No tool box ? - Google Pixel 3a XL Questions & Answers

I remember with the non pixel phones From Google there used to be tons and tons of tool boxes
Like the
Nexus Root Toolkit v2.1.9​Why is there none for the pixel phones
These tool boxes were quite useful
Being able to unlock the bootloader
Flash of custom recovery I'm even go back to stock
I hate using the ADB tools yes they work
But I find them extremely complicated and I don't want to punch in a whole bunch of command line
​

Related

How to root?

I have a Droid Charge right now and I'm planning on getting a Google Nexus as soon as I have some time to go up to the store to actually get the phone.
But the question I have is, how do I root it? The Verizon LTE version. Because... it simply comes down to this; if I can't root it, I don't want it.
With the manual way. The adb way. Or the fast boot way. I also seen this on Droid-Life yesterday and it seems like one of those quick "one click root" methods. I never tried it so I don't know. Here's the link
http://www.droid-life.com/2012/01/1...-receives-load-of-new-features/#disqus_thread
I found this...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1400871
I'm assuming that that's what I need to root this beast?
Also... do I have to unlock the bootloader? I've never had to unlock a bootloader, the Droid Charge which I have right now didn't have a locked bootloader.
trparky said:
I found this...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1400871
I'm assuming that that's what I need to root this beast?
Also... do I have to unlock the bootloader? I've never had to unlock a bootloader, the Droid Charge which I have right now didn't have a locked bootloader.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have to unlock the bootloader by setting up ADB after installing the android SDK to your computer. There are a ton of step by step guides for this but it is super easy and requires only one command after the set up is complete "fastboot OEM unlock" then I recommend using the CF-Root method that also has the guide here on XDA. The CF-Root method is also on command and basically just adds root to your stock rom.
---------- Post added at 10:27 AM ---------- Previous post was at 10:26 AM ----------
badassirocz said:
You have to unlock the bootloader by setting up ADB after installing the android SDK to your computer. There are a ton of step by step guides for this but it is super easy and requires only one command after the set up is complete "fastboot OEM unlock" then I recommend using the CF-Root method that also has the guide here on XDA. The CF-Root method is also on command and basically just adds root to your stock rom.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here is the CF-Root link
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1396952
So you don't recommend using the method in the forum thread I mentioned?
I already have ADB installed on my computer and have used it multiple times to do shell-related stuff and to push/pull files.
I would use regular ADB command prompts. Download and install the Samsung drivers and go to town. The only thing you may experience is after you install the drives and start ADB command if it hangs on waiting for device you need to go into device manager on you computer and you should see your phone listed with a yellow question mark or exclamation point. You need to select it and manually install the drivers from there. Still a piece a cake and the must fool proof way to go.
trparky said:
So you don't recommend using the method in the forum thread I mentioned?
I already have ADB installed on my computer and have used it multiple times to do shell-related stuff and to push/pull files.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
use the post that you found, if you have driver problems install PDAnet. It will work like a charm, just make sure you read all the way through first then start again from the beginning and do it step by step. Don't need to bother with adb anymore that the rootkit is out, its quick and easy and a great tool if your not comfortable with ADB
Edit: Also not to be a jerk, but you really should just search the development forum instead of cluttering the forums. You found the answer yourself.
I used the GNex Toolkit found on the development forum.
GSM Version: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1392310
LTE / CDMA Version: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1400871
Really simple and easy to use. It does it all for you. All you have to do is know what current build your phones running, by going into Settings->About Phone.
Load it up, select build version, hit the Unlock,Root,Recovery option.
I'd recommend you do this immediately, as unlocking the bootloader wipes your phone.

The Dangers of Tool Kits and One Click Root Methods + Mini Rant

I don't create threads on xda very often and 95% of my posts are me trying to help people out, but this is something I wanted to get off my chest.
It seems like everyday in this forum there are about 5 new threads of people "stuck in a bootloop" or "stuck on Google screen." The majority of these people don't know the difference between adb and fastboot or bootloader and recovery.
I bought the G1 on launch and there weren't tool kits. We had to use telnet and command prompt to do everything manually. I knew nothing about linux or coding, but I followed instructions and learned what was happening when I entered these commands. Through owning the G1 and then moving on to the Nexus One I don't remember seeing so many threads about people "soft bricking" their device. I think the reason for this is the tool kits and other scripts that make it almost too easy to unlock and root your phone. While I respect the people who write these scripts (and I think they do serve a purpose in some situations) I think it's causing more harm than good.
The people who are using these scripts aren't learning what is actually happening when they press 1 on their keyboard. Boom, their phone is unlocked, su-binaries and cwm recovery installed. Then, they flash a rom without creating a nandroid. What happens if something goes wrong and they didn't place any safety nets to help them? They post a thread saying their phone is bricked. People take time out of their day to help these people out, but since the user doesn't understand what the helper is talking about, they can't fix it.
Just last weekend I spent 30 minutes replying to a PM with step by step instructions how to flash stock images and including links to files and resources. The person replied back. Instead of fixing his phone himself, he said he "claimed his phone as stolen and will be getting sent a new one lol". WTF?! Not only is that morally wrong, it's also insurance fraud. And we wonder why carriers and OEM's are trying as hard as they can to lock down non-nexus phones.
Please, take the time to learn how to get yourself out of a mess before you are in a mess.
Weigh in with your thoughts, criticisms or tl;dr comments.
Thanks.
EDIT 8/9/12: Link to efrant's Android Galaxy Nexus 101 guide. All the info you need to know. http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1812959
EDIT 11/14/12 My Thank you & Goodbye post.
I agree that it's lack of research that causes the problems. But don't knock the toolkits, they're designed for ease and they work perfectly with an understanding of what's going on. I can go thru adb and unlock and root because I researched the absolute **** out of it and know how to use adb but I used a toolkit. Like I said, if they don't want to research then bad on them. Gotta learn somehow be it by mistake or research. But the toolkits aren't the enemy.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
There's always a bigger fish. Like little man syndrome , be careful before you develop big man syndrome. " I'm taller than you "
PS even with research, " you can't fix stupid " so just let it go. A poor craftsman blames his tools. Simple as that.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
Leaving good enough alone.
It's getting pretty comical when you see a "help me" post and before you even start reading the post you can correctly predict that the post will start something like this: "so I flashed *****'s custom ROM and now my phone's f****d".
This thread is so full of #winning. The easy way is not always the best way.
I used the manual methods for my Atrix so now after getting a good feel for Fastboot and ADB, the GNex Toolkit was really painless to use.
I understand what you're saying though. I guess some people just want easy routes to get what they want, completely scrolling past the giant red text that tells them exactly what could (and most likely will) happen.
phaze one said:
I agree that it's lack of research that causes the problems. But don't knock the toolkits, they're designed for ease and they work perfectly with an understanding of what's going on. I can go thru adb and unlock and root because I researched the absolute **** out of it and know how to use adb but I used a toolkit. Like I said, if they don't want to research then bad on them. Gotta learn somehow be it by mistake or research. But the toolkits aren't the enemy.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm going to second this, as long as the toolkits are well documented (showing what they did where, and why it was done) they can save people time typing the commands and looking them up if they forget them.
It's very similar to creating a GUI front end for a program. If done properly they're nothing but useful and time saving.
Im guilty of using the wugfresh kit. I could have easily done everything myself, but it contained everything I needed.
I agree with pretty much everything you said though. I see people offering money for them to root their phone over team viewer, etc. Those are the same people that warranty their phone that they, themselves messed up.
Thanks for your feedback everyone.
I just wanted to clarify I'm not ripping toolkits. They are a great way to get where you want to go quickly. If you know what you are doing by all means use it. But, to me it seems like they are just the cheat sheet to the test. Yeah, you aced the **** out of the test, but when asked to apply what you should have learned from that test in a real life situation; you are screwed.
How to unlock, root, and be done with it.
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot oem unlock
fastboot reboot
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot flash recovery recovery.img (clockwork)
fastboot reboot
adb reboot recovery
flash rom
reboot
profit
Not hard at all.
adrynalyne said:
How to unlock, root, and be done with it.
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot oem unlock
fastboot reboot
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot flash recovery recovery.img (clockwork)
fastboot reboot
adb reboot recovery
flash rom
reboot
profit
Not hard at all.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Exactly.
Wouldn't it be sweet if there was actually "profit" and the phone started spitting out money?
You're a dev. See what you can cook up.
The hardest part is just those drivers, not that I call it hard, just Windows can be a pita.
Once that part is working then using adb and fastboot comands I think is fairly straightforward and don't need the toolkit.
Im hardly experienced with Android or Linux. Ive used both for the past year or so only, and did take time to learn what abd commands there are etc. but also will use the toolkits to save time and headaches.
Anyways, its always like this. iOS hacking forums are similar.
Also, if you can get into recovery why do a nandroid? On SGS I was told by devs its not really needed as long as you dont mix up kernels. Do that, and what help is the nandroid? Cant flash it if you cant get into download mode. If you can, thats what stock images are for? I sync everything I really care about to cloud/PC.
El Daddy said:
Exactly.
Wouldn't it be sweet if there was actually "profit" and the phone started spitting out money?
You're a dev. See what you can cook up.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
LOL...I wouldn't be here if I could
Toolkits for the nexus is kinda unnecessary because it is so easy to unlock, but there are devices that one the 1%(?) could unlock without a toolkit.
Sent from my HTC Desire HD using XDA App
I
adrynalyne said:
How to unlock, root, and be done with it.
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot oem unlock
fastboot reboot
adb reboot bootloader
fastboot flash recovery recovery.img (clockwork)
fastboot reboot
adb reboot recovery
flash rom
reboot
profit
Not hard at all.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
One-click rooting on my Fascinate:
I used z4root to root my phone before I flashed my first ROM (back then I just used ROM Manager for everything and didn't even bother looking at the ROM threads on XDA until the late DJ05/DL09 days when I got used to flashing manually in Clockwork Recovery). With z4root I didn't even need to use my PC to root, but it didn't always work when I had to go back to stock.
One-click Odin pitfalls:
My first experience with Odin was using a one-click version to flash a stock Froyo leak on my Captivate when they had just started making custom ROMs for Froyo. I had a bad experience using one-click Odin so I soon learned how to manually use Odin to do much more than simply flash a Froyo leak with one click. I soon discovered that Odin could be used to do much more than simply going back to stock - I could flash different versions of Clockwork Recovery, different Captivate and Fascinate modems, etc.
Learning adb for myself:
When I got my Gnex I used the exact method adrynalyne posted, and I found it more gratifying than any one-click root (I got my Gnex before there even was a 1-click, and I had long gotten used to adb. There's actually a lot more you can do with adb than simply rooting. If you only use it for rooting it's like going to a four-star restaurant and always ordering the hot dog from the kids menu - you're barely scratching the surface of what adb can do. I highly recommend reading up on adb and learning the different commands you can use. For example, it got me out of a bootloop more than once on my Fascinate when I was running AOSP MTD ROMs (long before jt1134 made 3-button recovery work on them).
The tl;dr:
One-click methods actually hinder you from exploring your phone's full potential, and often do more harm than good. Learning to do things manually for yourself lets you discover other possibilities you never would have found with the one-clicks.
Terminators run on Android
skynet11 said:
One-click methods actually hinder you from exploring your phone's full potential, and often do more harm than good. Learning to do things manually for yourself lets you discover other possibilities you never would have found with the one-clicks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is exactly my sentiment.
android01 said:
There's always a bigger fish. Like little man syndrome , be careful before you develop big man syndrome. " I'm taller than you "
PS even with research, " you can't fix stupid " so just let it go. A poor craftsman blames his tools. Simple as that.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You just used 5 rhetorical sayings that make very little sense, in the context of this topic. Be helpful or don't post, maybe?
OP, I couldn't agree more. Too many people post here (and other places) about being stuck in a bootloop even though they should already know how to fix it, if they knew anything about the process they had gone through. It's utterly insane that people are making heavy modifications to a device that costs $650+ without knowing *what* they're doing.
It's like someone going outside to change the oil on their car without knowing a thing about it and following the most basic instructions from some random person on the internet, then freaking out when someone tells them they poured the oil into the power steering reservoir.
No-ones forcing you to help people who have screwed up their phone so I don't see the need to be all holier than thou about it. Why should people have to understand everything that goes on when they use a one-click method? People should just make sure they read the instructions so they don't screw things up. That's the problem, not the tools they use.
As has been stated before in this thread.. you can't stop the stupid, or protect people from their own stupidity.
After far too many years helping out "stupid" users (here and on other forums), unfortunately, I find it far better to pick and choose who I want to help these days. Then, if I get frustrated, I only have myself to blame.. for even responding in the first place.

[Q] Why is it so difficult to root the GN?

I just received my GSM Nexus that came with 4.0.4 and hopped on to root. Half the methods warn against using the method with 4.0.4 or have replies reporting 4.0.4 problems. The other half require 3-4 downloads, running command windows, and 30-40 minutes of time and a factory reset. What gives? Every other android phone I've had in the last 3 years have all had ultra simple one-click programs. Plug it in. Click. Done.
What's so different about this nexus that requires this complicated stuff?
BobbyDash said:
I just received my GSM Nexus that came with 4.0.4 and hopped on to root. Half the methods warn against using the method with 4.0.4 or have replies reporting 4.0.4 problems. The other half require 3-4 downloads, running command windows, and 30-40 minutes of time. What gives? Every other android phone I've had in the last 3 years have all had ultra simple one-click programs. Plug it in. Click. Done.
What's so different about this nexus that requires this complicated stuff?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There's nothing complicated about it. You only think it's complicated because you are used to one-click programs -- which is the very reason I don't recommend using them: it prevents the user from learning anything, much like using a calculator before learning how to add and subtract.
Obtaining root access on a GNex is extremely simple. It consists of booting or flashing a custom recovery and using it to flash one zip file. That's it.
And the reason that a lot of one-click exploits don't work on the GNex is that it is running the latest version of Android, which has patched the security holes the the older exploits were using.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Already tried the Gnex Toolkit 6.1?
This is supposed to work with 4.04. I didn´t try it yet, i rooted mine GN with 4.02.
But it wasn´t much more than 1 click with the toolkit.
My guide will work.
Ignore all toolkits, and do it the right way.
You'll thank yourself later if you ever need to go back to stock...
Or have a bricked device.
Srsly.
What is OP talking abouit? the GN is one of the EASIEST phones to root.
Its very easy, here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FK-AyIJm_6s&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using xda premium
Troll?
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
zephiK said:
What is OP talking abouit? the GN is one of the EASIEST phones to root.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not if all your used to is installing an app with one big button saying "click here to root". So many people don't realize that you don't need a one-click app or a toolkit to make rooting easy -- all it takes is a little bit of reading.
efrant said:
Not if all your used to is installing an app with one big button saying "click here to root". So many people don't realize that you don't need a one-click app or a toolkit to make rooting easy -- all it takes is a little bit of reading.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Toolkit is available. Doing the manual method is not the only way of doing it.
Not that I'm endorsing using a one click root because it is relatively easy,
get drivers.
fastboot oem unlock
fastboot flash recovery
This phone is hard to root ?
Nono...the Droid Incredible was hard to root way back. We had to rely on a race condition and precise timing to get the exploit to work. THAT was hard.
I'm very confused. Every nexus phone always had one command:
Fastboot OEM unlock
Gnex is the same as all previous nexus. What am I missing here? Just fastboot one command and you're done.
RogerPodacter said:
I'm very confused. Every nexus phone always had one command:
Fastboot OEM unlock
Gnex is the same as all previous nexus. What am I missing here? Just fastboot one command and you're done.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The problem here is that the OP has not done much (if any) reading on this.
Yes, I agree with you, being able to unlock your bootloader makes gaining root access easy. But what you posted: "Just fastboot one command and you're done." is not a procedure to gain root (its information like this that makes a lot of n00bs think unlocking their bootloader is the same as getting root access), and it is certainly not a way to explain it. I could be mistaken though...
I think your just use to other phones that either u Odin it or use app that would flash the phone with root on it. I remember first Android I did it was a pain took time to get timing right for first few times I thought I was missing something
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2
Jubakuba said:
My guide will work.
Ignore all toolkits, and do it the right way.
You'll thank yourself later if you ever need to go back to stock...
Or have a bricked device.
Srsly.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I used Jubakuba's guide; very straight forward, no surprises. Highly recommended!
If all you are used to is one click methods, then yes, it SEEMS hard. It is actually very simple.
Fastboot OEM unlock
Fastboot reboot bootloader
Fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
Fastboot reboot recovery
Flash the su.zip from recovery
Reboot to a newly rooted phone
Done. And I even added at least one step that you don't HAVE to do.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using XDA
thos25 said:
If all you are used to is one click methods, then yes, it SEEMS hard. It is actually very simple.
Fastboot OEM unlock
Fastboot reboot bootloader
Fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
Fastboot reboot recovery
Flash the su.zip from recovery
Reboot to a newly rooted phone
Done. And I even added at least one step that you don't HAVE to do.
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is on the right track.
But how about:
1) Where do I enter those commands?
2) Where do I get all the required files? Is recovery.img the same as cwm.img the same as recovery-clockwork-5.5.0.2-maguro.img?
3) How come my PC doesn't recognize my device?
efrant said:
This is on the right track.
But how about:
1) Where do I enter those commands?
2) Where do I get all the required files? Is recovery.img the same as cwm.img the same as recovery-clockwork-5.5.0.2-maguro.img?
3) How come my PC doesn't recognize my device?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1.) A command prompt
2.) Download the SDK - it has everything you need (drivers, fastboot, adb). The image is any image you download, put whatever it is named there.
3.) Because you don't have the drivers set up properly. Download the SDK. If it doesn't auto-detect select it manually from the usb drivers folder in the SDK. If it doesn't detect select manually from a list and pick android bootloader interface.
This has to be one of the easiest devices to root, took less then 5 minutes.
using fastboot it is also the easiest one to return to stock. I had to return mine to google due to a defect and it took less then ten minutes to do.
The OP just needs to read rather than looking to be spoon fed.
In each development section there are instructions in a sticky post.
Because everyone who wrote a procedure assumes people are not noobs so they skip steps.
I am a noob with my phone and it took me hours of reading various procedures and piecing them together to get my phone rooted
Not tell if this is trolling or real
Sent from my Galaxy Nexus using Tapatalk 2

[Q] "Enable OEM Unlock"

Hey Guys/Gals;
I am very aware that Rooting & Bootloader unlocking are two completely separate entities, my question on this matter is though, Is there anyway in which I can someone use the "Unlock OEM Bootloader" and ADB commands to my advantage to be able to flash a .zip for SuperSU?
Basically I find the "Stock ROM" for the LGUS991 to be good enough on its own merit that I do not want/need to change the ROM itself (So I do not really have a need for TWRP or CWM for that aspect), I would just like to install a couple of Root required apps for changing around some theme options and status bar modifications (things I could do with Framework Modules for example).
Is this all basically just a pipe dream (at least for now until we can get full Bootloader access) or is does this sound like something that might actually be able to be accomplished?
[Sorry if this is a super-noob question, This is my first non Samsung/HTC device so I was used to always having the root methods being there from day one of my old device purchases]

Zenphone 2 - no recovery?

Hi there,
I have a new (manufacturer refurbished) Zenfone 2 (Model number ASUS_Z00AD - ZE551ML, Android 5.0 according to the About).
I flashed twrp but I don't seem to be able to boot into it (or any) recovery. I'm not really sure where to go from here. I want a non-google ROM. Am I better off getting radio/ASUS updates first? I'm digging around the forum looking for guides but the array of everything is dizzying.
Would appreciate any guidance at all.
Best,
Paul
EDIT: I've tried using few of the one-click root batch utilities, but it seems that my cmd window opens and then does nothing after I write "ACCEPT" or whatever. Not really sure why. So I'm expecting to have to do this manually from the CLI. I'm pretty fluent with the command line in windows and linux but pretty clueless when it comes to phones. So I guess I'm gonna keep reading.
Hello Whitezebra,
are you still able to boot into the system on the phone? If yes, I would suggest you to enable the USB Debugging and then using the ADB to get into the bootloader. If you have not unlocked it, you have to do that first and then use the fastboot flash recovery with the TWRP, I just did that yesterday for Ze551ml 4gb Ram, 2,3Ghz (z00ad) and works like a charm
Edit: I was doing this flash while having an Android 6.0.1 Official OTA - if you can try to update it first and then I will help you to get that done if you want, I still have all of the necessary files.
Edit2: By updating the ROM you should get at least the official recovery back I believe.
Edit3: After I read it one more time I am not sure if you are not even able to get to the system or if it is just the recovery.
Edit4: Follow this maybe? https://forum.xda-developers.com/zenfone2/help/thead-bricked-phone-updating-to-mm-tips-t3452785

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