Related
okay so i was trying to root my kindle fire and i didnt get su any where so then i tryed to install cwm and now its stuck at the yellow triangle and it wont go into recovery and it also will not connect to adb i need hellp ASAP
Install drivers as ADB composite with the Android SDK and then use this to change the bootmode
The link you posted is not working due to the period in the URL at the end.
Do not afraid. I have got the same experience Let God bless the search button
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1568340
unzip fbmode.zip
adb push fbmode /data/local/fbmode
adb shell chmod 755 /data/local/fbmode
adb shell /data/local/fbmode
adb reboot
Your kindle will "get stuck" on the kindle fire screen, but really it's just in fastboot mode.
fastboot -i 0x1949 boot twrp-blaze-2.0.0RC0.img
Your device will now boot into twrp recovery, and flash the firefirefire bootlaoder. When done it will prompt you to reboot. Upon reboot you will get stuck on the "yellow triangle" screen of firefire fire.
fastboot oem idme bootmode 5002
fastboot reboot
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My kindle got the 6.3 update -solved!!
This has got to be one of the fastest ways I have rooted 6.3 kindle update
i went on line here http://liliputing.com/2012/03/root-...ogle-play-store-with-kindle-fire-utility.html
downloaded the new kindle fire utility and ckick on Install permanent root with super user. got rooted in about 2 minutes with no trouble at all
thanks everyone for your help but i solved it what i was doing was unsing the kindle fire utility trying to instal latest firefirefire but it just sat there and so i just went into the utility and reinstaled the twrp and it booted normal!!
Bricked Kindle
Okay, I'm not having the same issue, but I'm pretty sure I've completely, irevicalbly, bricked my kindle.
I know that I'm not in Fastboot mode, I've experienced that issue and solved it with the KFU.
Here's what I did:
I used the KFU to root my kindle. That worked fine. I was able to load all the Google apps (which was my initial goal). Then, I got greedy and decided that ICS was my next step - oops.
I followed the instructions on the following site:
androidauthority.com/kindle-fire-miui-4-ics-55853/
Note: I know, I'm an idiot - I should have paid attention to comments! UGH!
After I did this, I now only get the firefirefire logo and that is it. I can't load/reload TWRP and I can't change my bootmode to normal or recovery. The thing is, no matter which computer I plug the device into, the computer won't recognize the device. I get a message saying something "malfunctioned" when I plug it in. I've tried 3 different Windows machines (I've installed/reinstalled drivers I don't know how many times!) and I even tried loading Linux on a spare laptop and that didn't work either.
So, I tried the next thing I could think of. I followed the instructions on the following site:
ramble.karrth.com - Section "Troubleshooting TWRP
which involved removing the back cover, shorting a circuit (to force usbboot) and plugging my Kindle in. This didn't work for me either.
At this point, I'm willing to try anything. I'm not quite sure how to fix this issue. I think my next step is to either order a factory cable or make my own and try that, but if my bootloader is broke (truely broke) will that even work?
Please, if I should post this in another forum/place, just let me know. Any help appreciated!
I should also not that nothing comes up in my device manager. It does come up as a unrecognized USB bit goes away after telling me there was a malfunction.
ChrisKenison said:
I should also not that nothing comes up in my device manager. It does come up as a unrecognized USB bit goes away after telling me there was a malfunction.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you get the yellow triangle logo to come up, then it's probably in fastboot mode. If you reboot it while it's connected to your computer and you get some device detection beeps from Windows, it's likely to be a driver issue. Look here...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=23747671&postcount=2
You might want to read the first post in that thread too.
Watch carefully as the device boots up and you get the yellow triangle logo. If that boot logo comes up and stays there, it's in fastboot. If the boot logo comes up, the screens blacks out, and then the boot logo comes back up (dimmer) then it's either trying to get into recovery or booting into the OS and failing.
I would try setting the bootmode to normal in KFU and when it says "<waiting for device>" reboot the Kindle Fire. Since you have FFF, the fastboot program on your computer will wait for the Kindle Fire's FFF bootloader to get into temporary fastboot and reset the bootmode when the KF is ready.
But, the computer won't even recognize there is a device connected to it
I will have to try installing the drivers from the Android SDK... maybe that will turn up something. But, by installing the drivers from KFU, it doesn't work.
When I plug the device in, it beeps at me saying device is unrecognize and it couldn't install drivers because there was a malfunction. In the device manager (while that's happening) it shows up as an unrecognized usb device. Then, it goes away (the device doesn't stay in the device manager). Then, that whole thing happens again one more time. There isn't anything for me to update in the device manager... thoughts?
And because its not recognized in the device manger, kfu isn't picking it up
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
ChrisKenison said:
I will have to try installing the drivers from the Android SDK... maybe that will turn up something. But, by installing the drivers from KFU, it doesn't work.
When I plug the device in, it beeps at me saying device is unrecognize and it couldn't install drivers because there was a malfunction. In the device manager (while that's happening) it shows up as an unrecognized usb device. Then, it goes away (the device doesn't stay in the device manager). Then, that whole thing happens again one more time. There isn't anything for me to update in the device manager... thoughts?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you can't get the drivers working with the KFU distribution, you'll have a harder time with the SDK. They are the same drivers, but KFU has an updated, Kindle Fire specific .inf file for the driver and also installs the .ini file in the .android folder that you'll need. I don't know what you see in the device manager, but if you don't get one of the devices shown in the post I referred to earlier, I would try another Windows machine. You won't be able to do anything without getting it to detect your KF and load the proper drivers. If you are more adventurous, you could try pokey9000's Firekit (search for it) and try using linux to send it fastboot commands.
Yeah, that's my problem. I have tried 3 different windows machines (all windows 7) and, being the adventurous person i am I tried the Linux fix (removing back cover...) to no avail. All that did was make my kindle blink green. Not sure what that means either.
yea mine is stuck on the firefirefire boot screen
ChrisKenison said:
Yeah, that's my problem. I have tried 3 different windows machines (all windows 7) and, being the adventurous person i am I tried the Linux fix (removing back cover...) to no avail. All that did was make my kindle blink green. Not sure what that means either.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, if you can't get any of those scenarios to work out, maybe it's a hardware issue. It might be something as simple as a bad USB cable or something more serious within the KF itself. I've never had a problem with Windows or Linux not seeing the KF, so my hands on experience in this regard is limited... my KF has never been broken to that degree. I'm always curious to see what's going on with people's KF when they say nothing works, but my KF has never given me that opportunity.
ChrisKenison said:
I will have to try installing the drivers from the Android SDK... maybe that will turn up something. But, by installing the drivers from KFU, it doesn't work.
When I plug the device in, it beeps at me saying device is unrecognize and it couldn't install drivers because there was a malfunction. In the device manager (while that's happening) it shows up as an unrecognized usb device. Then, it goes away (the device doesn't stay in the device manager). Then, that whole thing happens again one more time. There isn't anything for me to update in the device manager... thoughts?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sometimes in order to install the correct driver you need to delete the original from your computer because it will continue to attempt to revert to the default but beforehand try rebooting your computer and the kindle
---------- Post added at 07:41 PM ---------- Previous post was at 07:39 PM ----------
mistaanime said:
yea mine is stuck on the firefirefire boot screen
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Run the kf utility again install twrp and fff again
I seriously need some help. My normally fierce Google-fu has failed me. I have searched countless threads on here (and elsewhere) and tried just as many solutions, but I haven't had any luck. My Kindle Fire is stuck at the "Kindle Fire" boot logo. I was using the KF utility, and ADB status was online, everything looked good. I chose the option to root and install TWRP. However, it couldn't grab TWRP through my corporate firewall/proxy, so it skipped it, placed my KF in fastboot (I think), rebooted, now I'm bricked.
Depending on which PC I use, and in what order it's plugged in, I get different results in the Device Manager (both Windows 7):
Home PC -
Hardware Ids = USB\UNKNOWN
Yes, I've tried loading drivers six ways from Sunday, and none worked.
Absolutely no solution involving ADB in any way will work until I can at least get Windows to recognize it correctly and load the proper drivers.
Work PC -
If I have the KF turned on when I plug it into my PC, I get the same result as on my home PC (though I don't think I tried plugging it in on my home PC while my KF was powered off).
If I have it turned off when I plug it in, my PC sees it as an "Android ADB Interface", with the correct hardware ids.
Even when it sees my KF correctly in Device Manager, I still can't get ADB to communicate with it.
I've tried FireKit on my Ubunutu 12.04 laptop, but it never sees my device, and gets stuck at the <waiting for device> message. I've tried countless driver iterations and many utilities, and none seem able to communicate with it while it's stuck at the logo.
Any help would be immeasurably appreciated!!
[UPDATE]
While my device was detected correctly in Device Manager (but still not able to communicate via ADB), I reloaded the drivers using the KF Utility. It is still detected as "Android ADB Interface" but with an error in Device Manager. The error is "This device cannot start. (Code10)". I uninstalled it, including drivers, and let Windows autodetect. It was identified as "kindle", so I ran the same driver package and it still sees it as "Android ADB Interface", but still with the error.
[UPDATE 2] - Steps I took to (finally) get mine working
Note: If your device is recognized in Device Manager as something *other* than "Unknown Device* (such as "kindle" or "Android ADB Interface"), skip to step 3.
1. Turn off the device.
2. Plug the device into USB to your computer. This should turn the device on.
3. Delete the ".android" folder from your Windows profile. This is very important. If you just uninstall the device and driver, Windows will still use this to reinstall the device. You want to start as fresh as possible to eliminate complications from previous attempts.
4. Uninstall it from Device Manager. Make certain to check the box to uninstall the driver as well.
5. Start a new scan for hardware changes in the Device Manager.
6. As mine was stuck in fastboot mode, it recognized the device as "kindle" (lower-case "k")
7. Run the "install_driver.bat" from the Kindle Fire Utility.
8. After driver install, run the Kindle Fire Utility.
9. ADB status will say "offline", that's fine.
10. Choose option 1 to go into the Bootmode Menu.
11. Choose option 1 to boot into Normal Mode.
12. It will be stuck at <waiting for device>.
13. Turn off the device, keeping it plugged into the PC. *very important* This step was one among others that made THE difference for me.
14. Turn on the device. *Hopefully*, you should immediately see the utility spit out some text and your device should reboot.
15. Boots up!! (well, mine did, and I had almost give up hope were it not for my pride and stubbornness).
Read this...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
with emphasis on device drivers.
"Android ADB Device" typically means the device is in fastboot mode and you cannot use adb while in fastboot mode.... you must use fastboot.
With your KF off and disconnected from your work computer, run this command...
Code:
fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product
and then connect it to the computer. The KF will turn on automatically. The computer will say "<waiting for device>" for a bit, but if the command works, it will eventually return "product: kindle" as output. If that works, you can actually flash TWRP from there, but if you are anxious for it to do something again...
Code:
fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode 4000
fastboot -i 0x1949 reboot
should get it booting normally again. If it doesn't, look at the link I gave you and focus on getting your drivers fixed. You won't be able to execute any commands (fastboot or adb) through Windows if the device drivers don't work. You might want to go back to Firekit if drivers remain problematic for you.
Everything you need to know to fix your KF is in that link at the beginning of my post, including the commands you need to run. At the bottom of post #3 is also another link to a how-to root/install ROMs page.
IT LIVES!!! While I was still getting the error code 10, I launched the KF utility one more time. ADB status was still offline. I went into the menu to modify boot mode, told it to boot in normal mode and it was stuck <waiting for device>. On a whim, I left it there and cycled power on my KF. It found the device, finished, rebooted, and it's good!!! The Device Manager is happy now too!!
The behavior was so odd between my work and home PC. I was seriously scared when it gave a bad device ids on my home PC. I think it was more a combination of several different things that helped, and I'll update my main post with all that I did to get it back (that I can remember). Hopefully it will help someone else.
This is an *amazing* community, and I can't thank everyone enough for the incredible work you all do and the true sense of selflessness exhibited here on the forums!
btw, How do I edit the subject to indicate it's solved?
^_^
OH ,MY GOSH I DO NOT NO HOW MUCH TO THANK U THNX FOR THE POST
jaetrix said:
OH ,MY GOSH I DO NOT NO HOW MUCH TO THANK U THNX FOR THE POST
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad it could help someone! I was frustrated enough about it and couldn't find a single solution that fit my issue. I just had to combine some to get it to work for me.
Bump
Yes this saved two bricked kindles. Trial and error is sometimes the best means to solving a problem.
Sent from my GT-I900 using xda premium
This is happening alot here of recent thats why I bumped it to the top of the list
Thank you for this. Maybe a moderator will be kind enough to sticky this.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
pugsley42 said:
I seriously need some help. My normally fierce Google-fu has failed me. I have searched countless threads on here (and elsewhere) and tried just as many solutions, but I haven't had any luck. My Kindle Fire is stuck at the "Kindle Fire" boot logo. I was using the KF utility, and ADB status was online, everything looked good. I chose the option to root and install TWRP. However, it couldn't grab TWRP through my corporate firewall/proxy, so it skipped it, placed my KF in fastboot (I think), rebooted, now I'm bricked.
[...]
15. Boots up!! (well, mine did, and I had almost give up hope were it not for my pride and stubbornness).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Pugsley42...you 'da man! I had the same story as you told above, including searching and following countless threads of instructions. Nothing worked until I found your instructions! Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Stuck at the KF logo
These steps still didn't work for me :-/ I'm still stuck with the KF logo and a "Waiting for device" prompt. I've read through these forums starting with the "KKFB" to this one and still haven't had any luck yet. It may be time to give up on her. I think I have royally messed her up.
If anyone else has any other suggestions I'm open i've tried everything else on here I can find.
Thanks
Neely
Neely said:
These steps still didn't work for me :-/ I'm still stuck with the KF logo and a "Waiting for device" prompt. I've read through these forums starting with the "KKFB" to this one and still haven't had any luck yet. It may be time to give up on her. I think I have royally messed her up.
If anyone else has any other suggestions I'm open i've tried everything else on here I can find.
Thanks
Neely
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My first suggestion would be to read this:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=25884555
Neely said:
These steps still didn't work for me :-/ I'm still stuck with the KF logo and a "Waiting for device" prompt. I've read through these forums starting with the "KKFB" to this one and still haven't had any luck yet. It may be time to give up on her. I think I have royally messed her up.
If anyone else has any other suggestions I'm open i've tried everything else on here I can find.
Thanks
Neely
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Agreed, you really need to be more specific. "Waiting for device" .... which part of the KF utility?. What *exactly* are you seeing, where? What does Device Manager show your KF identified as (keep in mind, there is a big difference between seeing it as "Kindle" and "kindle"). What *exactly* did you do that brought you to this point?
Symptoms. Symptoms. Symptoms. The more detail you provide, the more likelihood we can help.
Take heart. If there's anything I learned in my stubborn refusal to admit my KF was fully bricked, is that it can be brought back from a lot worse than we give it credit for. I also learned quite a bit that I never would have if I never failed. That's what I love about breaking things!
pugsley42 said:
Agreed, you really need to be more specific. "Waiting for device" .... which part of the KF utility?. What *exactly* are you seeing, where? What does Device Manager show your KF identified as (keep in mind, there is a big difference between seeing it as "Kindle" and "kindle"). What *exactly* did you do that brought you to this point?
Symptoms. Symptoms. Symptoms. The more detail you provide, the more likelihood we can help.
Take heart. If there's anything I learned in my stubborn refusal to admit my KF was fully bricked, is that it can be brought back from a lot worse than we give it credit for. I also learned quite a bit that I never would have if I never failed. That's what I love about breaking things!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay, I was attempting to load a ROM on it. It had been rooted already with no issues and then something happened during the installation of TWRP and spit out an error message of unable to load and then rebooted. That's where I am with the kindle fire boot screen.
As for the "Device Manager" It shows up as "Android Composite ADB Device" and with KFU it shows the following status:
ADB Status: Online
Boot Status: Unknown
At this point is when if I try to run Install Latest TWRP Recovery or FFFF or anything it just sits there and says "Waiting For Device"...
I've read though most of these posts and have tried several different suggestions with no luck so far. So I have actually read through here. :-/
Hope this helps at all.
I would try by trying to change the bootmode using the KF utility. If you're stuck at the KF logo on boot, then the other functions of the utility won't do anything. Your KF needs to be in a "usable" state before that can happen. Have you tried changing it to "Fastboot" or "Normal"?
Stuck at the KF logo
pugsley42 said:
I would try by trying to change the bootmode using the KF utility. If you're stuck at the KF logo on boot, then the other functions of the utility won't do anything. Your KF needs to be in a "usable" state before that can happen. Have you tried changing it to "Fastboot" or "Normal"?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, I've tried it using the KF Utility as well as using fastboot at the command line :-/
kinfauns said:
Read this...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
with emphasis on device drivers.
"Android ADB Device" typically means the device is in fastboot mode and you cannot use adb while in fastboot mode.... you must use fastboot.
With your KF off and disconnected from your work computer, run this command...
Code:
fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product
and then connect it to the computer. The KF will turn on automatically. The computer will say "<waiting for device>" for a bit, but if the command works, it will eventually return "product: kindle" as output. If that works, you can actually flash TWRP from there, but if you are anxious for it to do something again...
Code:
fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode 4000
fastboot -i 0x1949 reboot
should get it booting normally again. If it doesn't, look at the link I gave you and focus on getting your drivers fixed. You won't be able to execute any commands (fastboot or adb) through Windows if the device drivers don't work. You might want to go back to Firekit if drivers remain problematic for you.
Everything you need to know to fix your KF is in that link at the beginning of my post, including the commands you need to run. At the bottom of post #3 is also another link to a how-to root/install ROMs page.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your explanation and guidance cut right to the solution for me. Thank you so much!
Thank you!!
I've been searching forever for this same issue. This has not fixed it completely but has helped me! Thank you for taking the time to post this!!
cmgroden said:
I've been searching forever for this same issue. This has not fixed it completely but has helped me! Thank you for taking the time to post this!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I presume if any of this helped, you were able to get further than you have been. What state is it in now? What error(s) if any?
I seem to be having this same issue but I cannot get my pc to recoginze the kindle fire as anything. perhaps i did something wrong but i was following a video on youtube and though i was doing it exactly as it showed. First thing i did after I finally got the drivers loaded was start KFU and then chose to load TWRP. It started the process but when it hit the part about rebooting my device that's where it stopped. Since then i've been stuck at the white and yellow kindle fire logo. No matter what i do to try to reinstall the ADB drivers I cannot get my computer (win xp) to recognize the kindle. It shows as "unknown device" in device manager and when it's plugged in the little pop up says that the usb device has malfunctioned and windows doesn't recognize it. So am I totally dead? I'm assuming before i can do anything to recover it I need to get windows to recognize it with the ADB drivers.
Hello everyone,
I've tried to find my specific situation in related threads, but haven't seen my exact issue, so here goes. Several threads seemed to talk about what I'm seeing, but the remedies that worked for them have not worked for me.
I have a Kindle Fire running 6.3.1, and I tried rooting yesterday with Kindle Fire Utilities 0.9.6 on a Windows Vista Virtual Machine.
The drivers appeared to install correctly, because KFU was able to see the Kindle and showed "online" when I started the process. The Device Manager seemed to have the correct information as well.
In KFU, I selected option 2 from the main menu, to "Install Permanent Root with Superuser". KFU started downloading twrp.img, but was unhappy with the MD5 checksum, so it issued the error: "Oops... something went wrong with the download. The recovery downloaded is not correct. Please try the download again"
At this point, the run.bat program exited, and the Kindle rebooted.
However, it appears that KFU at least partially succeeded in putting the Kindle into fastboot mode, because now I just get the "Kindle Fire" orange and white logo and nothing else happens. Also, I can no longer access the Kindle from my computer.
Now, when I run KFU again, it can't find the Kindle. I also can't contact it by running adb or fastboot manually, either from Window or from Ubuntu.
I've tried most, if not all, of the tricks I've seen in related threads to get back into contact with the Kindle and restore it to normal boot mode. The fastboot executable gets stuck in the < waiting for device > state, and I've tried power-cycling the Kindle, unplugging and plugging it back in, timing the execution of fastboot with the startup screen, etc. Since KFU did not successfully install Fire Fire Fire or TWRP before the failure occurred, I can't use either of these to recover.
I have ordered a Factory Cable from SkOrPn, but I'm curious if there's anything else I can try before it arrives, or if maybe I've missed something in all of the reading I've done over the past couple of weeks. (I read many threads and posts about rooting the Kindle, along with the Beginners Guide, before I worked up the courage to actually try it yesterday, and since then I've been educating myself on recovery techniques).
Sorry for the lengthy post, thanks for any help or clues, and I apologize if this has been answered already in another thread.
You might try powering it down completely, run KFU, choose option 1, then choose normal boot mode (4000) and when it comes up with <waiting for device> then hit the power button on your Fire.
This has worked for me in getting it back to normal boot when things seemed to be hung up. I sometimes had to hold the power button down to hard shutdown after this, but when rebooted after that, it booted normally.
Can't hurt to try it in this case.
You say you're using a VM, but what OS are you typically running? Mac OSX and Linux both handle device drivers by far better than their MS counterparts.
soupmagnet said:
You say you're using a VM, but what OS are you typically running? Mac OSX and Linux both handle device drivers by far better than their MS counterparts.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
spfldcynic said:
You might try powering it down completely, run KFU, choose option 1, then choose normal boot mode (4000) and when it comes up with <waiting for device> then hit the power button on your Fire.
This has worked for me in getting it back to normal boot when things seemed to be hung up. I sometimes had to hold the power button down to hard shutdown after this, but when rebooted after that, it booted normally.
Can't hurt to try it in this case.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
spfldcynic - Thanks for the tip. I tried it, but never got past the < waiting for device > state. It makes me wonder if the Kindle is really in fastboot, or if it's in some other state that makes it unresponsive to external commands. Hopefully the Factory Cable will fix this.
soupmagnet - My host OS is Ubuntu 10.04. I'd like to be able to work with the Kindle directly in Linux, but went the Window route initially because I'd heard good things about KFU. After reading your post, I found the FireKit tools for Linux, but got the same results using the "normal_boot" script that I had with KFU and with directly issuing the "fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode normal" command from both Linux and Windows.
calgator said:
spfldcynic - Thanks for the tip. I tried it, but never got past the < waiting for device > state. It makes me wonder if the Kindle is really in fastboot, or if it's in some other state that makes it unresponsive to external commands. Hopefully the Factory Cable will fix this.
soupmagnet - My host OS is Ubuntu 10.04. I'd like to be able to work with the Kindle directly in Linux, but went the Window route initially because I'd heard good things about KFU. After reading your post, I found the FireKit tools for Linux, but got the same results using the "normal_boot" script that I had with KFU and with directly issuing the "fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode normal" command from both Linux and Windows.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you try the whole process from scratch on Ubuntu? Also, plug it into the wall charger and make sure it has some juice before continuing (if you haven't already)
Running low on ideas man, hope someone else can do more for you.
You can't just get up and go with Linux, there is some configuration that needs to be done first. Have you set up your udev rules and installed 32-bit libs?
[SOLVED] KFU Failed, Now Kindle Fire Won't Boot
soupmagnet said:
You can't just get up and go with Linux, there is some configuration that needs to be done first. Have you set up your udev rules and installed 32-bit libs?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, after reading your post I've discovered that you are correct. I followed Sblood86's instructions on setting up the udev rules (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=22067293), and I already had the 32-bit libraries and tools since I have the android sdk and a 32-bit Ubuntu installation.
Armed with this correct configuration, I typed
Code:
"./fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode 4000"
And this time, saw the following:
Code:
< waiting for device >
...
OKAY [ 0.201s]
finished. total time: 0.201s
Meaning that all is now well with my Kindle Fire, until the next rooting attempt.
Thanks for your help!
So, although the original KFU problem is not completely understood by me, since my Kindle is working, I'll say the problem is solved.
I am total noob. Just want to make that clear from the get go.
I hesitate to start a new thread, but I have been working on this forever, and have not made any progress.
I have a Kindle Fire that I would like to run android on - I started the process with the Kindle Fire Utility v 0.9.9. Something went wrong, and it is now stuck on the Kindle Fire start up logo. I also can no longer see it in the device manager, nor is it responsive to anything in the Utility. (ADB status: Offline Boot Status: Unknown). I am at a loss, does anyone have any ideas? Your help is appreciated!
.................FIGURED IT OUT!..............................
Much thanks to the pooch who spent hours helping me troubleshoot.
What we (he) did, as far as I remember, hopefully this can be of some service to someone else out there.
1) Figured out that trying all of this on a Virtual Machine is not a good idea!
2) I somehow broke the bootloader in my first attempt, so none of my computers were recognizing the KF.
3) Created a Pendrive to run Linux (ubuntu). Here Requires a USB drive formatted Fat16/Fat32/NTFS, minimum of 2 gb.
4) Once I got Linux running, installed SoupKit.
5) Went through a few tries of booting, rebooting, into recovery mode until the Kindle flickered back to life!
6) Followed prompts on SoupKit to install TWRP, updated TWRP, install FireFireFire, install Android 4.2.
Good luck, I am happy to answer any questions - though I am no means an expert now.
What I have tried...more info
More Information:
I am running Windows7 in a VirtualBox on an iMac.
I bricked the Kindle a few weeks ago, after messing with it then, I bought a factory fastboot cable. Still no dice.
I have tried all turning on and off computer, on and off Kindle with it disconnected, connected, going through the KFU 4 seconds after starting the Kindle. Letting the Kindle's battery die, recharging.
I have deleted .android folder, reinstalled drivers, re-downloaded KFU.
I have tried on a different computer (Windows XP) The Kindle is also not recognized there.
I have tried booting into Ubuntu (however in the directions there, it said the FireKit is for more "serious" issues than my soft brick.
I am sure there is some small detail I am missing, but I have not been able to find it - and I am not knowledgeable enough to properly diagnose the problem. Again thanks for any help.
kyleboyd said:
I am total noob. Just want to make that clear from the get go.
I hesitate to start a new thread, but I have been working on this forever, and have not made any progress.
I have a Kindle Fire that I would like to run android on - I started the process with the Kindle Fire Utility v 0.9.9. Something went wrong, and it is now stuck on the Kindle Fire start up logo. I also can no longer see it in the device manager, nor is it responsive to anything in the Utility. (ADB status: Offline Boot Status: Unknown). I am at a loss, does anyone have any ideas? Your help is appreciated!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sometimes KFU will show as Unknown even though it's really fine. I had the same issue as you. Try switching boot mode to Normal and see if that fixes it, it worked for me.
Read this (everything),especially third post.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
hemmulde 1st
zastava750 said:
Read this (everything),especially third post.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the reply!
I tried that. When I type "fastboot getvar product" it says waiting for device or something similiar.
The advice applying to Device Manager don't get me anywhere, because my Kindle doesn't show up.
Any other ideas?
kyleboyd said:
Thanks for the reply!
I tried that. When I type "fastboot getvar product" it says waiting for device or something similiar.
The advice applying to Device Manager don't get me anywhere, because my Kindle doesn't show up.
Any other ideas?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
When using the stock bootloader (plain "kindle fire" boot logo), the fastboot command must always specify the custom vendor ID used by the Kindle Fire. For example, the commands above must be slightly altered to...
Code:
fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product
fastboot -i 0x1949 devices
and likewise, all of the following commands will need the "-i 0x1949" switch when using the stock bootloader. The FFF bootloader's vendor ID has been changed to one that is normally recognized by fastboot, so the "-i 0x1949" switch can be omitted.
Now onto some more useful fastboot commands...
Code:
fastboot oem idme bootmode 4000
fastboot oem idme bootmode 4002
fastboot oem idme bootmode 5001
Using one of these commands will change the bootmode to normal (4000), fastboot (4002) or recovery (5001). Then issuing...
Code:
fastboot reboot
will reboot the device into the respective bootmode.
I've tried that as well...
Just so I am totally clear, this is what I did in relation to those instructions:
Opened Command Prompt - set the directory to C:/kfu/tools
Typed "fastboot -i 0x1949 getvar product" (with out the quotations, obviously)
<waiting for devices>
I plugged Kindle in, it powers on and the frozen logo pops up.
I also tried "fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode 4000" and "fastboot -i 0x1949 oem idme bootmode 4002"
According to the guide it often takes multiple tries, I have done it over and over again.
I have also tried different orders of code, plugging in Kindle, and powering on and off.
Am I doing something wrong? Is there a specific code for my Kindle? (Not -i 0x1949)
Thanks!
Have you tried this?
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1660636
Reinstall the driver then use kfu to reset the boot mode to normal.
Drivers?
I did try this: http://forum.xda-developers.com/show....php?t=1660636
When I get to the part about the Device Manager, I am stuck, as nothing shows up (I suspect something do with drivers)
Thepooch said:
Reinstall the driver then use kfu to reset the boot mode to normal.
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Click to collapse
By reinstall drivers do you mean clicking on "install_drivers" in the KFU folder? I have tried that.
Is there another method of uninstalling and installing drivers? Sorry if that is a dumb question!
If the devices is in fastboot which I believe it is it would show up as android adb interface, if it was attempting to boot to the system it would show up as android composite adb interface. If you are on xp or windows 8 this can be a bit of a tricky task. Android adb interface and android composite interface are two facets of the same driver. So yes I suggest rerunning the driver installation bat that is packaged with KFU. If perhaps you are on windows 8 you must disable driver signature verification and reinstall the driver. 3.0 usb ports have an issue with fastboot and can leave the device undetected.
Still not working
Thepooch said:
If the devices is in fastboot which I believe it is it would show up as android adb interface, if it was attempting to boot to the system it would show up as android composite adb interface. If you are on xp or windows 8 this can be a bit of a tricky task. Android adb interface and android composite interface are two facets of the same driver. So yes I suggest rerunning the driver installation bat that is packaged with KFU. If perhaps you are on windows 8 you must disable driver signature verification and reinstall the driver. 3.0 usb ports have an issue with fastboot and can leave the device undetected.
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Click to collapse
Thanks for the quick reply.
So I am on a Win7 and/or a Windows XP. Currently on both systems, when I plug it into the computer, with the Device Manager open, nothing happens other than the Kindle turning itself on.
Before it froze up, I saw it in device manager as Android ADB interface, and before doing anything at all, saw it as the default Kindle Fire.
On the Win7 system, I have rerun the driver installation bat over and over and over again, with absolutely no results.
On the WinXP, I have tried it, and for the life of me can't get it to install (it says install failed (Unsigned)). I never connected the Kindle up to this computer before it froze up, so I wonder if that is somehow causing the problem (it is trying to update drivers that don't exist?)
Am I doing something wrong with this? Can I uninstall or delete drivers, and totally start over?
If you are using a WinXP you must install driver manually.
Drivers?
zastava750 said:
If you are using a WinXP you must install driver manually.
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Click to collapse
How do I do that, when the Kindle does not show up as being connected? All the guides I have found start off with accessing from the Device Manager. My Kindle does not show up in the Device Manager...
okay well then you`re running xp use another computer getting the driver installed is hard even for the very skilled particularlly when the device is stuck in fastboot. Friend or relatives computer running windows 7 would be perfect. Otherwise it`s linux on a live usb booted on your xp machine.
Windows 7 - No Dice
Thepooch said:
okay well then you`re running xp use another computer getting the driver installed is hard even for the very skilled particularlly when the device is stuck in fastboot. Friend or relatives computer running windows 7 would be perfect. Otherwise it`s linux on a live usb booted on your xp machine.
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Click to collapse
Yeah so I have a Windows7. I have reinstalled the drivers (by clicking on the install_drivers.bat file in the KFU) over and over again, and I still do not get any recognition on the computer, or in the Device Manager when I plug in the Kindle.
Try different usb port, make sure they are usb 2.0. Is the logo static or animated? It possible that you broke the bootloader. At some point I would be willing to look at some things for you via teamviewer. If it is not driver related I fear your next move is here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1430038. Keep it on charger or off till it can be dealt with.
Thepooch said:
Try different usb port, make sure they are usb 2.0. Is the logo static or animated? It possible that you broke the bootloader. At some point I would be willing to look at some things for you via teamviewer. If it is not driver related I fear your next move is here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1430038. Keep it on charger or off till it can be dealt with.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks! I would be willing to give it a shot (teamview I mean) if you are willing.
I tried the Firekit before I began this thread, but I kept getting stuck trying to run the tool after booting into ubuntu. Perhaps that is a different thread topic, but I am more than willing to put more work into figuring that out, if it could be the key to unlocking this stupid thing.
I am having this exact same problem. Using Win XP i was able to get the ADB drivers loaded initially and used KFU to try to install TWRP. When it rebooted during that process it got stuck at the Kindle Fire logo. Since then I cannot get my computer to recognize the kindle. Like you, I feel like i've tried everything.
Nixnaegie said:
I am having this exact same problem. Using Win XP i was able to get the ADB drivers loaded initially and used KFU to try to install TWRP. When it rebooted during that process it got stuck at the Kindle Fire logo. Since then I cannot get my computer to recognize the kindle. Like you, I feel like i've tried everything.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad to know I'm not alone - misery loves company! Solidarity my friend.
I wish I could tell you I'd solved it, but alas, I have not. I'm still working on it, I'll keep you updated if I have any breakthroughs!
My son is trying to get his kindle fire back up and running. With not much success. He was reinstalling the software and must have wiped the device clean as now he cannot get back into recovery mode. When installing FFFF it says that there is no exec directory. He ordered a factory cable adapter from black hat under the impression that this would force the device into fastboot thus recovery. When he attached the adapter all that happened was that it went back to the kindle fire logo and is now showing offline status unknown. Before at least it was showing online. Are we mistaken that it should go to recovery (blue and white) kindle logo. We are a little tired of messing with it and are thinking of calling it quits. Any suggestions would be much appreciated. We have turned off and on, installed drivers, and switched cables to no avail.
jwhite0514 said:
My son is trying to get his kindle fire back up and running. With not much success. He was reinstalling the software and must have wiped the device clean as now he cannot get back into recovery mode. When installing FFFF it says that there is no exec directory. He ordered a factory cable adapter from black hat under the impression that this would force the device into fastboot thus recovery. When he attached the adapter all that happened was that it went back to the kindle fire logo and is now showing offline status unknown. Before at least it was showing online. Are we mistaken that it should go to recovery (blue and white) kindle logo. We are a little tired of messing with it and are thinking of calling it quits. Any suggestions would be much appreciated. We have turned off and on, installed drivers, and switched cables to no avail.
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Click to collapse
You almost got it right. The error you received means the shell is no longer accessible and therefore unable to send necessary shell commands, like those used to change bootmodes. In order to fix the problem, a factory cable is needed to access fastboot, which gives you an alternative method of changing bootmodes (to access recovery) or flashing partition images (i.e. installing recovery) by use of fastboot commands. But the factory cable does not actually boot the device into recovery on it's own though.
Here's where it get's a little tricky though. Unless you know what to look for, it's difficult to know whether the device is actually in fastboot because the only thing that will be displayed on the screen is the Kindle Fire logo. You'll know if the device is in fastboot because the Kindle Fire logo will stay brightly lit, indefinitely. If the Kindle Fire logo flashes and/or gets slightly dimmed, then you'll know the factory cable you have is defective. With that being said, however, just because the device boots into fastboot mode, doesn't necessarily mean the computer will communicate with it. For that, you need working drivers.
Long story, short...you need to confirm whether the device is actually in fastboot before you can go any further.
Thanks for the reply. I looked at the logo this morning and it came up brightly lit with no change so I am assuming it is in fastboot mode. That being said the device, in device manager it comes up as unknown usb device. Before it would come up as kindle and I would install the drivers and it would come up as an android phone adb composite. I went into device manager and tried to update the driver manually and windows tells me that the correct driver is being used for this device. I did unplug the adapter and go back with a regular data cable and that made no difference. Do you need to force it to use a different driver. I am trying to use the drivers that came with the KFU I downloaded.
soupmagnet said:
You almost got it right. The error you received means the shell is no longer accessible and therefore unable to send necessary shell commands, like those used to change bootmodes. In order to fix the problem, a factory cable is needed to access fastboot, which gives you an alternative method of changing bootmodes (to access recovery) or flashing partition images (i.e. installing recovery) by use of fastboot commands. But the factory cable does not actually boot the device into recovery on it's own though.
Here's where it get's a little tricky though. Unless you know what to look for, it's difficult to know whether the device is actually in fastboot because the only thing that will be displayed on the screen is the Kindle Fire logo. You'll know if the device is in fastboot because the Kindle Fire logo will stay brightly lit, indefinitely. If the Kindle Fire logo flashes and/or gets slightly dimmed, then you'll know the factory cable you have is defective. With that being said, however, just because the device boots into fastboot mode, doesn't necessarily mean the computer will communicate with it. For that, you need working drivers.
Long story, short...you need to confirm whether the device is actually in fastboot before you can go any further.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Kindle drivers are notoriously touchy. Try uninstalling/reinstalling them a couple of times. I predict they will suddenly start working and you can proceed with installing custom recovery/rom.
Sent from my GT-p511x
Thanks for the respone, I have installed and uninstalled to where if I here the computer connect and disconnect one more time I might throw it against the wall. Are there specific steps that I need to take other than ordinary to unintall/install the drivers correctly or maybe drivers that are more sccuessful than others.
Ok, after sifting through a number of threads. I read where adb and fastboot are mutually exclusive and adb will not see a device that is in fastboot mode. Is that correct? And when you install the drivers with KFU does that contain the fastboot drivers? Or should you download SDK platforms tools which contains both? And then run fastboot commands to flash a recovery? If so, is there a good tutorial for someone that does not follow directions well?
jwhite0514 said:
Ok, after sifting through a number of threads. I read where adb and fastboot are mutually exclusive and adb will not see a device that is in fastboot mode. Is that correct? And when you install the drivers with KFU does that contain the fastboot drivers? Or should you download SDK platforms tools which contains both? And then run fastboot commands to flash a recovery? If so, is there a good tutorial for someone that does not follow directions well?
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Click to collapse
Yes, adb and fastboot are mutually exclusive but the same drivers should work for each. You can try the drivers located HERE, or read the topic on understanding driver installation located HERE.
Of you are still unsuccessful in communicating with the device in fastboot while using fastboot commands, you may have to restore it with Firekit using the "shorting trick".
OK, here is an update. I was able to get the device into recovery and TWRP. Not sure what I did differently other than maybe standing on one foot, facing south and staring at the stars, but it worked. When all of this started it was right after my son updated the software to 6.3.2 via wifi, maybe something went wrong. So last night I was able to flash 6.3.1 back to the device and was told that it was done succesfully. Using adb I can see the device in recovery and the shell lsiting is ~ # ←[6n which I guess is good as it said there was no shell before. So now my question is could it possibly be a corrupt bootloader on the device as well as it was hung at the fire logo. If so, do I need to reinstall the stock bootloader and if so where do you find it or does it come with the software flash?
I have succesfully got the update file on the kindle, did all the wipes selected install and now seems to be hung at veryfing filesystem and partitions sizes. Can someone tell me how long a flash should take or is something wrong? Since I have never done this before I have no idea.