I've got the yakjuxw build and a Mac. Is there any way I can flash over to yakju, without finding a Windows machine to borrow or steal?
You can flash over to the Google build from a mac...no issue at all.. I have done that successfully a number of times. You'll need to download and install fastboot first. The executable for a mac is named 'fastboot-mac'.
I assume that you have the android SDK installed on your machine, if not, then there are quite a few guides on the net to help you with that, but essentially it is downloading the sdk and setting up environment variables on your mac. Just to confirm, my fastboot-mac is copied under the 'tools' folder of the sdk.
Once set up, boot the smartphone in bootloader mode either via 'adb reboot bootloader' command or by pressing the Vol plus + minus + power buttons. Then execute fastboot-mac devices to see whether you fastboot can identify your phone. If it does, then its simple steps from then on. If it doesn't, then you'll need to fix your install first.
Once the phone is visible to fastboot, then you need to unlock the bootloader and then execute the commands from the 'flash-all.sh' script that is included within the yajku build. I had indicated some steps here previously for another user.
HTH
Excellent! Thanks for answering!
Related
I seem to have an annoying problem. When the phone is connected via USB and is properly on i.e. in the sense launcher and everything, typing 'adb devices' on cmd works fine and I find the device. However when I power down
1. it goes into recovery
2. If I do manage to get into bootloader the PC tries to reinstall the drivers which it fails to do hence 'adb devices' doesn't come up with any results.
Any help would really be appreciated.
Android SDK?
Few quick questions, you have installed ADB drivers(i guess you have else no "devices" would show)? You are running in USB Debugging? I have only known fastboot to work in recovery mode, which guide are you following to flash the radio?
As far as i remember it is all fastboot commands once you have ADB reboot recovery then it's something like fastboot copy radio.img etc,
Check this post http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=896597
@Xtrema - I have the android sdk and in tools i put the three ADB files in there.
@wbbigdave - I'm pretty sure I have the ADB drivers because I can find it when the phone is fully on and I have HTC sync installed which has the Desire HD come up. I'm using this guide to flash the radio and method 2 since it seems like the method that the Android Rev maker said to use.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=11557769
My main problem is that it won't find my device when I'm in the bootloader :S but finds it when the phone is fully on.
Shall I try Method 1?
Method 1 is the one i use.
Download the radio flash.zip and extract to desktop, extract the radio.img file into the extracted folder. Then double click the 'start here' file. This will then open a command window into which you type the commands.
Phone should be in recovery when you do this.
Thanks alot, I was getting confused. Method 1 seems a lot easier but I was already in fastboot when I wasn't suppose to be
So far it seems to have gone through. How do I make sure I have the correct radio. In the bootloader will it not show the first half the the radio file name?
Settings, About phone, Software information, Baseband version.
How To Re-Flash Stock Image
Assuming you have ADB and everything setup already....
1. I just did this for practice. I did not need to do it –but I wanted to do it successfully before I “needed” to do it. I thought I would expand a little on the process and make it a little more noob friendly.
2. Getting started.
a. Read through the entire set of instructions first.
b. I am not responsible if you BORK your phone. I BORKED mine using someone else’s instructions and tried to write a very detailed step-by-step to help others out– but it is completely possible I have also made some small error in the instructions.
3. This will completely wipe your phone – including the SD partition – so transfer any files you need before you do this.
4. This will not re-lock your bootloader. It will remain unlocked.
5. Syntax (spelling, spaces, periods, dashes, CAPITOL, or lower case) matters. There were some spelling errors and file extensions left off the commands – and that will not work.
6.I used the file…
mysid-icl53f-factory-65895fa8.tgz
…which is 4.0.2 for the cdma/lte galaxy nexus [code name = toro/mysid]. The file is located here...
http://www.google.co...NiI9yTxKdUyW1tA
7. Unzip the file (I used 7.zip to do this).
Then you will have a .tar file…
mysid-icl53f-factory-65895fa8.tar
8. Unzip that file and you should end up with a folder…
mysid-icl53f
Inside that folder you will have five files…
i. bootloader-toro-primekk15.img
ii. flash-all.sh
iii. radio-cdma-toro-i515.ek05.img
iv. radio-toro-i515.ek02.img
v. image-mysid-icl53f.zip
Do not unzip “image-mysid-icl53f.zip”
9. Go ahead and copy and paste all these files to your directory…
/android/platform-tools
(or whatever directory you work from. You do not need the “flash-all.sh” so you do not have to copy it).
10. Open the Command Prompt in the directory where you have placed the necessary files by navigating to the directory, pressing shift, and then right mouse click (normally “C: /android/tools” or C: /android/platform-tools). This will bring up the dialogue box and you can select “open a command window here”.
11. Then enter the command…
adb devices
[…this should return your serial number…]
12. enter the command…
adb reboot-bootloader
[wait for bootloader – you should here 2 alert sounds – not just 1]
13. enter the command…
fastboot flash bootloader bootloader-toro-primekk15.img
14. enter the command…
fastboot reboot-bootloader
[wait]
15. enter the command…
fastboot flash radio radio-toro-i515.ek02.img
16. enter the command…
fastboot reboot-bootloader
[wait]
17. enter the command…
fastboot flash radio-cdma radio-cdma-toro-i515.ek05.img
18. enter the command…
fastboot reboot-bootloader
19. enter the command…
fastboot -w update image-mysid-icl53f.zip
20. So you know, steps 17 (flashing the cdma radio) and step 19 (flashing the update image) took longer than the rest so don't freak out - just be patient. If you did the steps in the proper order after entering the last command your phone should reboot on its own and be completely “fresh”. If you made mistakes (like I did the first time) and flashed the radios out of order (like I did) or did not wait long enough for an “Okay” dialogue (like I did) then when you reboot you will have no signal and no phone number and you will have to go through the process again and do it right (like I did).
Hope this helps someone.
Credit goes to JW at that other site for the fastboot commands. I just added detail for the write up.
Great guide, but what if the serial number doesn't show up?
Thank you for the excellent walkthrough. I am following it, but when I enter "adb devices" at the command prompt I receive "list of devices attached" but no serial number. Also, my Nexus displays: "Fastboot Command Read Error -2147483647". I did a battery pull after getting stuck in a bootloop, and am trying to recover. I can unlock and relock the bootloader, but that is the only command that is working.
Ominous39061 said:
Thank you for the excellent walkthrough. I am following it, but when I enter "adb devices" at the command prompt I receive "list of devices attached" but no serial number. Also, my Nexus displays: "Fastboot Command Read Error -2147483647". I did a battery pull after getting stuck in a bootloop, and am trying to recover. I can unlock and relock the bootloader, but that is the only command that is working.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
if it does not return a serial number than the phone is not being recognized. I believe that there are 2 different sets of drivers that are needed. Let me look for the link and info.
the fact that it returns "list of devices attached" but no number means that it is not finding your device which means it is probably a driver issue. let me see what I can come up with. But I am no expert at any of this.
Ok - so I just did some testing of my own. I ran into the same problem as you. And I know that I have the drivers installed. So what I did was try and "shut down" any thing that could interfere with with ADB/Fastboot.
Any tethering apps that you may have - PDA NET, Easy Tether, etc, could possibly do this. Also - when you plug your phone in - and the Auto Play options pop up for FTP (File Transfer Protocol) - X out of that.
I initially plugged in my phone. Opened the command prompt in my platform-tools folder. typed in...
adb devices
...and I got the same message as you. I then "turned off" everything that could be causing problems with the process. I unplugged the phone and replugged it in (and closed the dialog box again) and then re-opened the command prompt and entered...
adb devices
...and then I got the proper return message.
thepolishguy said:
Ok - so I just did some testing of my own. I ran into the same problem as you. And I know that I have the drivers installed. So what I did was try and "shut down" any thing that could interfere with with ADB/Fastboot.
Any tethering apps that you may have - PDA NET, Easy Tether, etc, could possibly do this. Also - when you plug your phone in - and the Auto Play options pop up for FTP (File Transfer Protocol) - X out of that.
I initially plugged in my phone. Opened the command prompt in my platform-tools folder. typed in...
adb devices
...and I got the same message as you. I then "turned off" everything that could be causing problems with the process. I unplugged the phone and replugged it in (and closed the dialog box again) and then re-opened the command prompt and entered...
adb devices
...and then I got the proper return message.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I got the same problem with mine i dont have anything like pda net installed but nothing i have tried is able to get adb to list my phone
Getting the same issue myself...help!
Thank you so much I'm a total noob with this stuff but your guide was very helpful!
Noev said:
I got the same problem with mine i dont have anything like pda net installed but nothing i have tried is able to get adb to list my phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ChuckTu said:
Getting the same issue myself...help!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok - so another member posted this...
ADB/Naked Drivers
...and I have heard some people say that it was very helpful. So hopefully this will help you guys to get your devices recognized.
Then there is also this thread and the OP said this...
Code:
On your windows PC. Use the root guide by bman
( [url]http://rootzwiki.com...nlock-and-root/[/url] )
and download the third option for drivers. Extract all
of these tho wherever you have your fast boot
( for me it was c:/users/thatmayh3mguy/) then run
fastboot in the cmd. The adbapi.DLL file will be there
and will make the fast boot work. I didn't have the sdk
installed ( fresh install of win 7 ultimate last week and
don't have it all set up yet) and it worked
thread...
adb help/getting your drivers installed correctly
OK - here is also another method that I found. I have PDA Net installed and I did not have any issues with fastboot. Here are some instructions that say the drivers that PDA Net use are the same drivers that you need for fastboot. So here is a link to the thread and hopefully one of these methods is going to work for you.
Installing PDA Net to solve your fastboot problems
ah ha - just read something else that I should have thought of...
If your phone is already in bootloader - the command...
adb devices
...will not work. so if you are in bootloader you should try the command...
fastboot devices
...instead and see if that returns anything for you.
just wanted to jump back in hear and say i was able to get mine working again. adb was allowing me to lock/unlock the bootloader i toggled that on and off then when i went to boot my phone it took a long time to boot but finally did. Thanks for all the help was in a real jam there for a minute. I used the naked adb drivers posted above not sure if that did anything but it worked for me. Thanks again!
Noev said:
just wanted to jump back in hear and say i was able to get mine working again. adb was allowing me to lock/unlock the bootloader i toggled that on and off then when i went to boot my phone it took a long time to boot but finally did. Thanks for all the help was in a real jam there for a minute. I used the naked adb drivers posted above not sure if that did anything but it worked for me. Thanks again!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
cool. glad to hear it.
trying this with a Linux OS
So I have a Samsung Galaxy Nexus on Verizon and I put 4.0.4 (IMM30B) using the Galaxy Nexus ToolKit on Windows. Since then I've had a few issues with performance so I want to go back to stock (ICF53F) then maybe goto latest IMM76K (I think). I've retrieved the zip file from steps above and untar'd the file, but when I try to flash the boot file it just sits there waiting for device. I'm not sure what it's waiting for. I'm in fastboot mode and then plugged in the phone to the usb cord but nothing happens.
Any ideas?
UPDATE:
I figured out the issue. On a linux machine using fastboot requires super user privileges. Maybe an update to the instructions may be in order?
CMD keeps telling me waiting for device.
How long will it takes first time?
this after entering: fastboot flash bootloader bootloader-toro-primekk15.img
ladyminnie said:
CMD keeps telling me waiting for device.
How long will it takes first time?
this after entering: fastboot flash bootloader bootloader-toro-primekk15.img
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does "fastboot devices" return your device?
If not, you may have a driver issue.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
A mistake I made a while ago, if you are sure that you have already installed ADB drivers, and your device still isn't being recognized by ADB..
Be sure USB Debugging is checked on.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
adb devices returns my number from the phone
adb reboot-bootloader does bring my phone into bootloader
than it stops with the next command. I waited for 45 minutes/
---------- Post added at 07:03 PM ---------- Previous post was at 06:57 PM ----------
usb debugging was/is still on
The white small led is lightning up every 10 seconds orso
problem solved with:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1766475
Hi All,
I have spent this afternoon rooting stock 4.3 yakju and thought that I'd share the latest on how to go about doing this manually for the maguro GT-I9250. This is a complete guide which brings all the information you will need under the one thread which doesn't seem to have been done before except as separate guides and scattered information all over the internet.
NOTE: Unlocking and Rooting your device will void your warranty and can in some instances if not performed properly brick the phone. This process will also wipe your phone back to factory defaults so any personal files and applications will be lost. You should backup the device using the backup options in the recovery environment or by saving any personal files off the device via the USB cable, prior to unlocking your device. You follow this procedure at your own risk!!
With that disclaimer out the way there, We can begin.
NB: I ran all linux commands in this tutorial as root, I am not able to say if running as a standard user may cause issues, although one forum suggested to run as root or sudo up if you have a bootloop issue so I did this to avoid problems. This tutorial assumes that you have some experience with using basic Linux commands including but not limited to copying and moving files, changing directories, listing files, running scripts and executables using './' and using the console
So Firstly I am running Fedora 19 x64 with the latest kernel. It's a lot easier than trying to muck around with Windows 7 drivers and there are tutorials for installing these. To update on that tutorial you can use the official samsung drivers to install the adb and mtp drivers (may already be noted in the thread, but I might as well state it here also.) and the best place to get the official samsung drivers is by installing the Samsung Kies application.
You need to enable 'USB debugging' in order for ADB to work, you do this from 'settings --> developer options' if you can't see 'developer options' you may need to enable them, to do this, select 'settings --> about phone' and tap 'build number' until it says 'you are now a developer' which takes around 7 taps. In 'developer options', you may need to turn them on by clicking the 'on' button at the top. Once you have turned them on, select 'usb debugging' and this will then tell you that 'this may make your device less secure', agree/accept this, and continue. You can always turn it off later if you need to. Once you enable this, within linux you may get prompted when running adb to authorize (e.g. you are not authorized, check the device screen). You need to authorise from the phone, so allow the connection and select 'remember this computer' to save having to do it again.
Now for the bootloader driver it's a bit trickier to install. You need to reboot into the bootloader, by powering off the device and then powering back on again while holding the volume + and volume - keys at the same time. You will then probably get a failed driver install for 'Android 1.0'. At this point, you will need the universal Naked driver from this thread. Download and extract it to your 'Downloads' folder. Now go to device manager, right click on the 'Android 1.0' device and select 'update driver...' and then select 'browse my computer for driver software' and then select 'let me pick from a list of drivers'. Click 'have disk' and you will be able to install from the folder you extracted the 'Universal Naked Driver' into. You will now be able to use the fastboot command in Windows.
Ok. Now we have the windows users covered. In Linux, All I needed to do was download the android sdk adt tools. I'm using the 64 bit version, so I downloaded the 64 bit version from the adt bundle section here. Once I had downloaded and extracted these into a folder in my Downloads folder under my user profile, I copied the adb and fastboot files to a separate folder as these are the only things I needed in the bundle. you do this by typing
Code:
cp /home/<your_username>/Downloads/Androidadt/adb /home/<your_username>/Downloads/Nexusroot/
cp /home/<your_username>/Downloads/Androidadt/fastboot /home/<your_username>/Downloads/Nexusroot/
From here on you will want to be working from the 'Nexusroot' folder, so type
Code:
cd /home/<your_username>/Downloads/Nexusroot
.
From here, you need to obtain the recovery you wish you use, I chose to use the CWM v6.0.4.3 touch recovery which can be obtained from here. Once it's saved to your downloads folder you should copy it to your previously created 'Nexusroot' folder where we saved adb and fastboot.
The next item on the list is something I did because I was running the yakjuxw firmware and is the reason I did everything in Linux for this tutorial, as the firmware files are tarballed and opening the tar in 7zip shows 'unix filesystem' as the base folder. I installed the stock 4.3 firmware from google. I used the extracted files for the firmware as my 'Nexusroot' folder and copied fastboot and adb into this folder as well as the recovery image. I then ran ./flash-all.sh with the device in fastboot mode (you will need to have unlocked the bootloader prior to doing this, instructions are below in the next paragraph. The script basically just flashes the firmware with the fastboot command, if you want to flash the CWM recovery at the same time, you will need to rename the recovery file to the same name as the recovery image in the tarball and replace or rename the one that came with the tar file from google), If you have setup your environment in Windows 7 as described above, there is also a batch file that will do the same thing ensure the device is in fastboot before running the batch file/script or it will sit there and say 'waiting for device' and make sure the fastboot application is in the same folder as the script. Once the flash is complete your device will be running the stock 4.3 firmware. (edit: I have since extracted the entire image out of the tar with 7zip from Windows 7, you will be able to flash the base once you extract it all to a folder but you need to open the secondary container file in 7zip separately)
The next step is to flash the recovery. To do this, put the device into fastboot mode and unlock the bootloader using the command
Code:
fastboot oem unlock
select 'Yes' at the prompt, your device will now reboot twice and perform a factory reset which will wipe all data, at this point you may need to re-enable 'usb debugging' from your settings (see above for instructions), re-enter fastboot mode by typing
Code:
adb reboot bootloader
next type in
Code:
fastboot flash recovery recovery-clockwork-touch-6.0.4.3-maguro.img
Your device will now install the touch recovery we downloaded earlier. Once done, type the command
Code:
fastboot reboot-bootloader
.
Now to root the device, download the SuperSU zip file from the link and copy it to your 'Nexusroot' folder. Now boot into your recovery environment by using your 'Volume -' key to select 'boot recovery' and allow the device to boot into the recovery environment. This will allow you to use the adb command. Change directory into your 'Nexusroot' folder if not already in it, and type
Code:
adb push UPDATE-SuperSU-v1.43.zip /sdcard/0
This will copy the zip file to the internal memory card. From the recovery environment on the phone, select 'install file from sdcard' and then 'choose zip from sd card'. Select '0' and then select the 'UPDATE-SuperSU-v1.43.zip' file and select 'yes - install...' and the zip file will install the SuperSU application and binaries. Your device is now rooted, however you will need to run the SuperSU app to update the binary again. We will discuss this further after the next step.
Now we should lock the bootloader again to prevent tampering with our recovery and other firmware images however if you wish to flash other ROMS you will want to leave this unlocked, or you will need to unlock it again next time you want to flash a rom. To lock the bootloader, with the phone in fastboot mode, you simply type
Code:
fastboot oem lock
and this will re-lock the bootloader. Note you will not be able to flash any radios, kernels, or other .img files while this is locked. Now reboot your phone back into Android.
Now that you know how to unlock your phone, it's rooted, and has a recovery environment installed, you need to activate your SuperUser install. To do this, open the SuperSU app, and when prompted to update, click 'continue'. You will at this point be asked how you want to install it, select 'CWM/TWRP Recovery' and your phone will reboot, you will see an update occur on the screen and SuperSU will now be correctly installed.
You can now begin experiencing the freedom to use whatever ROM you want, customise your device how you want, and even change which applications you want installed regardless of whether they are system apps or otherwise.
I hope this guide is helpful.
References:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1379875
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1830108
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2117822
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2065470
http://www.ibtimes.com/how-root-galaxy-nexus-i9250-nexus-4-android-43-jelly-bean-official-firmware-tutorial-1362063
http://www.clockworkmod.com/rommanager
https://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html
http://www.ubuntu.com/phone/install
https://developers.google.com/android/nexus/images
Thanks:
@1wayjonny
@TECK
@samersh72
Without your guides I wouldn't have been able to do this.
Was running MMuzzy, tried Omni, decided to go back (no statement on Omni, just didn't want to deal with new, setting up and such) and the only backup I have is in TWRP... but I switched to CM to install Omni... and like an over eager cleaner, I deleted the install files for everything last time I was in Omni... then I went into recovery, wiped and realized I need TWRP to restore my backup (no files found in CW)
All I can do is boot into recovery and I cannot figure out how to set up windows so I can put an install file on there to run so I can get back to TWRP and clean this mess up. I tried installing the Samsung drivers on an XP workstation but the computer doesn't find drivers when plugging in the phone... I pointed to the samsung/drivers folder in programs but no luck.
Bail a ding bat out?
Bump
Can anybody explain how to get this thing viewable in windows? (With no phone control)
Please.... and thank you in advance!!!
I am ready to pay someone for help on this
Help me get this back to life... name a reasonable price
Use efrant's guide in the stickys to flash the factory image and use his link for Windows drivers. It always works and his fastboot tutorial has saved my device more than once.
Link:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1626895
For my instructions, download these, you will end up using them:
1. Android drivers for windows, I would prefer Universal Naked Driver (UND):
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1766220
2. Android debugging tools (ADB), I would prefer minimal ADB:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=42407269
3. TWRP recovery image: http://www.teamw.in/project/twrp2/90 download the last version you remembered using or just use the latest openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.2-maguro.img
Install 1 & 2 in order. You may need to have the phone boot to recovery to install #1. Installing the drivers in Windows XP/7 will be easier, Windows 8/8.1 requires an advanced step to disable unknown driver enforcement.
For #2, if you have ADB/Fastboot already, skip this step. If you don't, then you may need to install it while in recovery too. Install it to a folder you are familiar with, I would choose C:\ and make an Android folder.
After you have both installed, boot your phone to bootloader mode. When it is shut off, hold VOL + and - at the same time then press the power button for all 3 simultaneously. It will boot into bootloader mode, where you see the android and your Galaxy Nexus revision/software details.
Move the TWRP recovery img file to the location of your ADB folder. For my example, I will assume #2 (adb tools) are installed in Local Disk (C and the android folder, so C:\Android
From here you would use the command prompt/terminal start > run > cmd or start, find program Command Prompt.
In the terminal type cd\foldertoTWRPimgfile\ or in my example, cd\android\
Next, type fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.2-maguro.img
my example would look like:
C:\android\ fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.2-maguro.img
it will show a progress indicator, then OK'd when it is finished.
You can then manually boot to recovery in fastboot, hit a volume button on your phone a few times until you see RECOVERY, then hit the power button to load it. You should now be in TWRP and be able to restore your backup, hope it is still there. Since it is likely that you were last using an older version of TWRP for MMuzzy, you might notice differences if you flash a newer version of TWRP.
kaijura said:
For my instructions, download these, you will end up using them:
1. Android drivers for windows, I would prefer Universal Naked Driver (UND):
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1766220
2. Android debugging tools (ADB), I would prefer minimal ADB:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=42407269
3. TWRP recovery image: http://www.teamw.in/project/twrp2/90 download the last version you remembered using or just use the latest openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.2-maguro.img
Install 1 & 2 in order. You may need to have the phone boot to recovery to install #1. Installing the drivers in Windows XP/7 will be easier, Windows 8/8.1 requires an advanced step to disable unknown driver enforcement.
For #2, if you have ADB/Fastboot already, skip this step. If you don't, then you may need to install it while in recovery too. Install it to a folder you are familiar with, I would choose C:\ and make an Android folder.
After you have both installed, boot your phone to bootloader mode. When it is shut off, hold VOL + and - at the same time then press the power button for all 3 simultaneously. It will boot into bootloader mode, where you see the android and your Galaxy Nexus revision/software details.
Move the TWRP recovery img file to the location of your ADB folder. For my example, I will assume #2 (adb tools) are installed in Local Disk (C and the android folder, so C:\Android
From here you would use the command prompt/terminal start > run > cmd or start, find program Command Prompt.
In the terminal type cd\foldertoTWRPimgfile\ or in my example, cd\android\
Next, type fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.2-maguro.img
my example would look like:
C:\android\ fastboot flash recovery openrecovery-twrp-2.6.3.2-maguro.img
it will show a progress indicator, then OK'd when it is finished.
You can then manually boot to recovery in fastboot, hit a volume button on your phone a few times until you see RECOVERY, then hit the power button to load it. You should now be in TWRP and be able to restore your backup, hope it is still there. Since it is likely that you were last using an older version of TWRP for MMuzzy, you might notice differences if you flash a newer version of TWRP.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wow... I really do not know where to begin to thank you... that REALLY saved my bacon as it is my work phone as well as personal cell too. Please send me a PM with a donation addy and an amount if you have one or I would be happy to send you a Christmas present...
Merry CHRISTmas everyone!!!!
EDIT: Solved, please delete mods. Solution on the bottom.
So essentially I'm on 7.1.1 trying to flash the OEM 8.1.zip from the website however I'm having trouble understanding the steps.
On the website it states:
Download the appropriate system image for the Razer Phone from here, then unzip it to a safe directory.
Connect your Razer Phone to your computer over USB.
Start the Phone in Download Mode with one of the following methods:
Using the adb tool: With the Phone powered on, execute: adb reboot bootloader
Enter Download Mode: Plug in a USB cable to connect your Razer Phone to your computer, Power Off the Phone, then turn it on and immediately press and hold the Volume Down button until “Download Mode” appears on screen.
If necessary, unlock the Phone’s bootloader. See Unlocking the Bootloader and Unlocking the Bootloader Critical Partitions for instructions.
Open a terminal on your computer and navigate to the unzipped system image directory.
Execute the flash_all script. This script installs the necessary bootloader, baseband firmware(s), and operating system for your Razer Phone.
Once the script finishes, your Phone will reboot.
You should now lock the bootloader for security.
See Locking the Bootloader for instructions.
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So essentially what I'm doing here is unzipping the 8.1 update, opening up a command prompt in that folder, and then typing in "flash_all"?
If that's the case I keep on getting an error. I tried doing an adb sideload for the .zip as well but that did not work either.
I'm certain I have some misunderstanding about how this is supposed to work, if someone could just point out what I'm doing wrong that'd be great.
Thank you.
EDIT: Yeah, apparently I was supposed to just dump the whole .zip file into the master folder. I was trying to use CD to change folders to a folder inside which didn't let me use fastboot.
You need to set your windows environment setting so it knows where your adb folder is so the script can run