Factory Reset - Google Pixel XL Questions & Answers

Can we factory reset one slot only? or does it do both?
I've got stock/root/magisk/elx on slot A, and thinking of trying a custom ROM on slot b.
could I reset slot B only to do this without upsetting slot A?
or would it be total reset, then install ROM on slot B and then redo stock on slot A?
I have a feeling it's the total reset, but would prefer not to lose what I have on slot A if possible

My understanding is that a factory data reset primarily affects userdata, since changes to other partitions were typically unaffected by a factory data reset on my prior phone. As noted in the following link, this phone only has one userdata, which is shared by the two slots. If you factory data reset the Pixel my expectation is for the userdata partition to be reset, so you will lose user apps, app data, and other user settings. I'd expect the slots to likely to be largely unaffected by a factory data reset, so whatever you have on slots A and B will probably remain through a factory data reset. I'm not familiar enough with Magisk and ElementalX to know if there are any parts of either install that goes to userdata, which might be wiped out with a factory data reset.
http://www.androidpolice.com/2016/1...-partition-changes-and-new-fastboot-commands/

I don't think slots A and B allow you to run different Roms on each slot like dual booting on a computer because when you install a Rom on one slot it also installs some information on the other slot. They weren't really designed for what you want to use the slots for. It's possible you would be able to boot into different Roms if you installed one in slot a and a different one in slot b but I suspect there would be other problems once you did so. If you try this you should post your results.

jhs39 said:
I don't think slots A and B allow you to run different Roms on each slot like dual booting on a computer because when you install a Rom on one slot it also installs some information on the other slot. They weren't really designed for what you want to use the slots for. It's possible you would be able to boot into different Roms if you installed one in slot a and a different one in slot b but I suspect there would be other problems once you did so. If you try this you should post your results.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've got non rooted stock on slot b and slot a has rooted stock.
I'm sure i've read previously that someone has a rom on one slot and stock on the other, but it's hard to narrow that down in the search...
if anyone does have a dual booted pixel/xl then that would be great to know

y2grae said:
I've got non rooted stock on slot b and slot a has rooted stock.
I'm sure i've read previously that someone has a rom on one slot and stock on the other, but it's hard to narrow that down in the search...
if anyone does have a dual booted pixel/xl then that would be great to know
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I believe you can only run the same base on both slots due to the fact that they share a data partition. I don't think you can run stock on one and aosp on the other.

y2grae said:
I've got non rooted stock on slot b and slot a has rooted stock.
I'm sure i've read previously that someone has a rom on one slot and stock on the other, but it's hard to narrow that down in the search...
if anyone does have a dual booted pixel/xl then that would be great to know
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea I'm setup to dual boot. You have to have same in each slot. So you can have pn rooted in one and pn unrooted in other. Or stock and stock rooted. Anything different and u get errors like crazy.

mac796 said:
Yea I'm setup to dual boot. You have to have same in each slot. So you can have pn rooted in one and pn unrooted in other. Or stock and stock rooted. Anything different and u get errors like crazy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cheers Mac, was thinking of trying either unholy or one of the other slightly different varients, but if it's going to error to hell and back... not worth it

y2grae said:
Cheers Mac, was thinking of trying either unholy or one of the other slightly different varients, but if it's going to error to hell and back... not worth it
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It'll work with Unholy it should work with any of them just got to make sure and have that same one in the other slot

Here's what the modified flash all bat looks like. Sorry not the best picture. After u flash just change everything from a to b. Then after you flash stock to both slots , you can boot TWRP and flash whatever custom ROMs u want to both slots

mac796 said:
Here's what the modified flash all bat looks like. Sorry not the best picture. After u flash just change everything from a to b. Then after you flash stock to both slots , you can boot TWRP and flash whatever custom ROMs u want to both slots
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, no. I want to keep my rooted/stock/elemental on slot A and put a custom Rom on slot B
slot B is currently just stock. (probably/possibly without ele as it should only flash to the slot in question from my understanding)

y2grae said:
Ah, no. I want to keep my rooted/stock/elemental on slot A and put a custom Rom on slot B
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have not seen anyone pull that off. They are not fully seperate slots, its not a full dual boot system. Quite a few items a common between the two slots.

TonikJDK said:
I have not seen anyone pull that off. They are not fully seperate slots, its not a full dual boot system. Quite a few items a common between the two slots.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
that's a shame, but thanks for the response.
what's the "shared" area of it then?
i know user data would be, as i've got the same info on both boots

Related

Proper way to setup slot A and Slot B

Hey Guys
With the new ROM's recently released, I wanted to setup the multiple slots.
Currently on stock rooted with elemental x kernel.
I have played around with the slots, but notice that when I switch to slot B, and boot, the data part is the same, but there is no root. For a while I was ok with this but want to get full use out of both.
Can someone advise what is best way to properly utilize both slots for testing (2) different ROM's?
Thanks
docluv01 said:
Hey Guys
With the new ROM's recently released, I wanted to setup the multiple slots.
Currently on stock rooted with elemental x kernel.
I have played around with the slots, but notice that when I switch to slot B, and boot, the data part is the same, but there is no root. For a while I was ok with this but want to get full use out of both.
Can someone advise what is best way to properly utilize both slots for testing (2) different ROM's?
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What Im hearing is you have to set up both roms separately and back up data. Then set up your slots with both roms. When you switch you wipe and restore data. Sounds alot like the previous method of just backing up and restoring with just a little time savings.
Yeah, you can't have two data partitions. The slots are just for the system partition so unless you do the restore/wipe method above, you can only have two "roms" installed with the same data set.
Until someone figures out how to split data partition so work with each slot...
xocomaox said:
Yeah, you can't have two data partitions. The slots are just for the system partition so unless you do the restore/wipe method above, you can only have two "roms" installed with the same data set.
So using the same ROM on both Slot A + B should be fine. And I guess SuperSU is flashed to each slot individually so should be ok to have one Slot Root and one not, with Safetynet covered by custom Kernel.
Is there anywhere this is being discussed more in depth? I'd love to try it but I'm not brave enough to do it with my limited know how!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
557953 said:
xocomaox said:
Yeah, you can't have two data partitions. The slots are just for the system partition so unless you do the restore/wipe method above, you can only have two "roms" installed with the same data set.
So using the same ROM on both Slot A + B should be fine. And I guess SuperSU is flashed to each slot individually so should be ok to have one Slot Root and one not, with Safetynet covered by custom Kernel.
Is there anywhere this is being discussed more in depth? I'd love to try it but I'm not brave enough to do it with my limited know how!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, that is how you could do it. It would work okay.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
557953 said:
xocomaox said:
Yeah, you can't have two data partitions. The slots are just for the system partition so unless you do the restore/wipe method above, you can only have two "roms" installed with the same data set.
So using the same ROM on both Slot A + B should be fine. And I guess SuperSU is flashed to each slot individually so should be ok to have one Slot Root and one not, with Safetynet covered by custom Kernel.
Is there anywhere this is being discussed more in depth? I'd love to try it but I'm not brave enough to do it with my limited know how!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately not. These discussions or scattered over many threads. I really don't need dual boot. It would be nice to understand as much as we can about the slots and flashing to those slots.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am dual booting now, but really limited value. I just have stock on both slots, TWRP and elemental X with on side rooted. The idea is just to use Android Pay on the non-root slot. It works, but really not worth your time except as an exercise
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
yearn2burn said:
I am dual booting now, but really limited value. I just have stock on both slots, TWRP and elemental X with on side rooted. The idea is just to use Android Pay on the non-root slot. It works, but really not worth your time except as an exercise
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thats the best use case for dual booting I have seen yet. For Android pay, bank apps, Pokémon go, etc...
yearn2burn said:
I am dual booting now, but really limited value. I just have stock on both slots, TWRP and elemental X with on side rooted. The idea is just to use Android Pay on the non-root slot. It works, but really not worth your time except as an exercise
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Would you mind giving us a quick run down on how you did it. I assume manually flashing everything except user data?
I'm keen to know how also, it's worth it for me and probably quite a lot of others here
TonikJDK said:
Would you mind giving us a quick run down on how you did it. I assume manually flashing everything except user data?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Really easy. When you initially install TWRP from the fastboot boot /path/to/TWRP.img process, that installs TWRP to both slots. However, when you reboot to TWRP, you're booting to whatever slot was active last. When you install SuperSU and a kernel, they install to that slot. The other is still stock except TWRP.
To set up the other slot, within TWRP simply tap reboot to see which slot is active. Tap the other slot to make it active, back out and install (or not) whatever you want.
One catch is that second slot may not be updated. Let's say you're booting on slot A. If you take an OTA update, it will simply update slot B and then reboot to slot B leaving A unchanged.
To find out if you're ready in the alternate slot, simply try to reboot to system after switching slots. Three possible results. One, it boots up fine. Check settings/about phone shows the current version. Second, it boots fine, but about phone shows the prior build. In that case, you need to ADB fastboot flash system_x path/to/system.img and maybe vendor.img. Not sure about flashing updated bootloader but try going without it to see if you boot correctly. Final scenario which I got the first time I tried booting to the second slot, it boot loops a couple times and finally boots to the previously active slot. That means something is missing that you need to fastboot flash as in second scenario.
The main thing for me is it's very informative just going through the exercises of dual booting. Give it a go.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
yearn2burn said:
Really easy. When you initially install TWRP from the fastboot boot /path/to/TWRP.img process, that installs TWRP to both slots. However, when you reboot to TWRP, you're booting to whatever slot was active last. When you install SuperSU and a kernel, they install to that slot. The other is still stock except TWRP.
To set up the other slot, within TWRP simply tap reboot to see which slot is active. Tap the other slot to make it active, back out and install (or not) whatever you want.
One catch is that second slot may not be updated. Let's say you're booting on slot A. If you take an OTA update, it will simply update slot B and then reboot to slot B leaving A unchanged.
To find out if you're ready in the alternate slot, simply try to reboot to system after switching slots. Three possible results. One, it boots up fine. Check settings/about phone shows the current version. Second, it boots fine, but about phone shows the prior build. In that case, you need to ADB fastboot flash system_x path/to/system.img and maybe vendor.img. Not sure about flashing updated bootloader but try going without it to see if you boot correctly. Final scenario which I got the first time I tried booting to the second slot, it boot loops a couple times and finally boots to the previously active slot. That means something is missing that you need to fastboot flash as in second scenario.
The main thing for me is it's very informative just going through the exercises of dual booting. Give it a go.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for posting this info had no idea it will be essentially be possible just with TWRP!
Both result one and third happened to me ever.
For result one, I can boot to the other slot, in which system unroofed, safety net patched kernel indtslled, can use bank apps but can't access quick settings and developers option etc. Finally, had to wipe userdata to fix it.
For result third, I have no idea how to figure out.
To sum up, two slots give us the possibility of dual booting.
But still a little way to go. Hope the distinguished developers can make this easier and useful in the near future.
yearn2burn said:
Really easy. When you initially install TWRP from the fastboot boot /path/to/TWRP.img process, that installs TWRP to both slots. However, when you reboot to TWRP, you're booting to whatever slot was active last. When you install SuperSU and a kernel, they install to that slot. The other is still stock except TWRP.
To set up the other slot, within TWRP simply tap reboot to see which slot is active. Tap the other slot to make it active, back out and install (or not) whatever you want.
One catch is that second slot may not be updated. Let's say you're booting on slot A. If you take an OTA update, it will simply update slot B and then reboot to slot B leaving A unchanged.
To find out if you're ready in the alternate slot, simply try to reboot to system after switching slots. Three possible results. One, it boots up fine. Check settings/about phone shows the current version. Second, it boots fine, but about phone shows the prior build. In that case, you need to ADB fastboot flash system_x path/to/system.img and maybe vendor.img. Not sure about flashing updated bootloader but try going without it to see if you boot correctly. Final scenario which I got the first time I tried booting to the second slot, it boot loops a couple times and finally boots to the previously active slot. That means something is missing that you need to fastboot flash as in second scenario.
The main thing for me is it's very informative just going through the exercises of dual booting. Give it a go.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
bush911 said:
Both result one and third happened to me ever.
For result one, I can boot to the other slot, in which system unroofed, safety net patched kernel indtslled, can use bank apps but can't access quick settings and developers option etc. Finally, had to wipe userdata to fix it.
For result third, I have no idea how to figure out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you have a custom ROM on one slot and stock on the other, you best not dual boot. In essence, it's like one or both slots will be the equivalent of a dirty flashed ROM.
To reiterate for third result where you switch slots (slot X to slot Y.) Boot system on slot Y results in a few boot loop cycles before finally booting into slot X again. You need to flash system.img to slot Y then try again.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
Well noted, never used custom ROM on Pixel. Will try dual boot again by chance.
yearn2burn said:
If you have a custom ROM on one slot and stock on the other, you best not dual boot. In essence, it's like one or both slots will be the equivalent of a dirty flashed ROM.
To reiterate for third result where you switch slots (slot X to slot Y.) Boot system on slot Y results in a few boot loop cycles before finally booting into slot X again. You need to flash system.img to slot Y then try again.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yearn2burn said:
Really easy. When you initially install TWRP from the fastboot boot /path/to/TWRP.img process, that installs TWRP to both slots. However, when you reboot to TWRP, you're booting to whatever slot was active last. When you install SuperSU and a kernel, they install to that slot. The other is still stock except TWRP.
To set up the other slot, within TWRP simply tap reboot to see which slot is active. Tap the other slot to make it active, back out and install (or not) whatever you want.
One catch is that second slot may not be updated. Let's say you're booting on slot A. If you take an OTA update, it will simply update slot B and then reboot to slot B leaving A unchanged.
To find out if you're ready in the alternate slot, simply try to reboot to system after switching slots. Three possible results. One, it boots up fine. Check settings/about phone shows the current version. Second, it boots fine, but about phone shows the prior build. In that case, you need to ADB fastboot flash system_x path/to/system.img and maybe vendor.img. Not sure about flashing updated bootloader but try going without it to see if you boot correctly. Final scenario which I got the first time I tried booting to the second slot, it boot loops a couple times and finally boots to the previously active slot. That means something is missing that you need to fastboot flash as in second scenario.
The main thing for me is it's very informative just going through the exercises of dual booting. Give it a go.
Sent from my Pixel XL using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just 2 quick question's, I assume will be easy one's
So running, Pure Nexus on Slot A and just flashed same rom in Slot B with TWRP, I got a message saying unable to mount system.img so I assume I'll need to flash system.img from Pure Nexus payload.bin? Thing is I cannot extract payload.bin, Power ISO says it is unsupported so I'm at a bit of a loss!
I assume the Bootloader is active to both Slots A + B? I don't wanna boot to Slot B and end up with a paperweight!
Thanksagain for your info
This stuff is confusing lol. If I wanted to treat it just like the old partition setup couldn't I theoretically just install TWRP on the primary slot, root and ROM that same slot, and backup just that slot and just leave the other slot alone completely?
gmac1990 said:
This stuff is confusing lol. If I wanted to treat it just like the old partition setup couldn't I theoretically just install TWRP on the primary slot, root and ROM that same slot, and backup just that slot and just leave the other slot alone completely?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is what I would suggest you do.
TonikJDK said:
That is what I would suggest you do.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A lot of people seem to be doing the dual slot thing. Is there a benefit or is it almost a requirement?
I basically installed the factory image without the -w flag, turn booted in TWRP (without flashing TWRP) and installed kernel, then flashed super SU then rebooted. Didn't work so I rebooted in TWRP and flashed TWRP and then flashed SuperSU. Note that I had SuperSU installed in 7.1.1 so I assumed it would overwrite. It didn't work so I uninstalled old SuperSU and re-flashed SuperSU 2.79. it still didn't work so I downgraded SuperSU and TWRP one release and reinstalled. Still no go. And that's where I'm at.
---------- Post added at 09:18 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:47 AM ----------
Better question is, how do we select what slot stuff gets installed in? It doesn't seem to be clear, more like a game of chance!

please delete this thread

Please delete
Post the exact error, but I suspect you are using Minimal Fastboot or an older version of fastboot. Get up to date.
https://developer.android.com/studio/releases/platform-tools.html
you were correct. i was out of date. Now.... my bootloader happened to be on slot B... should my primary slot be A? The factory restore worked flawless in B. What about A?
bash_array said:
you were correct. i was out of date. Now.... my bootloader happened to be on slot B... should my primary slot be A? The factory restore worked flawless in B. What about A?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is still a bit of a mystery to me, but I plan to dig in soon. Getting both slots bootable takes manual flashing of the inactive slot.
I wouldn't worry about it.
bash_array said:
you were correct. i was out of date. Now.... my bootloader happened to be on slot B... should my primary slot be A? The factory restore worked flawless in B. What about A?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It shouldn't really matter. If you take OTA'S then the next time you will switch to A as your active slot.
bash_array said:
you were correct. i was out of date. Now.... my bootloader happened to be on slot B... should my primary slot be A? The factory restore worked flawless in B. What about A?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There's no "primary" anything. If you stop at flash-all.bat and not do anything else, future OTAs seamlessly alternate the slots (update the non-active slot, then switch slot after reboot, then update the other slot). There are 2 bootloaders, 2 boot.img, 2 radio.img, 2 vendor.img, 2 system.img images.
Many of us take the slots a few steps further, wanting to "break" that seamless updating process by flashing certain components in one slot and not the other. That way you can have one slot rooted, running one kernel, and something different in the other slot. It's fun for a little bit, but like anything else, I get bored after a while.

Factory Firmware: Flash Both Boot Slots

I have re-flashed factory firmware multiple times now, but I'm still not 100% sure if both boot slots are 100% factory.
Usually after I execute flash-all.bat WITH userdata format, it always reflashes slot A. (besides system_other) Does this mean that boot slot B is not "fresh"???
I'm assuming not because I was on NMF26Q and I wanted to flash Resurrection Remix, which is requiring NOF26V vendor image. After I executed flash-all.bat WITH userdata format and flashing RR, I was on boot slot B and it showed that my vendor image was NMF26Q.
Is there a way to flash both boot slots in case of a RMA and I need to relock bootloader?
* Yes my platform-tools are up to date.
* Yes I watch it flash everything till the end with out fail.
Anutter226 said:
I have re-flashed factory firmware multiple times now, but I'm still not 100% sure if both boot slots are 100% factory.
Usually after I execute flash-all.batWITH userdata format, it always reflashes slot A. (besides system_other) Does this mean that boot slot B is not "fresh"???
I'm assuming not because I was on NMF26Q and I wanted to flash Resurrection Remix, which is requiring NOF26V vendor image. After I executed flash-all.batWITH userdata format and flashing RR, I was on boot slot B and it showed that my vendor image was NMF26Q.
Is there a way to flash both boot slots in case of a RMA and I need to relock bootloader?
* Yes my platform-tools are up to date.
* Yes I watch it flash everything till the end with out fail.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I imagine it's overkill but you could just switch the active slot and run flash-all again. As a precaution I would recommend booting into the OS after the first flash-all to make sure it flashed ok. If there happens to be some problem like a bad flash or wrong download you want to be sure that the "other" slot is bootable. Otherwise you might end up with a pair of unbootable slots which could get sticky.
Anutter226 said:
* Yes I watch it flash everything till the end with out fail.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
then you saw that flash-all.bat flashed both slots
V40 said:
then you saw that flash-all.bat flashed both slots
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Doesn't flash to both slots on mine
canemaxx said:
Doesn't flash to both slots on mine
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I believe it flashes to one slot and deletes the data on the other as standard
If you guys would read your terminal output after flashing you would know what gets flashed where. People are making this way to complicated. It is a big change from previous devices but once you know the partitions its pretty easy.
One data slot shared by A + B
Slot A & B have separate partitions for
-Vendor
-Bootloader
-Radio
-Modem
-Boot
-System
Flashall.bat flashes your active slot and installs system_other.img to the inactive system partition and wipes data, unless you edit the flashall.bat and erase -w.
Thats it. Now, how people are handling the two slots is another story. I keep both slots identical. Having two different bootloaders is a recipe for bricks in my opinion.
FWIW, I endorse the post above this one. I would only add if you get in trouble flash all without the -w and then change the active slot and flash all without the-w again.
Golf c said:
Having two different bootloaders is a recipe for bricks in my opinion.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello,
This makes me think:
With April stock on slot a for example, you accept May OTA... It will write the new bootloader to the inactive slot b.
So there will be two different bootloader anyway, no?
Cheers...
5.1 said:
Hello,
This makes me think:
With April stock on slot a for example, you accept May OTA... It will write the new bootloader to the inactive slot b.
So there will be two different bootloader anyway, no?
Cheers...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes but your not flashing custom roms and switching slots every flash. Flashing custom roms switches to the inactive slot. Food for thought. I don't know or want to know to much about hard bricking, but Afaik most of the hard bricks involve OTA's. Hence my best practices theory. Same bootloader in both slots. Somebody with more brick knowledge please correct me if I'm wrong?
Golf c said:
Yes but your not flashing custom roms and switching slots every flash. Flashing custom roms switches to the inactive slot. Food for thought. I don't know or want to know to much about hard bricking, but Afaik most of the hard bricks involve OTA's. Hence my best practices theory. Same bootloader in both slots. Somebody with more brick knowledge please correct me if I'm wrong?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey,
I started fresh before Pure Nexus and flashed NHG47K to both slots.
Anyway, i wiped, reinstalled, a few times since. But the ROM keeps installing to the same slot. It doesn't switch. The second slot still has stock install.
Switched a to b and booted stock. Switch back on a and back to PN...
Of course i'm no expert or developer either.
Where I agree is that custom could create problems I don't know either.
Cheers...
5.1 said:
Hey,
I started fresh before Pure Nexus and flashed NHG47K to both slots.
Anyway, i wiped, reinstalled, a few times since. But the ROM keeps installing to the same slot. It doesn't switch. The second slot still has stock install.
Switched a to b and booted stock. Switch back on a and back to PN...
Of course i'm no expert or developer either.
Where I agree is that custom could create problems I don't know either.
Cheers...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Never heard of this. Some people are flashing the same slot on purpose by switching slots before they flash the rom. I have never had any rom I have tried not switch slots. I haven't been on stock since Dirty Unicorns came out in December.
Golf c said:
Never heard of this. Some people are flashing the same slot on purpose by switching slots before they flash the rom. I have never had any rom I have tried not switch slots. I haven't been on stock since Dirty Unicorns came out in December.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey,
Maybe I'm doing it the wrong way then
Well, I kept having a weird issue, so just rebooted to TWRP, wipe everything except internal storage and reinstall from here: ROM, TWRP zip, reboot TWRP > reinstall vendor, reboot... Never switched slot.
Check this: https://postimg.org/gallery/2muhcz91o/
Slot a is PN, slot b is stock NHG47K.
Cheers...
5.1 said:
Hey,
Maybe I'm doing it the wrong way then
Well, I kept having a weird issue, so just rebooted to TWRP, wipe everything except internal storage and reinstall from here: ROM, TWRP zip, reboot TWRP > reinstall vendor, reboot... Never switched slot.
Check this: https://postimg.org/gallery/2muhcz91o/
Slot a is PN, slot b is stock NHG47K.
Cheers...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Somehow you must be switching slots before flashing PN. There is several ways to do it. I think as long as you know what's in the inactive slot, you should be good. My problem is the people that always flash to the same slot could have old bootloaders from who knows what build. You hit the wrong button and your dead.
Golf c said:
Somehow you must be switching slots before flashing PN. There is several ways to do it. I think as long as you know what's in the inactive slot, you should be good. My problem is the people that always flash to the same slot could have old bootloaders from who knows what build. You hit the wrong button and your dead.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey,
If I do it, i sincerely don't know how or when...
By the way, i just noticed a few apps misbehaving when i manually switched slot from bootloader to boot stock... Now I'm back on PN, i see it kind of messed up some apps permissions. And my browser kept FC even though I wiped its data and cache. Had to reinstall it, lol.
Well, I guess I'll have to install my phone over again...
Cheers...
Delete
---------- Post added at 11:54 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:48 PM ----------
5.1 said:
Hey,
If I do it, i sincerely don't know how or when...
By the way, i just noticed a few apps misbehaving when i manually switched slot from bootloader to boot stock... Now I'm back on PN, i see it kind of messed up some apps permissions. And my browser kept FC even though I wiped its data and cache. Had to reinstall it, lol.
Well, I guess I'll have to install my phone over again...
Cheers...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Afaik you can't run two different roms on Pixel because of the shared data partition. Hence your app problems. I heard stories about people doing it with some quasi work arounds. I think you can run same rom, one rooted, one non rooted. Not worth the reboot for me.
Golf c said:
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---------- Post added at 11:54 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:48 PM ----------
Afaik you can't run two different roms on Pixel because of the shared data partition. Hence your app problems. I heard stories about people doing it with some quasi work arounds. I think you can run same rom, one rooted, one non rooted. Not worth the reboot for me.
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Hey,
I did it just to show something to someone earlier. I don't need dual boot either...
One ROM is enough in my opinion.
Ok, time to hit the bed. See you later...
Cheers...
People are looking at this setup like a dual boot computer setup. That isnt what it is or how it works. Its using the same data....which includes all your settings. Boot, kernel and ram disk are in one partition now. There are a ton of moving parts we don't even know about.
This is a fancy update system, just like Chromebooks and iPhones.
TonikJDK said:
People are looking at this setup like a dual boot computer setup. That isnt what it is or how it works. Its using the same data....which includes all your settings. Boot, kernel and ram disk are in one partition now. There are a ton of moving parts we don't even know about.
This is a fancy update system, just like Chromebooks and iPhones.
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And I don't even use it because I have never taken an OTA. lol!
I'm glad I read this thread. I have just installed the L build and flashed the April bootloader. This took place on slot b and I want slot a to match ....what would the process be to do that? Any help is greatly appreciated
canemaxx said:
I'm glad I read this thread. I have just installed the L build and flashed the April bootloader. This took place on slot b and I want slot a to match ....what would the process be to do that? Any help is greatly appreciated
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No need since it ia working but you get into Fastboot mode then
Fastboot set_active a
Flash L, flash April bootloadee.

How do I change to older version???

I want to test something by going from May patch back to March without wiping data.
Can I just flash-all (without -w) or do it manually with selected files.
If I go manually is it enough to do the following? bootloader, boot, radio, recovery, system and vendor
Thanks
I would do the whole flash all bat with -w removed.
wangdaning said:
I would do the whole flash all bat with -w removed.
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Tried it again and does not work. Does the same as the first time. I get a white screen with a big G and moving bar underneath and nothing happens.
Reflash the current and it boots fine but does seam to work this way.
Probably something with the A/B partition scheme. Maybe you have to apply it to both slots for it to work, though I would be careful with that.
wangdaning said:
Probably something with the A/B partition scheme. Maybe you have to apply it to both slots for it to work, though I would be careful with that.
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If I do that would I do it this way?
flash-all in slot a, then since it wont boot, change active slot to b then flash-all again in this this slot
Shouldn't I be able to change slot and it would boot normally? Because right now when I change slot it does not work. I either have to got back to original slot or flash again in that new slot. I did not try flashing old version in both slots yet.
You are getting the white screen because you didn't wipe data. You will need to do a full wipe to go backwards.
TonikJDK said:
You are getting the white screen because you didn't wipe data. You will need to do a full wipe to go backwards.
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darn it. I'll take your word on this one because it just makes sense with all the testing I've done.
I'll ask this again. If I change active slots, shouldn't it just boot up normally?
With all the reading I did on slots one thing I got is that I thought we would be able to do that. Like installing 2 different roms and dual booting.
Ok so I did some more reading on a b slors to refremy memory and you can't dual boot...
But I still think i should be able to boot when choosing the other slot.
I think the issue is that going back it checks the other slot and if they don't match it will not boot. I am not 100% for that though.
Normally the active slot always has the newer version. When there's an update it installs in the inactive slot which has the older version. Booting the slot with the older version should not be a problem because it there ia a problem with the update on tje other slot then it reverts back to the slot with the older version.

Can't boot to other slot (A from B, vice versa)

Question about using TWRP to switch between slots A/B: I used the flash-all.sh script to flash the factory image to my phone, installed TWRP following the guide and it works fine, except when I try to boot into the opposite slot. For example, if my current active slot is A, I can use TWRP to change to slot B, and reboot system, but it never gets past the Google splash screen before restarting a few times, and eventually booting successfully back into slot A. I tried setting the active slot to B, and reflashing factory/installing TWRP and then the B slot can boot up fine, but not slot A. Anyone know what might be the issue? Or am I totally misunderstanding how to boot into the other slot? Is there more to it than changing the active slot and rebooting? Thanks!
The dual slot system is not designed to allow you to have two different boot options. The system is designed to only let you boot into one at a time. As soon as you boot into one slot, it "deactivates" the second slot. So even if you have been booting regularly on slot A and then take an OTA update that installs itself on slot B, as soon as you boot the first time into slot B (which occurs as part of the update process), you cannot boot into slot A anymore, even though it contains a perfectly good OS version that you were using just a couple minutes ago. I know I'm not using the correct lingo, but hopefully you get the idea.
What is happening in your example is that slot A is your currently active slot. This means slot B is not active for booting. Using TWRP to change to slot B and flashing something on slot B does not change that fact. You need to leave TWRP on the currently active slot and let it be. Flash anything you want onto slot A and it will work as expected. If you need to restore, you will need to restore a saved backup on to slot A.
I would also suggesting that you stop messing with manually trying to change the slots. Nothing good ever comes from it and I've seen plenty of cases where people have soft-bricked their phones because they were messing with the different slots. The only time you want to change slots or flash to anything other than the active slot is when the OTA update does it for you automatically. Changing it any other time is not necessary and can get you into trouble.
sic0048 said:
The dual slot system is not designed to allow you to have two different boot options. The system is designed to only let you boot into one at a time. As soon as you boot into one slot, it "deactivates" the second slot. So even if you have been booting regularly on slot A and then take an OTA update that installs itself on slot B, as soon as you boot the first time into slot B (which occurs as part of the update process), you cannot boot into slot A anymore, even though it contains a perfectly good OS version that you were using just a couple minutes ago. I know I'm not using the correct lingo, but hopefully you get the idea.
What is happening in your example is that slot A is your currently active slot. This means slot B is not active for booting. Using TWRP to change to slot B and flashing something on slot B does not change that fact. You need to leave TWRP on the currently active slot and let it be. Flash anything you want onto slot A and it will work as expected. If you need to restore, you will need to restore a saved backup on to slot A.
I would also suggesting that you stop messing with manually trying to change the slots. Nothing good ever comes from it and I've seen plenty of cases where people have soft-bricked their phones because they were messing with the different slots. The only time you want to change slots or flash to anything other than the active slot is when the OTA update does it for you automatically. Changing it any other time is not necessary and can get you into trouble.
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Sorry, but that's incorrect. You can use fastboot to set the active slot, I've done it multiple times to restore my phone from a bootloop scenario after a rom update. The slots don't disable themselves once a successful boot happens, you can boot to either or as long as there is a functioning OS on said slot you are booting to.
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs
Skittles9823 said:
Sorry, but that's incorrect. You can use fastboot to set the active slot, I've done it multiple times to restore my phone from a bootloop scenario after a rom update. The slots don't disable themselves once a successful boot happens, you can boot to either or as long as there is a functioning OS on said slot you are booting to.
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs
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Thanks for the reply, that was my understanding as well. I tried flashing to both slots in various ways but still have been able to successfully boot from both, only one at a time so to speak. Any ideas as to why that might be? Do I need to root the phone first? Speaking of rooting, would something like having one rooted ROM in one slot and a non-rooted version of the same ROM in the other slot be possible wit a 3a XL? I've seen references to this guide around here but only for older models.
https://ausdroid.net/2017/02/20/goo...tions-use-it-to-deliver-dual-booting-*****es/
PS Nice job on the AOSiP ROM!
gjtjbl said:
Thanks for the reply, that was my understanding as well. I tried flashing to both slots in various ways but still have been able to successfully boot from both, only one at a time so to speak. Any ideas as to why that might be? Do I need to root the phone first? Speaking of rooting, would something like having one rooted ROM in one slot and a non-rooted version of the same ROM in the other slot be possible wit a 3a XL? I've seen references to this guide around here but only for older models.
https://ausdroid.net/2017/02/20/goo...tions-use-it-to-deliver-dual-booting-*****es/
PS Nice job on the AOSiP ROM!
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Rooting shouldn't matter. As long as there is a functioning version of Android on either slot you should be able to boot to it.
I'd recommend checking to see if your adb/fastboot are up-to-date by downloading the latest platform-tools and using those. Other then that, I'm at a loss for ideas short of flashing the factory image with the flash-all.(bat/sh).
As for dual booting stuff yea it's possible to have one slot rooted and one slot not rooted but I've not really delved into the whole seperate setups for different slots thing.
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs
Skittles9823 said:
Rooting shouldn't matter. As long as there is a functioning version of Android on either slot you should be able to boot to it.
I'd recommend checking to see if your adb/fastboot are up-to-date by downloading the latest platform-tools and using those. Other then that, I'm at a loss for ideas short of flashing the factory image with the flash-all.(bat/sh).
As for dual booting stuff yea it's possible to have one slot rooted and one slot not rooted but I've not really delved into the whole seperate setups for different slots thing.
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs
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Thanks for the help I ended up getting AOSiP rooted in one slot and unrooted in the other and seems to work ok. I've tried searching around and I think the answer is no, but since TWRP won't work with Android 10, is it possible to change the boot slot from the phone itself? It would be more convenient than using my computer and fastboot but that might be the only option.
gjtjbl said:
Thanks for the help I ended up getting AOSiP rooted in one slot and unrooted in the other and seems to work ok. I've tried searching around and I think the answer is no, but since TWRP won't work with Android 10, is it possible to change the boot slot from the phone itself? It would be more convenient than using my computer and fastboot but that might be the only option.
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You can only do it via fastboot unfortunately.
Sent from my Pixel 3a XL using XDA Labs

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