I'll give you the essentials..
Stupidness ensued (doesn't it always?) and it ended up in an accidental deletion of my GNexus internal storage. Had a lot of pictures on there I hadn't backed up (see: stupidness) and now I'm searching desperately for a way to recover them. Now for the inquiry: If I backup my device, root and unlock, then restore the backed up rom.. will I still be able to access the cache which would enable me to restore said pictures through the various apps that allow such a thing?
I would imagine yes, however not being an expert in the field of tinkering with Android I come seeking your help and or advise.
Thanks!
Hope this helps
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1994705
irizwan said:
Hope this helps
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1994705
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Click to collapse
I wouldn't have come posting here if I hadn't already done a little research first. Good method, however, it requires a rooted device, of which I have not. I'm also running 4.2, which can't be rooted without unlocking the device, and thus wiping all data from my phone. So my original question still stands; if cached deleted items (pictures, video, etc) can still be recovered through an app if a backup of the original rom image is taken, and then restored on a rooted device.
Related
I am in the process downgrading my Tmobile G2.
I got the # , ok
I got the version changed, ok
I got the temp root (maybe).
But once I got the temp root and trying to backup.
The apps says I don't have root access.
It means after I pushed busybox ,etc ,ect. I click the backup apps, the backup apps say good to go. But even I reload the apps the 2nd time. It will show I don't have root access.
But I still have the # sign.
I checked the forum as someone else had the same problem, but I did not find the answer.
Does anyone have some suggestion?
Thanks
be sure to disable the fastboot option. turn your phone off, pull the battery and leave it like this for a minute... then start again
hoffmas said:
be sure to disable the fastboot option. turn your phone off, pull the battery and leave it like this for a minute... then start again
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Click to collapse
I got the same trouble with my Desire Z. You can see my question near the the week ago. And advice was the same, but it didn't help. I think temporary root was honest but may be backup application managed to destroy some reserved memory for root, i don't know. I couldn't to backup system either MyBackup Pro or Titanium.
So I can't rooting my phone.
I will very glad if anybody help me and you.
sure you can root your phone. if the backup doesn´t work just skip it.
"If you have nothing to back up or don't care to back anything up, proceed to the next section." (...from the guide)
I agree
hoffmas said:
sure you can root your phone. if the backup doesn´t work just skip it.
"If you have nothing to back up or don't care to back anything up, proceed to the next section." (...from the guide)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After rooting when I tried to backup the stock rom even I got some errors.
"Can't mount..some something"
Googled for it a lot and most of them indirectly said the phone might be bricked. Since I had nothing else to do I continued with the next step i.e. installing custom rom (cynogemod in my case) and everything turned out fine.
I am not recommending that you skip the backup process, if you can find anything then surely take a backup else skip it and continue.
hoffmas said:
if the backup doesn´t work just skip it.
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Click to collapse
I afraid that skipping backup procedure before rooting is not a better advice.
I've bought my device over a year ago and now it has a lot of useful app and files. I usually use MyBackupPro to store non-system data without rooting.
However, it seems to me that's not enough, or am I wrong?
I think that after the rooting and replacement of the firmware I get a new, empty device without my usual things.
Is it enough or not after rooting to restore only the non-system data to continue to use the device as before plus root ?
Thanks.
yes =) just backup your apps and restore afterwards... you wont loose any sdcard content while rooting (except for goldcard). sure you can´t backup system apps, but this doesn´t make sense anyway because they wont work with your new rom
backup while rooting could be important for warranty issues... but actually isn´t really cause you can use a wwe ruu.
Hi all,
I ran into an issue while trying to root my Samsung Galaxy S III. I used a tutorial from Max Lee on Youtube (can't post link) to help me get through the process . There was a step that used Titanium Backup to check if you rooted your phone correctly. However when I downloaded Titanium Backup and tried to open it, I didn't see the superSU request window like it appeared in the tutorial. It was stuck on "asking for root rights..." I decided to reinstall Titanium Backup to see if it would help. After uninstalling it, I realized my Play Store would not load anything. I looked at some other apps and they wouldn't load either (Gmail, Hangouts, some games, etc). I tried logging out and back into my Google account but that didn't work either. A lot of my apps aren't working after attempting to root my phone and I'm not sure what the issue is.
I'm new to this sort of stuff and I couldn't really find an answer for my problem (at least not that I could find on Google). Sorry if this has been asked already! Could anyone tell me what I could do to get my phone back to it's original state at least? I'm kind of afraid to try and root again if I do get a fix for this. Also, factory reset is going to be my last option ;_;.
Samsung Galaxy S III SGH-T999 running Android version 4.1.2
Thanks!
If you can, back up your internal sdcard data. It's very likely you may have to do a factory reset which can erase it.
(BTW, when you get it going again, consider using the free unlock method in the General section. Once you update you can't do it free anymore)
OK, so first, only use what info you find in the T999 forums. Everything you need is here and it's hard to help fix things caused by info gained elsewhere.
Do you have a custom recovery installed? (Twrp or cwm) if so boot recovery and factory reset. This will wipe all apps and data (except internal sd...at least it shouldnt). With luck, this is all you need to do. Reboot and hopefully it'll be working so you can reinstall your stuff. If you have stock recovery, still do this, but it WILL wipe ALL user data).
If that doesn't work, the easiest and most reliable next step is to flash your current firmware build via Odin, and factory reset from settings or stock recovery. (wipes all data).
Then you can unlock and update if you so choose. You can find your firmware and instructions in my firmware thread stickied in the development section. (You'll probably want to use the root66 versions)
If you have any questions feel free to ask. Better safe than sorry. But keep in mind just about everything you could possibly need or want to know has been covered, so don't forget to search for your answers first.
If you still want root after all that, we have several extremely easy options.
Good luck!
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-T999 using Tapatalk
Hello
I want to ask it's possible to restore data after factory reset, such as photos, videos, etc?
Maybe in this site there is pre rooted rom which have ability to restore?
Thanks for advice.
O
Sunrise2000 said:
Hello
I want to ask it's possible to restore data after factory reset, such as photos, videos, etc?
Maybe in this site there is pre rooted rom which have ability to restore?
Thanks for advice.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It depends on the time you want to spent on this and there is no guarantee at all.
Most importantly you have to stop using your device as every second android is running it may overwrite the data you deleted.
Once overwritten you're lost. Well there are companies may restoring even those but this is also a very expensive journey.
Then the next question is do you have twrp installed or not?
You definitively need a rooted device and besides that twrp would be the best starting point to avoid more data loss.
Then you would dump your data/media partition with dd then copy that image over to your pc and starting data rescue on that image.
I've never used that before but there is a send command tool when the device is in download mode. This way you should be able to backup even without root..
.
Hey guys,
I really need help. I was about to update my brother op3 from 3.2.4 to 3.2.8. When I was done I wanted to continue to flash to 4.0 but when I use the advanced reboot to boot into recovery it suddenly said "factory reset"!!!! Everything is gone even from the storage! I cant even backup from the backup file from twrp because it is gone! Can anyone please help me out? There are software to recovery this but I have to pay for all of them and they are not cheap!
Thank you in advance!
After a factory reset, even paid recovery tools aren't able to fully restore your data to their original state. At best, you'll get back a majority of the individual files you had on your phone prior to the wipe. The more you use the phone after wiping it, the more the old data is overwritten. At this point, I would just make the best out of this unfortunate event and clean flash whatever OS you were trying to update to. At least the phone will be de-cluttered at this point. You may even notice that the phone feels a little faster afterwards, and may even improve your battery life slightly.
If you had something really important on your phone that wasn't backed up, data recovery tools may be able to restore it, but I wouldn't hold my breath. Additionally, TWRP backups do not backup media files such as music, photos, personal documents, etc. Even if you were able to find a nandroid backup, you would only get back your OS, apps, and app data. Most of this can be restored by just downloading everything again.
In the future, I would recommend saving nandroid backups directly to a USB flash drive through USB OTG. Music and photos can also be backed up to the cloud through various free or paid services (Google Photos for example).
shujin51 said:
Hey guys,
I really need help. I was about to update my brother op3 from 3.2.4 to 3.2.8. When I was done I wanted to continue to flash to 4.0 but when I use the advanced reboot to boot into recovery it suddenly said "factory reset"!!!! Everything is gone even from the storage! I cant even backup from the backup file from twrp because it is gone! Can anyone please help me out? There are software to recovery this but I have to pay for all of them and they are not cheap!
Thank you in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Chance to recover your files are verry slim. Use the TWRP provided by Bluspark, it's on his main thread, stock twrp seems to have many issues.
Hi
I made a terrible mistake while unlocking bootloader of my Samsung A50 without knowing that this is gonna wipe my entire data.
I know i made a terrible mistake without knowing the rules . Now all i want is get back my Data.
I did some research about it and all is saying i need root access to do that. Now my question is is there any way to do that without rooting or even if i need to root do i have to install TWRP for that?(i don't want to wipe/format again as this might effect the previous data recovery.)
What should i do now?
The folder system was vaporized so even if you do recovery what's there it will be a juxtaposed nightmare of files.
Consider it a valuable lesson on critical data management... I hope some of it was backed up.
blackhawk said:
The folder system was vaporized so even if you do recovery what's there it will be a juxtaposed nightmare of files.
Consider it a valuable lesson on critical data management... I hope some of it was backed up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
important ones were backed up still some were left..
sarosata9 said:
important ones were backed up still some were left..
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Click to collapse
If any of it was backup on cloud apps... Google or Samsung.
Lol, I've lost whole databases
subscriptionm said:
You can do a few things to help keep your data safe and secure. First, it's important to have a good password management system in place.
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Click to collapse
Never encrypt backup drives as you are the one most likely to be locked out. The data will likely be lost if that happens.