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I got a Market notification that the new Google Maps was avail, with the GPS turn-by-turn navigation. After downloading I get the message "Install Unsuccessful." I'm assuming this is because I am running Cyanogen's mod. Any workround? A straight APK hosted somewhere? Sorry to be a nub, do apps need to be ported/resigned to modded ROM's?
Have you got Android SDK installed? If so, you can use the famous "adb" tool to solve the problem. If your phone is rooted - and I assume it is, it takes only three commands. Connect your phone to your PC and from the command line interface issue the following commands:
adb remount
adb shell rm /system/app/Maps.apk
adb uninstall com.google.android.apps.maps
And then on your phone go to the Android market and install Google Maps again.
HTH,
@Pijar - Thanks for this quick and painless solution. Found it within seconds of starting my search and your answer was concise and accurate.
great, thanks
worked for me too!
Pijar said:
Have you got Android SDK installed? If so, you can use the famous "adb" tool to solve the problem. If your phone is rooted - and I assume it is, it takes only three commands. Connect your phone to your PC and from the command line interface issue the following commands:
adb remount
adb shell rm /system/app/Maps.apk
adb uninstall com.google.android.apps.maps
And then on your phone go to the Android market and install Google Maps again.
HTH,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
NOTE: This will only work inside the United States. If you live outside of the US, or even live inside and want Google Nav to work for you outside of the US, you need to install the tweaked version that works everywhere Google Maps works.
how the hell do I get this to work???
Am I supposed to use the windows command line? OR... is there a specific command line interface buried within the Android SDK tools?
Sorry if this sounds like a completely retarded question, but I have yet to really use the Android SDK and have no idea as to WTF i'm doing!! LOL!
rbrainard said:
how the hell do I get this to work???
Am I supposed to use the windows command line? OR... is there a specific command line interface buried within the Android SDK tools?
Sorry if this sounds like a completely retarded question, but I have yet to really use the Android SDK and have no idea as to WTF i'm doing!! LOL!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
rbrainard, yes, you should use your command line (cmd.exe) utility, if you are using Windows. I have not specified it, because I wanted the instruction to be universal (I personally work on Linux). So, after installing Android SDK, you should enter the command line, change directory to the directory where you installed the SDK, there you should enter the "tools" subdirectory, and there you will find the "adb" tool, which should let you execute the commands I specified in my post.
I do not think your remark to be "retarded" , just the opposite, sometimes "simple" answers are not that obvious to people who start to deal with some solutions - what I really find annoying are "use google" answers when sometimes it is not such a big deal to post the answer and it is not always so easy to find the correct solution while searching the net.
Thanks, just what I was looking for.
Pijar said:
Have you got Android SDK installed? If so, you can use the famous "adb" tool to solve the problem. If your phone is rooted - and I assume it is, it takes only three commands. Connect your phone to your PC and from the command line interface issue the following commands:
adb remount
adb shell rm /system/app/Maps.apk
adb uninstall com.google.android.apps.maps
And then on your phone go to the Android market and install Google Maps again.
HTH,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks this worked.
Pijar said:
rbrainard, yes, you should use your command line (cmd.exe) utility, if you are using Windows. I have not specified it, because I wanted the instruction to be universal (I personally work on Linux). So, after installing Android SDK, you should enter the command line, change directory to the directory where you installed the SDK, there you should enter the "tools" subdirectory, and there you will find the "adb" tool, which should let you execute the commands I specified in my post.
I do not think your remark to be "retarded" , just the opposite, sometimes "simple" answers are not that obvious to people who start to deal with some solutions - what I really find annoying are "use google" answers when sometimes it is not such a big deal to post the answer and it is not always so easy to find the correct solution while searching the net.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Makes absolutely perfect sense now. I followed your instructions to the "T" and after reboot, Google Maps was no longer in my list of programs.
I then went to the Market and proceeded to try and install the latest version and received the same error: "Installation Unsuccessful"...
UPDATE:
Today I get a different error: "Incompatible Upgrade".
Does anyone have a copy of the APK file for Google Maps?
Okay, nevermind... I have it fixed now.
Placed the Maps.APK in my C:\ directory
ADB Remount
ADB Push C:\Maps.apk /System/app
Viola!
Credit goes to MRAndroid
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=5033339&postcount=50
Does anybody have any good info or a list of commands we can use in ADB without root access? I am not clear if this is strictly an App developer tool when root access is not allowed or if there are still commands we can use to interact with our phones. Thanks for any commands posted in advance!
Just type adb and it will give you a list of commands, if you try to do anything that requires root it will tell you that you can't do it.
I think this should be in general also.
Sent from my ADR6300 using Tapatalk
Actually this has to do with Android development. Thank you for the refresh I forgot you could just type that in to get the commands.
I searched around and couldn't get a clear answer. I'm a noob at anything command prompt/terminal related.
I was screwing around with adb last night after figuring out that I can remove program .apks with the rm <com.whatever.program> command. I got a little trigger happy and removed things that I don't use, just to test it out. I made a nandroid backup before I started. The phone runs fine, but now the Market won't download anything. It just sits on the Starting download... screen.
One of the .apks I removed was GmailProvider.apk. Whether this is the problem or not, I'd like to reinstall it for practice. I can always nand restore later.
So my question is... How can I use adb push to reinstall an apk?
I tried:
Code:
adb push C:\GmailProvider.apk
adb install C:\GmailProvider.apk
adb install C:\GmailProvider.apk \system\app
And about every variation of the 3, in and out of the adb shell.
It didn't work, and I'm at a loss to do anything else. So does anyone have any suggestions?
You have to push it abs then give it permissions.
So after pushing the apk give it permissions by doing this.
Code:
Adb push C:/gmailprovider.apk /system/app/gmailprovider.apk
adb shell
Chmod 775 /system/nameofapp.apk
Exit
Adb reboot
Your phone needs to be rebooted so I added the adb reboot, but you can just turn it off and on like you would normally or use that command.hope it helps.
Sent from my Eris using XDA App
Code:
# Chmod 775 /system/GmailProvider.apk
Chmod: not found
What's Chmod do, anyway?
EDIT: Forgot to cd to the directory...lemme try again.
EDIT2: Same error.
Okay, I tried:
Code:
# install /system/app/GmailProvider.apk [-cdDsp]
With no errors. Lemme see if it worked.
EDIT: I can see it, but the Market still isn't downloading apps. Lemme try an actual program.
Raikalo said:
Code:
# Chmod 775 /system/GmailProvider.apk
Chmod: not found
What's Chmod do, anyway?
EDIT: Forgot to cd to the directory...lemme try again.
EDIT2: Same error.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok I see two things that might be wrong with what you did.
Try not capatalizing the first letter(Not sure if this is a big deal but better to make sure.) and fix your path, GmailProvider.apk should be in the system/app folder.
Code:
adb shell
chmod 775 /system/app/GmailProvider.apk
adb reboot
The chmod command (abbreviated from change mode) is a shell command and C language function in Unix and Unix-like environments. When executed, it can change file system modes of files and directories. The modes include permissions and special modes
EDIt:
Raikalo said:
Okay, I tried:
Code:
# install /system/app/GmailProvider.apk [-cdDsp]
With no errors. Lemme see if it worked.
EDIT: I can see it, but the Market still isn't downloading apps. Lemme try an actual program.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yea you might be able to see it but the app might not have the right permissions to be used. Therefore it might be the reason why you can't download apps from market.
Excellent.
Code:
adb push C:/GmailProvider.apk /system/app/GmailProvider.apk
adb shell
chmod 775 /system/app/GmailProvider.apk
adb reboot
Worked like a charm. The capitalization was required; it gave an error without it. I installed Gmail.apk again using the same method and ran the program, and it worked. Thanks!
EDIT: GASP! Market works.
You're a lifesaver. Well, ROMsaver. I guess this means that GmailProvider.apk and gtalkservice.apk can't be removed from the phone.
Raikalo said:
However, the Market still won't download. Hm.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I just want to take this moment to make a Public Service Announcement: Everyone please remember to do a Nandroid backup before making any changes to your /system area.
Raikalo said:
Excellent.
Code:
adb push C:/GmailProvider.apk /system/app/GmailProvider.apk
adb shell
chmod 775 /system/app/GmailProvider.apk
adb reboot
Worked like a charm. The capitalization was required; it gave an error without it. I installed Gmail.apk again using the same method and ran the program, and it worked. Thanks!
However, the Market still won't download. Hm.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Don't know what to tell ya, you can start adding back the apks you deleted or do that nand restore since you already know how to install back a system apk, so you learned what you wanted
EDIT: I see you got it to work so that's good news, but like Nestor pointed out always use nand backup before you do any changes to the system area, I've learned to do this the hard way lol.
It's a good reminder
Thanks a ton guys I'll nand backup in a few to have a better restore point.
Learning android-related things ftw!
Oh, one more thing.
I saw something about adding an Environmental Variable to windows that involved adb? Could someone explain that?
- Also, Mikey1022 has reminded me to add the "ADB" directory path as a system variable in windows...
To do this right-click on "My Computer" and select Properties. Next select the Advanced tab(Advanced Settings in Vista) then select Environment Variables.
Click "New" under System Variables and add the following:
Variable: adb
Value: C:\android-sdk-windows-1.1_r1\tools
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There's an example. I tried this and it didn't do anything.
Raikalo said:
Oh, one more thing.
I saw something about adding an Environmental Variable to windows that involved adb? Could someone explain that?
There's an example. I tried this and it didn't do anything.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i think Thefuzz4.net explained this better
To make life easier, lets add a global path to the android SDK tools. Right-click My Computer > Properties,
click on Advanced, then click on Environment Variables.
Doubleclick on PATH, then at the end of the Variable value, add a semi colon ";" and then c:\AndroidSDK\tools
Doing The above ^^ will let you run adb from anywhere on your computer, like your desktop. You won't have to change to the directory and the run adb anymore, you can just run adb from anywhere on the command prompt. Its basically a little trick for us lazy people that hate having to "cd C:/android/tools" before running adb.
Does anyone know of a good resourse for adb and/or shell commands. Every time i try to goole it i just get links to different forums with just basic stuff, push, pull, ect. Id like to find something much more complete including chmod and the like
Sent from my Eris using XDA App
Thanks t2. Makes sense now. I hate CDing to the directory, so shortcuts are also ftw.
@above -- couldn't find a real resource so I resorted to asking specific questions on xda. if you find a resource lemme know.
ALSO -- chmod 775 /system/app/RandomProgram.apk.....what does the "775" do?
Raikalo said:
Thanks t2. Makes sense now. I hate CDing to the directory, so shortcuts are also ftw.
@above -- couldn't find a real resource so I resorted to asking specific questions on xda. if you find a resource lemme know.
ALSO -- chmod 775 /system/app/RandomProgram.apk.....what does the "775" do?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
the different numbers are different permission settings. I forgot the other numbers, but their are others that set the applications for different permissions in the system. Someone correct me if I am mistaken though.
Finally found some explanation of chmod at catcode.com/teachmod/ . not sure if it directly applies to andriod, but seems to make sense to me now
Sent from my Eris using XDA App
wrong thread
I can't seem to figure out how to remove stock apps using adb? Can anyone list the commands needed to do this?
adb remount
adb shell rm /system/app/YourApplicationHere.apk
cloudedice said:
adb remount
adb shell rm /system/app/YourApplicationHere.apk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Does this completely remove the app? I mean in particular the listing in the app drawer, as well as in the "Manage Apps" section (if applicable). Also where will app data be stored, if used?
Thanks
yes, completely.
use "adb shell ls -1 /system/app/" to find out the exact name of the app you want to delete, it's caps sensitive.
you can try these 2 programs to remove apps
you should try using android commander or droid explorer. search for them in the forums. they are free and help out a lot.
+ For Droid Explorer: http://de.codeplex.com/ I use this and it is pretty handy. Though you can just be lazy like I usually am and just uninstall apps via Titanium Backup. I haven't tried Android Commander (yet, but maybe I should...) but in interest of being fair, you can find it here: http://handheld.softpedia.com/get/Desktop-and-Shell/Windows/Android-Commander-93099.shtml and the official site is here, but didn't find it very well laid out (no offense PanPiotr...): http://androidcommander.com/
One other thing if you want to backup the app to your sd use cp /system/apps/appnname /sdcard/backup/appname
Sent from my Eris using XDA App
Sorry to ask such a noob question, but I just ran Unrevoked 3 and unrevoked forever. Everything seemed to work correctly, but when I try and run androind commander to delete files it says I need root permissions. I saw the superuser permissions icon in my app list, but when I click it nothing happens. Did I miss something?
ryanmc2033 said:
Sorry to ask such a noob question, but I just ran Unrevoked 3 and unrevoked forever. Everything seemed to work correctly, but when I try and run androind commander to delete files it says I need root permissions. I saw the superuser permissions icon in my app list, but when I click it nothing happens. Did I miss something?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
do you use other apps (setcpu, etc) that require Superuser permissions? any issues with those? if you do have other apps that have SU permissions, then uninstall/reinstall Android Commander... it should then request permission again.
if neither situation applies... use the directions above to remove the Superuser.apk file from /system/app and then go to this thread and download the new Superuser app
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=682828
I am getting the following error when I try to pull a TWRP backup from my Nexus 4. Can anyone please help?
Code:
remote object '/sdcard/TWRP' does not exist
It doesn't exist there. /sdcard/ is really a symlink. The actual location is /data/media/0/TWRP, but try /storage/emulated/0/TWRP as well.
Next time type "adb shell" to go into the phone, then type:
find / -type d -iname twrp
this will search the entire phone for folders with the name TWRP and list their path.
/ is the root folder of the phone to search in
-type d means search for folders only, leave it out if you want to search for file names
-iname means to search for terms case insensitive
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Thanks for the help eksasol. I've tried to pull many different paths and they all return the same remote object does not exist error. I've even tried sudo adb pull, with the same result. I've tried this, find / -type d -iname twrp but, all I get is Permission denied. If anyone else has got some ideas I'd be happy to hear them. Thanks. :good:
If you are using Ubuntu or linux, typing 'find' only search what is in your PC. You get permission denied because you want to search in a root directly that required root permission.
To search for files in your phone, you need to log into your phone by typing "adb shell". TWRP give you root by default, then you can use the find command.
Since you have root by default in TWRP, you don't need to use sudo, also Android do not have "sudo" installed. The correct way to gain root privilege in linux (Android) is by typing: su -
To tell if you have are root, you should see # where your user name is in the command window.
Once you are done finding the path, you need to exit the adb shell in order to make contact with your PC, so just type exit. Only then you can start using "adb pull".
by the way, its "adb pull /data/media/0/TWRP/ \home\username\backup\"
Rememer in linux (Android), it's case sensitive.
OK, I see my mistakes now. I was not exiting adb shell when typing adb pull. Anyway, thanks to your help, everything is working correctly now. Thank you again, I really appreciate it. Now I can flash the 4.4 update safely.
eksasol said:
If you are using Ubuntu or linux, typing 'find' only search what is in your PC. You get permission denied because you want to search in a root directly that required root permission.
...
by the way, its "adb pull /data/media/0/TWRP/ \home\username\backup"
Rememer in linux (Android), it's case sensitive.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for helping me re-learn that linux (Android) is case sensitive