SOLVED Wug's toolkit has me jammed. - Nexus 5X Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Edit: I had switched to a different (charge-only) cable halfway through and not realized it. Switched back and the phone was recognized again.
Steps:
I unlocked my bootloader with Wug's toolkit.
I installed the zips that it asked me to (that it put on my SD card).
I updated SuperSU
I got a notice to update the SuperSU binary.
SuperSU binary won't install via Play.
Tried to install via TWRP and recovery isn't twrp, seems to be stock recovery (thought I installed it, maybe not)
Now the toolkit won't recognize my device. neither will windows. It gives me the USB noise but won't show the device in the folder list and defaults to USB for Charging. I can change it but it doesn't make it recognizable.
I'm trying ot back out and try again but the toolkit says it finds the device but that it's listed as "offline". When I toggle the USB debugging, it doesn't ask me to fingerprint my computer.
When I try the "soft brick" option to flash from the bootloader, the script reports a failure "data transfer failure (unknown error)", then says "rebooting into bootloader..." and does nothing else BUT my phone's bootloader still says "downloading..." When I reboot, the script throws another failure and says "waiting for device". when I bootload into it again and connect, the script throws more failures.
I've been on this for 4 hours, getting pretty fatigued (through the night on a weekend when family is visiting. yes, I'm an idiot for trying this procedure but the 5 went so smoothly I was optimistic).

try reinstalling the drivers. also the OEM-lock option in the dev-settings may help bringing you back to step one.

I was halfway through installing the drivers when I quit for sleep last night.
I'm using the LG-Mobile-Driver_v3.14.1.exe package, and the installer says it installed successfully, but windows says that MTP and PCI Simple Communications Controller had "No driver found", so the device doesn't show up in my drive list and wugfresh won't detect it.
I've removed all Google, LG, MTP, and Nexus drivers in USBDeview, but can't seem to figure this out.
I was able to get the drivers installed on my wife's system, so I'll open another thread about this if I can't get them to work.

Try using @Heisenberg root instructions if you get back to stock. I've tried multiple times to use the toolkit to no avail. I've had to resort to Heisenberg's root method every time and it just works.
You may wonder why I've rooted multiple times...I was testing with Android Pay and wanted to start clean. Although I was able to use the toolkit to get back to stock easily.

oubravs2b said:
Try using @Heisenberg root instructions if you get back to stock. I've tried multiple times to use the toolkit to no avail. I've had to resort to Heisenberg's root method every time and it just works.
You may wonder why I've rooted multiple times...I was testing with Android Pay and wanted to start clean. Although I was able to use the toolkit to get back to stock easily.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so, the reason my computer stopped recognizing the phone was that I switched to a charge-only cable without realizing it. Switched back and the phone recognized fine.
The weird thing is, the charge-only cable worked fine for data xfer on my wife's system.

Related

[Q] Can you unroot without using a PC?

I'm new and I hope I'm not posting this in the wrong place or re-posting an old question, but I have been searching on this and other sites for days and haven't been able to find anything pertaining to my question, so sorry in advance If I'm not posting this correctly.
I have a rooted epic touch with rogue boot loader installed and UnNamed rom installed. I really liked the way it was running until I had some kind of malfunction happened and now the battery charge light won't shut off and the battery drains within a couple hours of standby time. the phone is only a couple months old and would like to take it to the sprint store as I'm assuming this is an obvious hardware issue. My problem is that my pc doesn't recognize my phone anymore so I can't flash back to stock and get rid of root, voiding my warranty. I have tried uninstalling and reinstalling kies and stand alone drivers multiple times with no avail. I've tried with the battery and sd card removed and have also tried on multiple pc's (2 win7 and and xp machine). every time it says the drivers weren't installed successfully and to replace the device being connected.
My question: Is there a way to revert to stock off of the internal memory of the phone? I know there are zip roms you can flash from the boot loader but I was wondering if there was a way to flash a rom from zip and install the original boot loader as well as get rid of root? Any help I can get would be extremely appreciated and again I apologize if I am wasting anyone's time by asking in the wrong place or re-asking a question.
Ok so I downloaded the Calkin's_Stock_Rooted_EK02_ROM_v1.0 and got it on my sd card via dropbox. Flashed and now have a stock rom on it which I think is a step in the right direction.
The only thing is now I have clockwork boot loader and still rooted. and still not recognizing on pc. anyone know of an unrooted zip with original boot loader?
I couldn't get my PC to recognize either of my 2 E4GT's, each due to a different reason, both issues were resolved by going through each step in sfhub's debugging checklist:
sfhub said:
This post is for the FAQ section:
Why is the install stuck waiting for device to be connected?
Your phone isn't being recognized by your PC as an Android device.
When the drivers are installed and the phone is properly recognized, you should see the following in start->run->devmgmt.msc
Code:
Android Phone
SAMSUNG Android ADB Interface
Modem
SAMSUNG Mobile USB Modem
Until you get the SAMSUNG Android ADB Interface to show up, neither ADB nor this script will work.
Here is a debugging checklist:
1) dial ##UPST# (##8778#) in the dialer and verify AP (or ALL) is checked (if CP is checked, phone won't be recognized as an Android device)
2) restart the ADB server (choose Option G to stop the server, it'll get started automatically by the script)
3) verify USB Debugging is ENABLED
4) verify USB drivers are installed (Win7-64bit see below)
5) try a different usb cable
If you are in Win7-64bit try changing the default install location for the drivers:
If you see an error like this:
Try running the CMD prompt (or e4gtauto-sfx.exe) as Administrator. Right-click on the CMD icon (or e4gtauto-sfx.exe) and select "Run As", then select Administrator.
If that doesn't work, try disabling windows firewall.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I went down that list and everything seemed to be in order but still no recognition by pc. I kept uninstalling and reinstalling the drivers and switching usb ports and it finally installed the drivers successfully long enough for odin to recognize it and to flash back to stock. As soon as it was done the machine stopped recognizing it again. Lucky break I guess. So I can now return it to sprint and deal with the hardware issue.
I would still like to find a zip file like the tar that I flashed that installs stock recovery and non rooted ek02 rom and kernel from cwm, if that's even possible.
Thanks Godswrath, for helping me out.
You could use wifi explorer to get files on to sd card and mobile Odin to flash the tar file back to stock....
Sent from my SPH-D710 using xda premium
Lol....I am a noob.
They make a mobile Odin? That would have saved my like 4 hours....

[Q] Nexus 7 won't boot, need to recover data...HELP!!!!

Ok, so, this is a two part question.
I've got a 32GB Nexus 7, and I'm having some issues with it. This tablet is completely stock. I haven't rooted it, I haven't unlocked the bootloader, installed a custom ROM or anything. All I've done with it was install OTA updates from Google, download some apps/games, and take some pictures.
About two days after I bought the thing and set it up, I got an error that said "System UIDs inconsistent" or something to that effect. I'd never seen it before, but a Google search revealed that the easiest way to fix it was to do a wipe/factory reset, so I did.
Fast forward to a couple of days ago...I'm from Canada, and while driving down to the States, I was bored, so I took out my shiny new Nexus 7, and turned it on. It was stuck at the 'X' screen, and wouldn't boot. I was frustrated, but because I was still in Canada, I was able to run a search on my phone. Factory reset. Ugh. So I did...once it finished, I used my data plan to download a few essential apps, and it was good to go.
Fast forward to today. I'm going to be returning home later today, but yesterday I decided to try out the GPS functions, because the TomTom GPS I've got isn't the greatest, and I much prefer Google Maps Navigation. A friend with a Nexus 4 was able to use the wifi where we were staying to get directions to various places, and then he'd shut off the wifi, and his N4 would still maintain the GPS signal and navigate him for the whole trip, even with no data, and for a lot of the time, no cell signal at all. I wanted to try the same with my N7, not knowing that many users are experiencing issues with the GPS.
So yesterday I was trying to use the Sygic GPS app, which apparently does offline navigation. And I guess because the N7 location capabilities are iffy right now, it wasn't working. So I, in my infinite wisdom, decided to reboot the tablet, thinking that would fix the GPS. This was after I had taken LOTS and LOTS of photos during the trip.
The tablet reboots, and gets stuck on the 'X' screen again. I was ready to bash my head through the car window at that point.
Long story short, the tablet doesn't boot. I'm a software developer for a living, so I had (keyword.. HAD) USB debugging turned on, but since I had to wipe the thing at the start of the trip, I never re-enabled USB debugging, but I don't recall if you actually have to or not...I'm assuming that it loses that setting when you wipe it.
So USB debugging, I can only assume, is not enabled. I can boot into recovery mode, but all I get is the Android icon with a red exclamation mark, and a message that says "No command". I know that you can press the power and volume up buttons to get the menu in recovery mode.
But what I was hoping to be able to do was use ADB to pull a full backup of the device, to at least salvage all the photos I took. I don't care about the apps, I can always reinstall those. I did not have a chance to set up an auto-sync (either Dropbox or Google+) of the photos, unfortunately.
I downloaded the Google USB drivers, and the Android Platform Tools (the wifi at this hotel sucks, so I didn't get the full SDK), and I'm using my brother's laptop, which is running Windows 8. I can get the tablet into recovery mode, and the laptop recognizes the tablet when I try to power it up, or when its in the fastboot menu.
But I can't get ADB to recognize the Nexus at all, it doesn't appear in adb devices whatsoever. And right now, the laptop doesn't seem to react when I plug the tablet in after booting into recovery mode. I also tried plugging in the USB cord, then booting into recovery mode, same thing.
I can only get ADB to recognize the tablet if I hit the "Apply update from ADB" option in the recovery menu. It shows up in adb devices, but it says "sideload" next to it, and if I try any other adb command (shell, backup, pull, etc) it just says "error: closed". I tried adb kill-server and adb start-server, then adb backup again, no dice.
I stayed up till 1AM last night fiddling with this thing, and I have a feeling that I might need to wait till I get home, or maybe when I get to work, as I believe I've got the full Android SDK installed there.
So, my two questions on this are...
1) What the hell am I doing wrong? Is there any way for me to recover the photos from the device? I'm sure that adb backup will work, if I could just get this damn laptop to recognize the device.
I've done quite a few Google searches already, and found a few results. I can't post links apparently, but there's a certain thread posted on StackExchange about how to perform a full backup of non-rooted Android devices. While it was helpful, I can't do that backup because this laptop won't recognize the tablet.
But I'm just spinning my wheels here, and could really use some help. Are there different drivers I should be using? Is there a way to run ADB from the bootloader rather than recovery mode? How do I get Device Manager (Windows) to even recognize the tablet when its in recovery mode?
2) So this will be the third time (after I get these photos recovered, hopefully) that I'll be doing a wipe on this tablet. I've got a two year replacement warranty on it. Should I be taking it back for a new one? Would it be a bad app thats causing these issues? Most of the apps I have are "official" ones anyway, aside from a couple of games, but they're all popular ones. After the wipe, should I re-flash it with Google's latest stock ROM?
Thanks in advance!!
Woops, I just realized you haven't unlocked the tablet. Sorry, everything I wrote below won't work because the bootloader won't let you boot into an unsigned recovery image and if you try to unlock now the process will force a wipe. The only thing I can suggest is try booting into safe mode. Sometimes you can get the MTP device to show up even if the system isn't totally started. There is a link in the stuff below for that. I guess you could also try the adb backup again, now knowing what is going on with adb and recovery.
[Info] Guide to entering safe mode, bootloader, stock recovery
[GUIDE] Full Phone Backup without Unlock or Root
====
Almost TLDR.
Anyway, I don't know why you get the System UIDs inconsistent. Probably some corruption somewhere, but who knows the cause. There are sporadic reports of it on this tablet and actually other brand tablets as well, but it doesn't seem like the more widespread issues. Personally I think it would be worth it to exchange it to see if that helps.
Regarding your ADB issues, there are multiple:
First, in stock recovery, adb isn't running until you select sideload, that is why you don't see it under adb devices.
Second, the adb in stock recovery (ie adb sideload option) is restricted in its functions. It basically only supports sideloading.
You don't seem to have this issue, but the regular Google USB drivers won't work for adb under recovery because the USB IDs change and the device usually shows up as an unknown device "Flo". If you are afflicted by that issue, see this post for drivers that will work under both android and recovery:
[FIX] MTP with USB debugging / ADB within Recovery (windows/nexus7)
Hope is not lost though, you can boot into TWRP recovery, which does support a full adb and you should be able to "adb pull" all your files off the sdcard. Just don't do any wipes or formats by accident until you get the files off.
Download TWRP from here: http://techerrata.com/browse/twrp2/flo
Place the file in the same directory as your adb/fastboot executables
Boot into bootloader using Power+VolDown, see this post if you have trouble
[Info] Guide to entering safe mode, bootloader, stock recovery
connect the USB cable to a USB2.0 port on your computer
you should see some indication that the android bootloader device got recognized
in your adb directory enter (I renamed the downloaded TWRP image for convenience)
fastboot boot twrp.img​after maybe 5 seconds of seemingly nothing going on, TWRP will start up
your PC may ask you for drivers, if so, see the link above where I provided drivers
after that you should have full adb available to pull your files
After you are sure you have everything pulled off, try the factory image restore from google.
1. This may or may not help you but have you manually installed the adb drivers on the laptop? If not, check here. It also includes instructions on how to disable driver signature enforcement on your brother's Window 8 laptop. Now, I'm not sure if he updated that driver for flo, or if he even has to, but if that driver doesn't work, download the sdk. A driver comes in it that'll work. I know it'll be painful to wait for the whole thing to download, but it might be your best option. It's in ...\sdk\extras\google\usb_driver\
2. It's up to you whether to return it or not. I, personally, hate dealing with the return process, even if it's in-store, so I usually make-do until a fix is found, or in this situation with a Nexus device, I would try to troubleshoot it. I, too am a software developer by profession (mainly .NET; I develop on Android as kind of a hobby) and I enjoy working out issues myself. But that's just my opinion, it's completely up to you. I doubt it's any apps, I doubt it's any games. I would probably try installing factory images back onto the device and see if that helps.
Thanks for the replies, guys.
I just got home late last night, and while I was too exhausted yesterday to do anything with it, I brought the Nexus 7 with me to work today, so I'll see what I can do with it here. I thought I had the Android SDK installed on my work computer, but I don't. Fortunately, now that I'm back from holidays, I have access to fast internet connections.
My regular desktop at home and my work computer are both running Windows 7, so I shouldn't run into the driver enforcement issues that people experience with Windows 8.
I tried booting it into safe mode once, but I didn't have the USB connected. Even with safe mode, it was just frozen at the 'X' screen, but I'll try it again with the USB connected.
I'm a bit confused though. The tablet hasn't been unlocked, sfhub, so like you said, I won't be able to boot into TWRP. So aside from booting into safe mode, there's nothing I can do to get the adb pull or adb backup commands to work?
If someone can clear that up for me, that'd be appreciated. I'm going to try safe mode now, but as far as I'm aware, all I can do is boot the tablet into recovery mode. So is there a driver that would allow me to use the shell, pull, or backup commands from either stock recovery or the bootloader menu?
Update...
So, safe mode doesn't work as far as booting the device goes; it just hangs at the 'X' screen.
However, something named "Nexus 7" shows up in Device Manager, and when I told it to look for a driver in the folder containing the USB drivers from Google, it installed a driver, and called it "MTP USB Device".
Unfortunately, the device doesn't show up under My Computer (damn it, wishful thinking!!), and then after about 15 seconds, a yellow exclamation mark shows up on the device icon in Device Manager, and it generates an error saying "This device cannot start. (Code 10)".
Does this at least seem like progress?
Stealth22 said:
Update...
So, safe mode doesn't work as far as booting the device goes; it just hangs at the 'X' screen.
However, something named "Nexus 7" shows up in Device Manager, and when I told it to look for a driver in the folder containing the USB drivers from Google, it installed a driver, and called it "MTP USB Device".
Unfortunately, the device doesn't show up under My Computer (damn it, wishful thinking!!), and then after about 15 seconds, a yellow exclamation mark shows up on the device icon in Device Manager, and it generates an error saying "This device cannot start. (Code 10)".
Does this at least seem like progress?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It does look like progress. Try booting your phone up into recovery mode, connecting it to the computer, then installing those drivers for the phone again. Mine comes up as "Google Galaxy Nexus ADB Interface" in recovery after installing the drivers, but I think if you can get it to come up as "MTP USB Device", you might be able to use adb commands. I'm not 100% sure, but if you can get it back to recognized as an MTP device again, try quickly switching over to the command prompt and trying the "adb devices" command and see if it shows up. Of course, if you install the drivers and it comes up as an ADB interface device, you should just be able to run adb commands and not need to see if MTP will work.
The computer doesn't recognize the device at all when I start Recovery Mode. On the tablet, all I see is an Android laying down with a red exclamation mark saying "No command."
The only way I can get it to even pop up in Device Manager is if I hit "Apply update from ADB", which enables the adb sideload command, but NOTHING ELSE. If I try to run ANY other ADB command, I get "error: closed".
Remember, the device is COMPLETELY stock, not rooted, and the bootloader is locked. I had to do a wipe the last time this happened, driving down to the States at the beginning of my vacation. So even though I had USB debugging enabled before, I never re-enabled it after doing the wipe. Then I took a bunch of photos, and after rebooting the device for the first time after that one wipe, it again no longer boots up.
I would love to fix the damn thing by just doing another factory reset. But I don't want to do that, because I need to recover the photos that I've taken this past weekend.
I might call Google support and see if they know of any solution.
Stealth22 said:
I'm a bit confused though. The tablet hasn't been unlocked, sfhub, so like you said, I won't be able to boot into TWRP. So aside from booting into safe mode, there's nothing I can do to get the adb pull or adb backup commands to work?
If someone can clear that up for me, that'd be appreciated. I'm going to try safe mode now, but as far as I'm aware, all I can do is boot the tablet into recovery mode. So is there a driver that would allow me to use the shell, pull, or backup commands from either stock recovery or the bootloader menu?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
With stock recovery and locked bootloader with Android that won't boot, and not being to factory reset because you want to save your data, you won't be able to do any normal adb commands.
The only thing you might want to try is the adb backup command, which I've never tried from stock recovery, so there is a remote possibilty it might work, but probably not.
---------- Post added at 09:56 AM ---------- Previous post was at 09:54 AM ----------
Stealth22 said:
Update...
So, safe mode doesn't work as far as booting the device goes; it just hangs at the 'X' screen.
However, something named "Nexus 7" shows up in Device Manager, and when I told it to look for a driver in the folder containing the USB drivers from Google, it installed a driver, and called it "MTP USB Device".
Unfortunately, the device doesn't show up under My Computer (damn it, wishful thinking!!), and then after about 15 seconds, a yellow exclamation mark shows up on the device icon in Device Manager, and it generates an error saying "This device cannot start. (Code 10)".
Does this at least seem like progress?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It would have been huge progress if you got the MTP device recognized as you could drag and drop files.
You can try spending some time figuring out whether it is a driver issue or the unit hasn't booted up far enough to response to MTP requests by removing drivers and let it reinstall with known good ones.
The ADB backup command was the first thing that I tried, it didn't work. I can't do ANYTHING with ADB in recovery mode because the computer doesn't even recognize that the tablet is connected until I select "Apply update from ADB", at which point I can only run the sideload command. Any other ADB command (backup included) brings up "error: closed".
I guess my last hope will be the MTP option, if I can get the driver working. I think I'm going to have to call Google on this one.
Stealth22 said:
Ok, so, this is a two part question.
I've got a 32GB Nexus 7, and I'm having some issues with it. This tablet is completely stock. I haven't rooted it, I haven't unlocked the bootloader, installed a custom ROM or anything. All I've done with it was install OTA updates from Google, download some apps/games, and take some pictures.
About two days after I bought the thing and set it up, I got an error that said "System UIDs inconsistent" or something to that effect. I'd never seen it before, but a Google search revealed that the easiest way to fix it was to do a wipe/factory reset, so I did.
Fast forward to a couple of days ago...I'm from Canada, and while driving down to the States, I was bored, so I took out my shiny new Nexus 7, and turned it on. It was stuck at the 'X' screen, and wouldn't boot. I was frustrated, but because I was still in Canada, I was able to run a search on my phone. Factory reset. Ugh. So I did...once it finished, I used my data plan to download a few essential apps, and it was good to go.
Fast forward to today. I'm going to be returning home later today, but yesterday I decided to try out the GPS functions, because the TomTom GPS I've got isn't the greatest, and I much prefer Google Maps Navigation. A friend with a Nexus 4 was able to use the wifi where we were staying to get directions to various places, and then he'd shut off the wifi, and his N4 would still maintain the GPS signal and navigate him for the whole trip, even with no data, and for a lot of the time, no cell signal at all. I wanted to try the same with my N7, not knowing that many users are experiencing issues with the GPS.
So yesterday I was trying to use the Sygic GPS app, which apparently does offline navigation. And I guess because the N7 location capabilities are iffy right now, it wasn't working. So I, in my infinite wisdom, decided to reboot the tablet, thinking that would fix the GPS. This was after I had taken LOTS and LOTS of photos during the trip.
The tablet reboots, and gets stuck on the 'X' screen again. I was ready to bash my head through the car window at that point.
Long story short, the tablet doesn't boot. I'm a software developer for a living, so I had (keyword.. HAD) USB debugging turned on, but since I had to wipe the thing at the start of the trip, I never re-enabled USB debugging, but I don't recall if you actually have to or not...I'm assuming that it loses that setting when you wipe it.
So USB debugging, I can only assume, is not enabled. I can boot into recovery mode, but all I get is the Android icon with a red exclamation mark, and a message that says "No command". I know that you can press the power and volume up buttons to get the menu in recovery mode.
But what I was hoping to be able to do was use ADB to pull a full backup of the device, to at least salvage all the photos I took. I don't care about the apps, I can always reinstall those. I did not have a chance to set up an auto-sync (either Dropbox or Google+) of the photos, unfortunately.
I downloaded the Google USB drivers, and the Android Platform Tools (the wifi at this hotel sucks, so I didn't get the full SDK), and I'm using my brother's laptop, which is running Windows 8. I can get the tablet into recovery mode, and the laptop recognizes the tablet when I try to power it up, or when its in the fastboot menu.
But I can't get ADB to recognize the Nexus at all, it doesn't appear in adb devices whatsoever. And right now, the laptop doesn't seem to react when I plug the tablet in after booting into recovery mode. I also tried plugging in the USB cord, then booting into recovery mode, same thing.
I can only get ADB to recognize the tablet if I hit the "Apply update from ADB" option in the recovery menu. It shows up in adb devices, but it says "sideload" next to it, and if I try any other adb command (shell, backup, pull, etc) it just says "error: closed". I tried adb kill-server and adb start-server, then adb backup again, no dice.
I stayed up till 1AM last night fiddling with this thing, and I have a feeling that I might need to wait till I get home, or maybe when I get to work, as I believe I've got the full Android SDK installed there.
So, my two questions on this are...
1) What the hell am I doing wrong? Is there any way for me to recover the photos from the device? I'm sure that adb backup will work, if I could just get this damn laptop to recognize the device.
I've done quite a few Google searches already, and found a few results. I can't post links apparently, but there's a certain thread posted on StackExchange about how to perform a full backup of non-rooted Android devices. While it was helpful, I can't do that backup because this laptop won't recognize the tablet.
But I'm just spinning my wheels here, and could really use some help. Are there different drivers I should be using? Is there a way to run ADB from the bootloader rather than recovery mode? How do I get Device Manager (Windows) to even recognize the tablet when its in recovery mode?
2) So this will be the third time (after I get these photos recovered, hopefully) that I'll be doing a wipe on this tablet. I've got a two year replacement warranty on it. Should I be taking it back for a new one? Would it be a bad app thats causing these issues? Most of the apps I have are "official" ones anyway, aside from a couple of games, but they're all popular ones. After the wipe, should I re-flash it with Google's latest stock ROM?
Thanks in advance!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would take it back, if you haven't rooted it, unlocked the bootloader then you probably got a lemon. Just return it, not worth the hassle. Even if you fix it yourself you shouldn't have too. My recommendation is to return it.
sfhub said:
With stock recovery and locked bootloader with Android that won't boot, and not being to factory reset because you want to save your data, you won't be able to do any normal adb commands.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, I stand corrected. I don't have much experience with the stock recovery; one of the first things I did when I got this phone was install CWM, and I haven't flashed a stock recovery image since.
So, back to OP:
Try getting MTP to work in recovery, then you can manually bring the files over through Explorer.
Wait, why not install a custom recovery? go here, download the fastboot file, and put it in your platform-tools folder. Might want to rename it to "recovery.img" if it isn't already named that. Now:
1. Boot into the bootloader (power off, hold Power and Volume down until it vibrates and goes to a screen with an Android on his back and his chest open)
2. Once there, see if adb will recognize your device. If not, try installing the drivers again.
3. If adb sees your device, issue this command (assuming the CWM recovery.img file is in your platform-tools folder)
Code:
fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
Once that's done, boot up into your new custom recovery. From there, make a nandroid (optional, that nandroid will contain your pictures if you want to do a factory reset or accidentally hit something). Now if you can get adb to recognize your phone while in this recovery, you can issue adb commands such as adb pull. I would do:
Code:
adb pull /sdcard/ \sdcard\
That will pull the entire contents of your sdcard to a folder called \sdcard\ under platform-tools.
EDIT:
Slight revision to the command I gave you to pull your pictures. If you just want the pictures taken by your camera, run
Code:
adb pull /sdcard/DCIM/Camera/ camera\
That will pull the pictures and place it into a folder called 'camera' inside of your platform-tools folder. The previous code I gave you would put the entire contents of you sdcard in a folder called 'sdcard' on the root of the C:\ drive because I put a back-slash ahead of the folder name. My mistake.
I'll give it a try, but I'm 99.9% sure that I can't flash a recovery image unless the bootloader is unlocked, which wipes all of the data.
I'm just downloading a factory image now...I've pretty much accepted the fact that the photos are gone.
Stealth22 said:
I'll give it a try, but I'm 99.9% sure that I can't flash a recovery image unless the bootloader is unlocked, which wipes all of the data.
I'm just downloading a factory image now...I've pretty much accepted the fact that the photos are gone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh yeah, I'm sorry. I keep forgetting you have your bootloader locked, whoops.
Hey, I just thought of something else. Are you planning on flashing those images one by one, following a guide similar to this one? If so, if you don't flash userdata.img, it should preserve your data, including contents of /sdcard/. He touches on it a bit in the guide:
10) Flash the data partition: fastboot flash userdata userdata.img Note: this command will wipe your device (including /sdcard), EVEN if your bootloader is already unlocked. See note 2 below.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
2) This note is NOT for n00bs. There has been a lot of uncertainty and questions around stock ROMs and losing/wiping data. You CAN flash a stock ROM WITHOUT losing the data stored in /sdcard (and possibly even all apps and app data, although this depends on which apps you have installed). This can be done by skipping step 10 in part D. However, if your device goes into a boot loop, you will need to boot CWM, and wipe data <-- this will wipe your apps and app data, but not /sdcard.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Might want to note that the guide I posted was for the Nexus 4, but the process should be the same. Try not flashing userdata.img when flashing the stock image.
If the bootloader was unlocked to begin with, yeah, that would work. The guide for the N7 has a similar note about preserving user data.
I've gone ahead with the factory reset. Next time, I'll be sure to have automatic backups to Dropbox or Google+.
I'm going through the same thing right now.
Photos from vacation in Italy. I did back up half of the trip but wifi was so slow at the hotels that I couldn't get everything.
Now Stuck on X at boot.
Boot loader locked.
USB debugging off.
I installed the Nexus 7 Toolkit.
I too was only able to get my computer to recognize the nexus only in sideload mode.
I was able to load an update to the nexus through sideload and it did install.
I was hopeful that the update would have fix it but it did not.
I poked around in the update zip file and say a script called install-recovery.sh.
I was wondering if this script or another one that runs during the update process could be edited to run something like and adb pull or backup.
Does anyone know if this is possible?
I don't know much about adb or messing around with ROMs, etc. I don't even know what language this sh file is written in. Could someone tell me?
Thanks.
joecap5 said:
I'm going through the same thing right now.
Photos from vacation in Italy. I did back up half of the trip but wifi was so slow at the hotels that I couldn't get everything.
Now Stuck on X at boot.
Boot loader locked.
USB debugging off.
I installed the Nexus 7 Toolkit.
I too was only able to get my computer to recognize the nexus only in sideload mode.
I was able to load an update to the nexus through sideload and it did install.
I was hopeful that the update would have fix it but it did not.
I poked around in the update zip file and say a script called install-recovery.sh.
I was wondering if this script or another one that runs during the update process could be edited to run something like and adb pull or backup.
Does anyone know if this is possible?
I don't know much about adb or messing around with ROMs, etc. I don't even know what language this sh file is written in. Could someone tell me?
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know if you can edit that script to pull a backup, I'm not really an expert on that subject. But from the amount of time and effort I spent, my guess would be that you (like I was) are unfortunately SOL.
I know it's been 3 weeks since you posted, but I thought I'd reply anyway, in case this ever happens to anyone else. Long story short, I was never able to recover anything, and was forced to do a reset.
I had called Google and tried to see if they could work out a solution. I was willing to ship the tablet to them, have them pull the data off, do a reset, and ship it back, but obviously, they said they couldn't do that.
In the end, I accepted that the photos were gone, and did a factory reset. Then I downloaded the stock image from Google, and reinstalled the stock OS from scratch, because of the issues I was having. I just figured that because this was the third time I was doing a factory reset, that something was screwed up with the factory image that was on the device, and that it wouldn't hurt to do a fresh install.
The very first thing I did was install Dropbox and set up the automatic sync function for photos.
I haven't rebooted my N7 very much since then (for fear of this happening again!), but whenever I've had to, it's started up with no issues. Now, I'm careful about what apps I install from Google Play, and any time I have to do a reboot or if Google sends out an update, I do a full backup first. In fact, I hadn't done a backup in a while, so I just pulled a backup, and restarted the tablet because my BT keyboard wouldn't connect. No issues this time either.
From now on though, any time I go on vacation, I don't care if I'm using a real camera or if I forget the camera and have to use my phone or N7. The laptop comes with me on the trip, and photos/videos taken get backed up at the end of each day. Copied to the laptop, to my USB passport drive, Dropbox, the whole 9 yards. I learned that lesson the hard way, and I'm a programmer for a living, so I definitely should have known better.
Moral of the story...if it's important to you, don't be lazy like I was. BACK IT UP.
Try this:
Stealth22 said:
Ok, so, this is a two part question.
I've got a 32GB Nexus 7, and I'm having some issues with it. This tablet is completely stock. I haven't rooted it, I haven't unlocked the bootloader, installed a custom ROM or anything. All I've done with it was install OTA updates from Google, download some apps/games, and take some pictures.
About two days after I bought the thing and set it up, I got an error that said "System UIDs inconsistent" or something to that effect. I'd never seen it before, but a Google search revealed that the easiest way to fix it was to do a wipe/factory reset, so I did.
Fast forward to a couple of days ago...I'm from Canada, and while driving down to the States, I was bored, so I took out my shiny new Nexus 7, and turned it on. It was stuck at the 'X' screen, and wouldn't boot. I was frustrated, but because I was still in Canada, I was able to run a search on my phone. Factory reset. Ugh. So I did...once it finished, I used my data plan to download a few essential apps, and it was good to go.
Fast forward to today. I'm going to be returning home later today, but yesterday I decided to try out the GPS functions, because the TomTom GPS I've got isn't the greatest, and I much prefer Google Maps Navigation. A friend with a Nexus 4 was able to use the wifi where we were staying to get directions to various places, and then he'd shut off the wifi, and his N4 would still maintain the GPS signal and navigate him for the whole trip, even with no data, and for a lot of the time, no cell signal at all. I wanted to try the same with my N7, not knowing that many users are experiencing issues with the GPS.
So yesterday I was trying to use the Sygic GPS app, which apparently does offline navigation. And I guess because the N7 location capabilities are iffy right now, it wasn't working. So I, in my infinite wisdom, decided to reboot the tablet, thinking that would fix the GPS. This was after I had taken LOTS and LOTS of photos during the trip.
The tablet reboots, and gets stuck on the 'X' screen again. I was ready to bash my head through the car window at that point.
Long story short, the tablet doesn't boot. I'm a software developer for a living, so I had (keyword.. HAD) USB debugging turned on, but since I had to wipe the thing at the start of the trip, I never re-enabled USB debugging, but I don't recall if you actually have to or not...I'm assuming that it loses that setting when you wipe it.
So USB debugging, I can only assume, is not enabled. I can boot into recovery mode, but all I get is the Android icon with a red exclamation mark, and a message that says "No command". I know that you can press the power and volume up buttons to get the menu in recovery mode.
But what I was hoping to be able to do was use ADB to pull a full backup of the device, to at least salvage all the photos I took. I don't care about the apps, I can always reinstall those. I did not have a chance to set up an auto-sync (either Dropbox or Google+) of the photos, unfortunately.
I downloaded the Google USB drivers, and the Android Platform Tools (the wifi at this hotel sucks, so I didn't get the full SDK), and I'm using my brother's laptop, which is running Windows 8. I can get the tablet into recovery mode, and the laptop recognizes the tablet when I try to power it up, or when its in the fastboot menu.
But I can't get ADB to recognize the Nexus at all, it doesn't appear in adb devices whatsoever. And right now, the laptop doesn't seem to react when I plug the tablet in after booting into recovery mode. I also tried plugging in the USB cord, then booting into recovery mode, same thing.
I can only get ADB to recognize the tablet if I hit the "Apply update from ADB" option in the recovery menu. It shows up in adb devices, but it says "sideload" next to it, and if I try any other adb command (shell, backup, pull, etc) it just says "error: closed". I tried adb kill-server and adb start-server, then adb backup again, no dice.
I stayed up till 1AM last night fiddling with this thing, and I have a feeling that I might need to wait till I get home, or maybe when I get to work, as I believe I've got the full Android SDK installed there.
So, my two questions on this are...
1) What the hell am I doing wrong? Is there any way for me to recover the photos from the device? I'm sure that adb backup will work, if I could just get this damn laptop to recognize the device.
I've done quite a few Google searches already, and found a few results. I can't post links apparently, but there's a certain thread posted on StackExchange about how to perform a full backup of non-rooted Android devices. While it was helpful, I can't do that backup because this laptop won't recognize the tablet.
But I'm just spinning my wheels here, and could really use some help. Are there different drivers I should be using? Is there a way to run ADB from the bootloader rather than recovery mode? How do I get Device Manager (Windows) to even recognize the tablet when its in recovery mode?
2) So this will be the third time (after I get these photos recovered, hopefully) that I'll be doing a wipe on this tablet. I've got a two year replacement warranty on it. Should I be taking it back for a new one? Would it be a bad app thats causing these issues? Most of the apps I have are "official" ones anyway, aside from a couple of games, but they're all popular ones. After the wipe, should I re-flash it with Google's latest stock ROM?
Thanks in advance‼
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, first of all, have you tried to - simply let it on the Charger!??
Then press and hold the power button
If it doesn't work: Has the device ever taken a kind of damage because of heat/water/drop/whatever?
Try to replace the battery.
Try to hold the so►called „KEÝ4" inside of the device- for exactly 16.0 to 16.2 seconds. Then you smoehow can manage and check the hardware health+status+whatever. Efficient application. Also works with 0,1% battery charge.☺☻☺
I'm so sorry for you.
Which Nexus is it? (2012/2013? How many GB? Which Android Version? Because KitKat is bogus.))
I know a Galaxy S3 Mini, fell into water for 3 Seconds.
Then everything worked perfectly fine but... even if the device was turned off and connected to the charger: the device actually did recogniƶe the Charger but then:
{
"lightbox_close": "Close",
"lightbox_next": "Next",
"lightbox_previous": "Previous",
"lightbox_error": "The requested content cannot be loaded. Please try again later.",
"lightbox_start_slideshow": "Start slideshow",
"lightbox_stop_slideshow": "Stop slideshow",
"lightbox_full_screen": "Full screen",
"lightbox_thumbnails": "Thumbnails",
"lightbox_download": "Download",
"lightbox_share": "Share",
"lightbox_zoom": "Zoom",
"lightbox_new_window": "New window",
"lightbox_toggle_sidebar": "Toggle sidebar"
}
►Turned into►►→→
‼‼
I hope, that i could help.
All the best for you and your Nexus.

[H811] ADB Broken after Rooting?

Yesterday I decided to install ClockworkMod. I was running 6.0.0 Marshmallow
I unlocked my bootloader no problem. I decided to root before I flashed the rom. I booted into TWRP using adb, made a nandroid backup, and flashed stock-20a-rooted.zip (I was following this guide). It worked! I used a rootchecker app to ensure I had a good root. Then I went to boot into TWRP to install ClockworkMod. I turned off my phone and did the volume down + power thing, but I got the LG hard factory reset screen. So I decided to use ADB instead and rebooted my phone. However, when I tried to use adb, my device was listed as "unauthorized", and I haven't been able to use adb since! Here's what I tried (but not necessarily in this order):
Using the LG hard factory reset. Nothing changed.
clearing adbkey file on my computer. Nothing changed.
using a different computer with fresh adb and driver install. Nothing changed.
rebooting both PCs. No dice.
tried mtp and ptp on device. Neither worked. Device was not recognized on MTP (used to be recognized by adb when it was on mtp.) device was recognized on ptp, but it was listed as "unauthorized"
tried to revoke usb debugging in settings on device. That option wasn't listed in developer options.
tried to clear adbkey on device and found out that my device still hadn't generated an adbkey file!
throughout this whole time, whenever I plugged in my device, the NSA fingerprint dialog box DID NOT APPEAR.
Questions, thoughts on potential solutions:
can I somehow unroot or go back to stock? I heard we can't do this anymore because it bricks our phones....
I feel like this has something to do with how my device never created an adbkeys file.
SOLUTION
I have been working on this today and I found a solution. I had read that downgrading/unrooting bricks our devices, and so I had ruled it out as an option. After further research I found that we can revert to stock without downgrading and avoid a brick. Since I have an H811 on 20o, I found firmware here and flashed it using LGUP, which you can find here. I suggest using this link to learn how to flash the firmware. After that, ADB worked fine and the NSA fingerprint dialog once again showed up on my device when I ran ADB. Good luck to any of you with the same problem!!! Reply if you need help.

Adb recognizes devices during phone on state, but not in fastboot.

Okay so now that I've scanned pretty much all of what the internet has to offer on this issue, I'm helpless and forced to write a new thread here about this.
Yes, a similar question has been replied to a million times before, but absolutely none of that helped, made no difference whatsoever.
So earlier, I was on the stock rom, with TWRP flashed and root access. But wanted to switch to the community build. Tried the twrp trick to install the CB but that didn't work, so flashed the stock OP3 rom and flashed community build.
All went fine, until I tried flashing back TWRP. Used the traditional ADB method of doing that, seemed to have flashed it but tried going into recovery only to be presented with a black screen. I got fed up of that trying to fix it for a whole day so I just left it, because I could still boot into the OS and that worked fine.
Fast forward to about a week later; somehow the flash didn't work and I still have stock recovery. Now I try flashing TWRP again, but I discover that my device doesn't get detected in fastboot. It absolutely refuses to.
It DOES, however, gets detected in the OS just fine.
I've tried every which way, absolutely NOTHING seems to work AT ALL.
- OEM unlocking is checked, if that makes a difference
- USB debugging is turned on
- Uninstalled all USB drivers related to the device, and installed them via device manager (but it gave me this error:
"the folder you specified doesn't contain a compatible software driver for your device. If the folder contains a driver, make sure it is designed to work with windows for x64-based systems)
seeing as I'm on an x64 version of Windows (its worked before with my Nexus 5, I swear)
- Tried it with different adb fastboot files, from all over the internet. All of them show just that blank space after I type in 'adb devices'
- Installed universal adb drivers.
- Samsung drivers.
- Obviously the official OnePlus drivers.
- Used Usbdeview to uninstall / force stop and re-installed the drivers.
- All in one tool
Now I'm thinking, I should try to re-lock the bootloader and unlock it again, or do like hard rest sort of things. I have no idea though, how this would affect the detection in fastboot.
Anyone have any ideas? Because I'm out of all of them, and so is most of internet.
TL;DR - Adb devices detects phone while booted in OS, but not in fastboot. Tried all methods, nothing works. Going to do lock bootloader then unlock it and try again, if not that then going to do a clean wipe and install the community build again, hoping that would work. Should I?
railpressureflip said:
Okay so now that I've scanned pretty much all of what the internet has to offer on this issue, I'm helpless and forced to write a new thread here about this.
Yes, a similar question has been replied to a million times before, but absolutely none of that helped, made no difference whatsoever.
So earlier, I was on the stock rom, with TWRP flashed and root access. But wanted to switch to the community build. Tried the twrp trick to install the CB but that didn't work, so flashed the stock OP3 rom and flashed community build.
All went fine, until I tried flashing back TWRP. Used the traditional ADB method of doing that, seemed to have flashed it but tried going into recovery only to be presented with a black screen. I got fed up of that trying to fix it for a whole day so I just left it, because I could still boot into the OS and that worked fine.
Fast forward to about a week later; somehow the flash didn't work and I still have stock recovery. Now I try flashing TWRP again, but I discover that my device doesn't get detected in fastboot. It absolutely refuses to.
It DOES, however, gets detected in the OS just fine.
I've tried every which way, absolutely NOTHING seems to work AT ALL.
- OEM unlocking is checked, if that makes a difference
- USB debugging is turned on
- Uninstalled all USB drivers related to the device, and installed them via device manager (but it gave me this error:
"the folder you specified doesn't contain a compatible software driver for your device. If the folder contains a driver, make sure it is designed to work with windows for x64-based systems)
seeing as I'm on an x64 version of Windows (its worked before with my Nexus 5, I swear)
- Tried it with different adb fastboot files, from all over the internet. All of them show just that blank space after I type in 'adb devices'
- Installed universal adb drivers.
- Samsung drivers.
- Obviously the official OnePlus drivers.
- Used Usbdeview to uninstall / force stop and re-installed the drivers.
- All in one tool
Now I'm thinking, I should try to re-lock the bootloader and unlock it again, or do like hard rest sort of things. I have no idea though, how this would affect the detection in fastboot.
Anyone have any ideas? Because I'm out of all of them, and so is most of internet.
TL;DR - Adb devices detects phone while booted in OS, but not in fastboot. Tried all methods, nothing works. Going to do lock bootloader then unlock it and try again, if not that then going to do a clean wipe and install the community build again, hoping that would work. Should I?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=3485186
Having the exact same Problems with my OP3 running everything stock 3.2.7 expect for the fact the device is unlocked...
Would love to hear how the problem can be solved!
ELoTRIX said:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=3485186
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmmm Windows 7.
I can most certainly try that but the real question now is; how the hell did it work previously on my Windows 10 machine and refuses to work now? But at least I have a solution to try out, in the mean time! Thanks!
railpressureflip said:
Okay so now that I've scanned pretty much all of what the internet has to offer on this issue, I'm helpless and forced to write a new thread here about this.
Yes, a similar question has been replied to a million times before, but absolutely none of that helped, made no difference whatsoever.
So earlier, I was on the stock rom, with TWRP flashed and root access. But wanted to switch to the community build. Tried the twrp trick to install the CB but that didn't work, so flashed the stock OP3 rom and flashed community build.
All went fine, until I tried flashing back TWRP. Used the traditional ADB method of doing that, seemed to have flashed it but tried going into recovery only to be presented with a black screen. I got fed up of that trying to fix it for a whole day so I just left it, because I could still boot into the OS and that worked fine.
Fast forward to about a week later; somehow the flash didn't work and I still have stock recovery. Now I try flashing TWRP again, but I discover that my device doesn't get detected in fastboot. It absolutely refuses to.
It DOES, however, gets detected in the OS just fine.
I've tried every which way, absolutely NOTHING seems to work AT ALL.
- OEM unlocking is checked, if that makes a difference
- USB debugging is turned on
- Uninstalled all USB drivers related to the device, and installed them via device manager (but it gave me this error:
"the folder you specified doesn't contain a compatible software driver for your device. If the folder contains a driver, make sure it is designed to work with windows for x64-based systems)
seeing as I'm on an x64 version of Windows (its worked before with my Nexus 5, I swear)
- Tried it with different adb fastboot files, from all over the internet. All of them show just that blank space after I type in 'adb devices'
- Installed universal adb drivers.
- Samsung drivers.
- Obviously the official OnePlus drivers.
- Used Usbdeview to uninstall / force stop and re-installed the drivers.
- All in one tool
Now I'm thinking, I should try to re-lock the bootloader and unlock it again, or do like hard rest sort of things. I have no idea though, how this would affect the detection in fastboot.
Anyone have any ideas? Because I'm out of all of them, and so is most of internet.
TL;DR - Adb devices detects phone while booted in OS, but not in fastboot. Tried all methods, nothing works. Going to do lock bootloader then unlock it and try again, if not that then going to do a clean wipe and install the community build again, hoping that would work. Should I?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You need modified twrp by @eng.sdk.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=68691560&postcount=56
I am having a similar issue. I have a brand new OP3. Everything stock. I'm attempting to unlock the bootloader and have found that while ADB recognises the phone, Fastboot doesn't. I'm pretty sure it's a driver issue and I have no idea how to fix.
Hello
Everything is working good
it seems to be a problem with adb Windows 10 IDK
, it is better to do it on Windows 7
Follow this :
http://forum.xda-developers.com/oneplus-3/how-to/oneplus-3-how-to-unlock-bootloader-t3398733
abhi0502 said:
You need modified twrp by @eng.sdk.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=68691560&postcount=56
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm afraid you've missed the point, my friend.
If the phone does not get detected in the fastboot, it means I cannot flash anything, period. No original TWRP, no modified TWRP.
I had this exact issue and fixed it.
Fastboot would never see my device, no matter which driver package I tried or no matter how I tried to install or force the correct drivers. Turns out Windows 10 (and Windows 8) has a feature that completely prevents installation of unsigned drivers, which blocks the fastboot driver. If you're seeing "Kedracom" or "Android Device" in the device manager, then your driver is NOT actually installed. This is true even if Windows doesn't throw you an error message during install, or if you appear to force the installation. Even though it looks like you're doing the install correctly, Windows just ignores your unsigned drivers.
You need to temporarily disable the security feature to permit installation of unsigned drivers. This involves invoking a special restart function. Here's the howto for Win10: http://www.howtogeek.com/167723/how-...igned-drivers/
Once you've done this, on the next reboot you can do a forced install of the unsigned fastboot drivers you downloaded for the OP3. And simply rebooting your computer restores the security feature.
It's mostly because of the windows security over unsigned drivers.. Try the above method or just the cmd way..
Sent from my Xiaomi Mi 5 using XDA Labs

Tried to upgrade OxygenOS and now SIM isn't recognized

Tl;dr: DM-VERITY error after upgrading, SIM card not recognized. Can't get fastboot to work to try out a solution. Everything is going to ****.
So... this one's a doozy.
I tried to install the update by dropping it onto my phone and using TWRP to install it, which I ended up having to update. After I updated, I get a brief second popup screen when I reboot telling me that there is an invalid DM-VERITY (it only pops up for a second). When the phone loads, it doesn't recognize SIMs.
I did some research and it looks like the issue can be fixed by flashing the stock recovery. So I go to flash the stock recovery, which requires the usage of fastboot. Which I always have problems with.
Sure enough, adb recognizes my device but fastboot doesn't. I have all the drivers downloaded, so I go check on my device in device manager. For some reason, it's always listed under "Portable Devices" no matter what I do... no matter whether I enable/disable USB debugging, MTP/PTP/Charging, etc. I was under the impression that a device not being recognized by fastboot meant that you had to go find it under "other devices" and manually update the drivers. However, the only options here are ADB drivers, not bootloader ones.
So I did more research. Turns out that Windows 10 is ****ty and you have to disable secure boot to install unsigned drivers. So I went into my BIOS, disabled it, booted into safe mode, reinstalled the drivers, and... nothing.
So I'm basically where I started and for the first time in a while, I have no clue what to do. Nothing's working. I even tried to load an older version of OxygenOS and install it with TWRP (sideloading didn't work), which didn't work. I'm totally stuck and I have no idea what to do.
If you don't care about your data, just use the unbrick guide method 2. Don't know about the first one, I have never used that. That will get you to a like new phone. You could even get 4.0.3 version, using the newer unbrick toolkit.
Windows 10 x64 isn't that sh**y. I've never had issues with the drivers, and they all install automatically (fastboot, adb, unbrick tool). They all work with 4 phones without any issues: OP3, Nexus 5X, Nexus 5, Nexus 4.
True, I had just unbrick my op3 2 days back by method 2 .
Well this was wild
So I did try to unbrick and got the Sahara communication error.
But I ended up fixing my problem! Someone on Reddit correctly pointed out that the dm-verity screen often exists simply as a result of unlocking the bootloader. I was assuming that one symptom caused the other. They suggested just reflashing OnePlus's 4.1.3 full ROM. I did it exactly the same way as I had when I got the error (with TWRP) and... it worked!
I'm astounded. My phone wouldn't work with fastboot, wasn't recognized by the unbrick toolkit, and had a host of other issues. I did 7 hours of work on it and the solution ended up being that I just needed to reinstall the OS (again). My hypothesis is that there was some hidden issue that resulted in part of the firmware being incorrectly updated, and when I wiped my device as part of my troubleshooting process it was ready to be reflashed with the OS.
Thank you guys so much anyway!

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