot said:
I know it's an older post, but I had to reply on this.
You see "3 heavy layers". I see 0 security layers.
First of all, a password protected phone doesn't stop anyone to hook up your phone to a computer and extract all the data they want from your partitions with adb commands. There goes the "1st layer".
Secondly, a password protected Dropbox app doesn't mean anything if you already downloaded the files on your phone. See the above. You have to download if you want to view and edit the document you mentioned. It will only protect your online data. Here goes your "2nd layer"
And the last one, a password protected Word document? Really? Brute forcing tools are wide avaible to crack Office documents. Security is a joke on this one. There goes your "3rd layer".
Anyhow I do share the same thought with you to let the phone boot into Android in order to call and track a lost phone. But only because I use Cerberus which survives factory resets. Most thieves are not knowledgeable in my opinion, so chances are high I could keep tracking my phone. Anyone who has the knowledge can re-format the phone anyway, so just hoping on the first category petty thieves
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You would be amazed at how well that doesn't work. The first steps when stealing a phone is to remove the sim card which makes all teaching apps useless. Then it is a full format and wipe of the device while loading a new os, then depending on the store that bought it they will also change the IMEI of the device.
When someone steals your phone, your info is the last thing they want. It's the device it's self.
[email protected] said:
Actually you dont need to remove it then re-do it again
just setting>security>screen lock> type PIN> PIN
then you will see Secure start-up ( Require PIN to start device/ No Thank you)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I tried this on my Nexus 6p, but it still asks for pin when rebooting. Do you know of any other way to get this removed?
correct fix
Your battery must be at 80% or more and on charger. Enable password lock and check no thanks then using 5 letters and 1 number enter a password. Then scroll down to trust agent and turn off the agents. Now goto lock screen and disable everything by clicking non. Reboot device.
thank uuuuuuuu
[email protected] said:
It turns out that you can turn off PIN on boot but it's enabled by default and it's not obvious how to do it. You have to turn off the PIN (set your security type to None), then re-enable a PIN. At that point it will ask you if you want a PIN on boot or not.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, It's worked for me ^_^
I restarted my phone and now it says secure restart. It doesn't give me a pin pad so when I do type the numbers it dont work. How do I get past the secure startup if my lock screen password don't even work?
Need help for my sister said:
I restarted my phone and now it says secure restart. It doesn't give me a pin pad so when I do type the numbers it dont work. How do I get past the secure startup if my lock screen password don't even work?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Please post a photo so we can see what's happening.

Lock screen won't recognize PIN/Android bug?

I can't unlock my phone with the PIN I assigned it. I always use the same PIN, so I'm pretty sure it's not a keystroke error. When I enter the PIN, it says "incorrect pin" and makes me wait 30 seconds before trying again. I don't believe I've made any recent changes to the phone. I also started it in safe mode, and was still unable to get in with the PIN. Some research on the web suggests that this is an android bug that has not yet been fixed. I'd really prefer not to have to do a factory reset, because I have a lot of important photos on the phone.
Is there any chance of fixing this through the "delete password file through ADB" method? The phone has been connected to 2 laptops previously, but I'm unable to remember if I left ADB debugging enabled. I'm having trouble getting either computer to recognize it, though it shows up on linux command line through the "lsusb" command. Phone has stock ROM, not sure when last updated.
If there are any other methods likely to work, please let me know!

New Pixel comes with Bootloader unlocked and it's unable to lock

Hi everyone,
I just bought a Google Pixel 5 with Android 11 that was declared "new" and when I got it, from the first time powering it on, I got the security alert that the bootloader is unlocked, see photo attached. For several personal reasons I cannot easily send it back, so I tried to understand what this means but I am no developer. I tried an entire day to install ADB, put the phone in developer mode and download the firmware image from the official source, I got to the point where the ADB devices command showed the phone as connected but then nothing else worked. In every video or guide online, the steps varied from what I had in front of me, or did not yield the same results, or how the files looked was different (I downloaded the same firmware version that is installed on the phone from the official Google page but never had an image file, just various other very non-descript files in it). As I am pretty clueless, I tried googling my way around the error codes I got but everything I tried didn't work. I either got more error codes, answers like the ADB server is already killed, or that flashing command that just returned something like "waiting for available device" and got stuck on it, or nothing happened at all. Then I figured out that the option in the developer menu "Allow OEM unlocking" is greyed out and I read then that there are phones where you simply cannot lock or unlock the bootloader. However, all online guides I see are from people who have a locked bootloader and want to unlock it, and in my case it's exactly the other way around, it came unlocked and I want to lock it. I also tried a normal reset of the phone from the settings menu, deleting all data, and it didn't work. When I got into fastboot mode, I only could choose between Recovery Mode, Rescue Mode and Restart Bootloader, I tried all of them and none worked, and often the last thing that happened was that the screen turned into a small Android with an open chest, and a line "No command" and the only way to get the phone out of this was by pressing the power button for more than 10 seconds. Every time it restarts, the bootloader unlocked safety advice is showing.
After reading all day long about this, I suspect that the phone was probably refurbished. I wondered whether they maybe accidentally forgot to lock it or whether it was intentional, and in case it was intentional, if there is any way someone would have digital access to the phone. I want to understand if it would be possible for me to keep it without having security issues. I read that the unlocked bootloader is a physical problem, if your phone gets stolen or you physically lose it, someone might hack your PIN easier, or get easier access to your data. However, the PIN code and the standard data encryption also seem to protect my data enough. And tbh, as soon as my phone would be lost or stolen, I would delete all data via Find My Device. So I wondered... if it's impossible for me to lock the bootloader, can I still safely keep the phone and use it, with all standard security apps installed like an anti virus app, Google Play Protect and standard security features like PIN and fingerprint unlock and encryption and be safe, or is there any danger I am not aware of? Or is there any way to enable OEM lock or fix this somehow that I would be able to get done as a non-developer? As mentioned before, sending it back is too difficult at the moment so I am just trying to understand what this bootloader unlocked means for me and if it poses a threat to my security as a normal user? (Watching videos, online banking, emails, sending work-related but not highly data sensitive documents, paying with NFC..)
Thanks in advance! I really appreciate any insights to help me understand what this is, if there is any solution to it or if it actually poses no danger if I secure my data another way.
wehramausi said:
Hi everyone,
I just bought a Google Pixel 5 with Android 11 that was declared "new" and when I got it, from the first time powering it on, I got the security alert that the bootloader is unlocked, see photo attached. For several personal reasons I cannot easily send it back, so I tried to understand what this means but I am no developer. I tried an entire day to install ADB, put the phone in developer mode and download the firmware image from the official source, I got to the point where the ADB devices command showed the phone as connected but then nothing else worked. In every video or guide online, the steps varied from what I had in front of me, or did not yield the same results, or how the files looked was different (I downloaded the same firmware version that is installed on the phone from the official Google page but never had an image file, just various other very non-descript files in it). As I am pretty clueless, I tried googling my way around the error codes I got but everything I tried didn't work. I either got more error codes, answers like the ADB server is already killed, or that flashing command that just returned something like "waiting for available device" and got stuck on it, or nothing happened at all. Then I figured out that the option in the developer menu "Allow OEM unlocking" is greyed out and I read then that there are phones where you simply cannot lock or unlock the bootloader. However, all online guides I see are from people who have a locked bootloader and want to unlock it, and in my case it's exactly the other way around, it came unlocked and I want to lock it. I also tried a normal reset of the phone from the settings menu, deleting all data, and it didn't work. When I got into fastboot mode, I only could choose between Recovery Mode, Rescue Mode and Restart Bootloader, I tried all of them and none worked, and often the last thing that happened was that the screen turned into a small Android with an open chest, and a line "No command" and the only way to get the phone out of this was by pressing the power button for more than 10 seconds. Every time it restarts, the bootloader unlocked safety advice is showing.
After reading all day long about this, I suspect that the phone was probably refurbished. I wondered whether they maybe accidentally forgot to lock it or whether it was intentional, and in case it was intentional, if there is any way someone would have digital access to the phone. I want to understand if it would be possible for me to keep it without having security issues. I read that the unlocked bootloader is a physical problem, if your phone gets stolen or you physically lose it, someone might hack your PIN easier, or get easier access to your data. However, the PIN code and the standard data encryption also seem to protect my data enough. And tbh, as soon as my phone would be lost or stolen, I would delete all data via Find My Device. So I wondered... if it's impossible for me to lock the bootloader, can I still safely keep the phone and use it, with all standard security apps installed like an anti virus app, Google Play Protect and standard security features like PIN and fingerprint unlock and encryption and be safe, or is there any danger I am not aware of? Or is there any way to enable OEM lock or fix this somehow that I would be able to get done as a non-developer? As mentioned before, sending it back is too difficult at the moment so I am just trying to understand what this bootloader unlocked means for me and if it poses a threat to my security as a normal user? (Watching videos, online banking, emails, sending work-related but not highly data sensitive documents, paying with NFC..)
Thanks in advance! I really appreciate any insights to help me understand what this is, if there is any solution to it or if it actually poses no danger if I secure my data another way.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
When the bootloader is unlocked, "allow oem unlocking" is greyed out.
You use fastboot commands when flashing firmware and locking the bootloader
Code:
fastboot devices
The factory image downloaded from this page includes a script that flashes the device, typically named flash-all.sh (On Windows systems, use flash-all.bat
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Factory Images for Nexus and Pixel Devices | Google Play services | Google for Developers
developers.google.com
Once the script finishes, your device reboots. You should now lock the bootloader for security:
Start the device in fastboot mode again, as described above.
Execute:
fastboot flashing lock
or, for older devices, run:
fastboot oem lock
Locking bootloader will wipe the data on some devices. After locking the bootloader, if you want to flash the device again, you must run fastboot oem unlock again, which will wipe the data.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wehramausi said:
Hi everyone,
I just bought a Google Pixel 5 with Android 11 that was declared "new" and when I got it, from the first time powering it on, I got the security alert that the bootloader is unlocked, see photo attached. For several personal reasons I cannot easily send it back, so I tried to understand what this means but I am no developer. I tried an entire day to install ADB, put the phone in developer mode and download the firmware image from the official source, I got to the point where the ADB devices command showed the phone as connected but then nothing else worked. In every video or guide online, the steps varied from what I had in front of me, or did not yield the same results, or how the files looked was different (I downloaded the same firmware version that is installed on the phone from the official Google page but never had an image file, just various other very non-descript files in it). As I am pretty clueless, I tried googling my way around the error codes I got but everything I tried didn't work. I either got more error codes, answers like the ADB server is already killed, or that flashing command that just returned something like "waiting for available device" and got stuck on it, or nothing happened at all. Then I figured out that the option in the developer menu "Allow OEM unlocking" is greyed out and I read then that there are phones where you simply cannot lock or unlock the bootloader. However, all online guides I see are from people who have a locked bootloader and want to unlock it, and in my case it's exactly the other way around, it came unlocked and I want to lock it. I also tried a normal reset of the phone from the settings menu, deleting all data, and it didn't work. When I got into fastboot mode, I only could choose between Recovery Mode, Rescue Mode and Restart Bootloader, I tried all of them and none worked, and often the last thing that happened was that the screen turned into a small Android with an open chest, and a line "No command" and the only way to get the phone out of this was by pressing the power button for more than 10 seconds. Every time it restarts, the bootloader unlocked safety advice is showing.
After reading all day long about this, I suspect that the phone was probably refurbished. I wondered whether they maybe accidentally forgot to lock it or whether it was intentional, and in case it was intentional, if there is any way someone would have digital access to the phone. I want to understand if it would be possible for me to keep it without having security issues. I read that the unlocked bootloader is a physical problem, if your phone gets stolen or you physically lose it, someone might hack your PIN easier, or get easier access to your data. However, the PIN code and the standard data encryption also seem to protect my data enough. And tbh, as soon as my phone would be lost or stolen, I would delete all data via Find My Device. So I wondered... if it's impossible for me to lock the bootloader, can I still safely keep the phone and use it, with all standard security apps installed like an anti virus app, Google Play Protect and standard security features like PIN and fingerprint unlock and encryption and be safe, or is there any danger I am not aware of? Or is there any way to enable OEM lock or fix this somehow that I would be able to get done as a non-developer? As mentioned before, sending it back is too difficult at the moment so I am just trying to understand what this bootloader unlocked means for me and if it poses a threat to my security as a normal user? (Watching videos, online banking, emails, sending work-related but not highly data sensitive documents, paying with NFC..)
Thanks in advance! I really appreciate any insights to help me understand what this is, if there is any solution to it or if it actually poses no danger if I secure my data another way.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Trade you for a locked 4a 5g...
sipotek said:
Hey Bro can you share a method that how can I root Google Pixel 5, I tried a lot but i can't update the recovery mode? can you share some simple method like with the help of any Apk, or recovery file.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lots of threads and guides online that show how to root

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