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Hello all,
I have a problem with the adb shell.
I rooted my HTC Hero, the superuser permission app is well installed, my ROM is MoDaCo Custom ROM 3.0 core.
I can push/pull files with adb, no problem.
When I go to shell mode (adb shell command), I am in root by default. When I type ANY command (ls, mount, cat, cd, trythismyfriendyoullgetitrepeated...), the shell repeats my command in the output and does nothing, EXCEPT for reboot or exit (they work after repeating themselves in the output)...
What's the point? I am totally lost...
Thanks in advance.
I made a new install of the rom, and like magic it fixed everything... Well, no problem anymore, although I don't understand what happened.
Need lil help with adb... reinstalled all drivers and reinstalled android sdk and install all tools/updates.. still giving me same no adb errors.. Im nand unlock with engineering bootloader.
wasd321 said:
Need lil help with adb... reinstalled all drivers and reinstalled android sdk and install all tools/updates.. still giving me same no adb errors.. Im nand unlock with engineering bootloader.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your problem is that you're entering adb commands inside shell.
Once you see the # sign, after typing adb shell, that means that the adb commands will no longer work. So, your commands that begin with adb will NOT work if you see the # sign..
Also, for commands like adb devices and remount, they need to be run outside of shell or rather from your AndroidSDK\tools PATH directly.
This will work:
Code:
C:\android-sdk\tools:
adb remount
adb devices
adb shell
This won't work:
Code:
C:\android-sdk\tools:
# adb remount
# adb devices
# adb shell
Notice the # sign (this happens when you type adb shell), this means you're now root and now using shell -- you cannot run the adb commands inside shell, you have to instead use Linux commands, or specifically commands from BusyBox.
Just to clarify: Some commands can be sent outside of the shell, but they have to be preceded by "adb". For example:
Code:
adb reboot recovery
Others will only work inside of the shell, like ls, mv, cd, and so forth. Search for an adb command listing (you do have a Google phone, after all) and it may help to familiarize yourself with basic Linux terminal commands as well - a lot of them are accepted by adb.
SilverZero said:
Just to clarify: Some commands can be sent outside of the shell, but they have to be preceded by "adb". For example:
Code:
adb reboot recovery
Others will only work inside of the shell, like ls, mv, cd, and so forth. Search for an adb command listing (you do have a Google phone, after all) and it may help to familiarize yourself with basic Linux terminal commands as well - a lot of them are accepted by adb.
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Click to collapse
Yea, I was aware of this, just decided not to mention it. Thanks for pointing it out though.
So I'm trying to get into su to run gfree_verify to make sure my permaroot S-off/SIM card unlock/SuperCID was successful, but I'm getting a permission denied error.
What happens is, I type adb shell, then I type su, there's a really long delay, then it tells me Permission Denied. However, when I run the Terminal Emulator from my phone and type in the su command, I get root access just fine.
I used the "official" method that is on the HTC Vision Wiki that is located here. The only thing, however, is that my Android SDK install wasn't installed using any type of installer. I just extracted a zip file and shoved it in a random folder. I did make sure to run the Command Prompt as Administrator before issuing the adb shell command, but I'm still unable to get superuser access through the PC. Trying to use the adb root command gives me an "adbd cannot run as root in production builds" error.
Did I do something incorrectly?
adb kill-server
adb start-server
See if that works. If not, try rebooting your computer.
Sent from a Western Union telegram.
Does the Superuser app seem to be installed correctly on your phone ?
Do you have the output from gfree ? I wonder if it didn't work correctly with your kernel, it doesn't work with all kernels. What ROM/kernel do you have ?
Which procedure did you use, the one in the Wiki, or one involving dd'ing the eng hboot ?
steviewevie said:
Does the Superuser app seem to be installed correctly on your phone ?
Do you have the output from gfree ? I wonder if it didn't work correctly with your kernel, it doesn't work with all kernels. What ROM/kernel do you have ?
Which procedure did you use, the one in the Wiki, or one involving dd'ing the eng hboot ?
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Click to collapse
I rebooted the daemeon, computer, and also the phone. No dice.
The Superuser app is correctly installed. When I ran Adfree and attempted to go into SU in Terminal, I got the usual Allow Superuser access dialog. Both worked without any problems; like I said, I can get root access from the on-the-phone terminal, it's when I attempted to get root access from the adb shell command on my computer where I have problems.
No special ROMs, completely stock post-November OTA update. The only thing I flashed after permarooting was the Clockwork Recovery mod, but adb shell SU wasn't working before this. I initially used some outdated instructions (involving the use of the dd command, and the wpathis.ko or something). I read some more and learned these were out of dated, so I unrooted. I then used the instructions that are on the wiki using gfree to permroot.
gfree_verify works without any problems if I run it from the Terminal Emulator on my phone. Returns the proper values to indicate I'm SIM Unlocked, SuperCID, and S-off. I'm glad it works, but I still don't like the fact I can't use the adb shell. Typing characters on the G2 is a pain in the ass.
I still want to know why I can't enter superuser from the PC adb shell. Am I doing something incorrectly?
Thanks a lot for your help!
Try clearing data for the SuperUser app?
go in your recovery screen from boot, select your mount options, and mount everything lol. Not sure if it'll fix it but everytime I have adb permission issues that seems to fix it and I don't think it could hurt.
dietotherhythm said:
go in your recovery screen from boot, select your mount options, and mount everything lol. Not sure if it'll fix it but everytime I have adb permission issues that seems to fix it and I don't think it could hurt.
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Click to collapse
This worked perfectly! When I entered su from the command prompt, the SuperUser app popped up on the phone's side and I hit allow. It then let me through.
What exactly was broken though? Why did mounting everything from the Clockwork Recovery menu fix this?
ADB is not friendly to me. I was able to root my g1 with pure ease. I cant get started with adb, I dont know why I cant get $, I've read several guides and I'm just about to give up. I'm running 2.2 on my g2.
I do have a couple of questions:
Are rooting with rage or visionary 14 the only way to root?
Are there any root guides out there that dont require ADB?
ADB is a ****ing pain in the ass to me, especially since I've tried everything and cant get it to work. Also, the drivers that go on Win7 64bit just dont work.
Also when I do have root, can I get android updates?
Any help would be thankfully appreciated. Sorry if I'm a pain in the ass, but I'd like to know if there is an easier way.
I think you need the q&a section
Sent from my HTC Vision using XDA App
This will help u get adb working...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=865685
If you can't figure out adb, you definitely shouldn't be rooting your phone.
Some ROMS disable OTA notifications while others allow it. However, so long as you have a custom recovery, even if you get the notification and download it, you wont be able to flash it.
dictionary said:
If you can't figure out adb, you definitely shouldn't be rooting your phone.
Some ROMS disable OTA notifications while others allow it. However, so long as you have a custom recovery, even if you get the notification and download it, you wont be able to flash it.
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Click to collapse
while my knowledge of adb isnt stellar, I have run into problems using it. I'm going to try this new link to the guide and see if it works.
Still if anyone knows other solutions, chime in.
Try the guide linked above. The drivers in the HTC Sync package (see the guide) definitely do work on Win 7 64-bit.
Clicked on SDK Manager.exe and it gave me the attached message; anti-virus is off and bare ass minimum services are running and I added the line in variables.
Any ideas?
sorry about the ****ty pics
cwis said:
Clicked on SDK Manager.exe and it gave me the attached message; anti-virus is off and bare ass minimum services are running and I added the line in variables.
Any ideas?
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Click to collapse
Did you definitely add it to your path as it is suggesting in that window ? If so, I think you may need to reboot to pick that change up.
I did that just in case.
Actually, that path field was empty. So, I added it as is.
look up droid explorer
I made some leeway:
C:\Program Files (x86)\android-sdk-windows\tools>adb shell
$
$ adb push su /sdcard/su
$ adb push su /sdcard/su
$ adb: permission denied
good grief!!!!!!!
I've completely removed visionary before starting this procedure. Did I need temproot before attempting this?
Downloading and installing Droid Explorer. Thanks!
Also, I'm using this guide: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=834228
No matter what I've done, permission denied.
The steps you are trying are actually to get temproot (it's an alternate method to Visionary), so you don't need to already be temprooted.
You don't want to run "adb push" commands after you have run "adb shell". ADB commands will no longer work until you exit the shell (simply type exit and hit enter---you'll notice your command prompt will change back to normal). If you are following the guide you linked to, you'll notice adb shell is not run prior to running the first push command.
ianmcquinn said:
The steps you are trying are actually to get temproot (it's an alternate method to Visionary), so you don't need to already be temprooted.
You don't want to run "adb push" commands after you have run "adb shell". ADB commands will no longer work until you exit the shell (simply type exit and hit enter---you'll notice your command prompt will change back to normal). If you are following the guide you linked to, you'll notice adb shell is not run prior to running the first push command.
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^^^^ what he said.
You are trying to run adb on your phone there, which isn't right. That's your phone's command prompt, the "$". "adb" is something totally different on your phone. You need to run the adb commands on your PC. That's why "adb shell" worked (because you ran it on your PC), then "adb push" didn't (because you tried to run it on your phone).
steviewevie said:
^^^^ what he said.
You are trying to run adb on your phone there, which isn't right. That's your phone's command prompt, the "$". "adb" is something totally different on your phone. You need to run the adb commands on your PC. That's why "adb shell" worked (because you ran it on your PC), then "adb push" didn't (because you tried to run it on your phone).
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I did run the commands from my pc. But still permission denied.
cwis said:
I did run the commands from my pc. But still permission denied.
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Click to collapse
"permission denied" is a message from your phone, not your PC.
The $ prompt that you copied and pasted up shows that you were running the commands on your phone. As soon as you do "adb shell", then any commands you are entering after that are going on your phone, even though they're physically being typed on your PC - because your PC has started a command prompt on your phone, as shown by the $ prompt.
cwis said:
I did run the commands from my pc. But still permission denied.
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Click to collapse
Basically, don't start by typing adb shell. The instructions you are trying to follow don't even say to do that anywhere. I highly recommend you reread the instructions very carefully and follow them exactly. Rooting this phone is actually pretty simple if you just do exactly as the guide states. If you don't know what you are doing and mistype something in some of the later steps though, you can seriously screw up your phone...
I think part of the confusion is that the commands listed on the guide all have "$" at the beginning of them, probably because whoever wrote that was using a Linux PC or maybe a Mac. You are actually executing these commands from your Windows command shell so they will look more like:
D:\Android SDK\platform-tools>adb push su /sdcard/su
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
(depending on where you have the SDK installed)
instead of:
$ adb push su /sdcard/su
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
but of course you only need to type:
adb push su /sdcard/su
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Again these are typed from your windows command shell.
im having trouble wirh "reboot recovery" command in my terminal/adb shell
when i try to run in terminal, i get "not permitted!"
and adb shell says [1] Segmentation fault reboot recovery
if i try running reboot -f in terminal or adb shell, i get "usage: reboot [-n] [-p] [rebootcommand]"
i've checked /system/bin, and the reboot bin is there
i've checked the permisssions, originally set to rwsr-sr-x
changing them to rwxr-xr-x makes no change
i found several threads with ppl having the same trouble:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=16022907&postcount=2040
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1280074
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=935715
the only one i found useful is the 1st one
the only way i got reboot working is by deleting /system/bin/reboot, and using "reboot -f". without the -f switch nothing happens. if i do reboot recovery -f, it only rebots
but what i really want is to reboot into recovery. any idea on how to? i read in first linked post that the problem is in symlinked reboot to busybox, thats why deleting helped somewhat. anyone has an idea on how to get rebooting to recovery in terminal working?
oh, and my rom is rcmix 4.0. i've read that problem is rom related. but i dont want to switch, because it would defeat the purpouse in the first place....
You need an insecure boot img to run adb as root. No root no reboot. From terminal instead try sudo -i reboot recovery.
sudo not found
and i have root, i do get # in terminal and adb shell. adb commands like push/pull/chmod work fine
about insecure boot image, as far as i can understand you need that in order to have root, whuch i do have. and afaik, that means pretty much all custom kernels? if im missing something here, please do explane...