[Q] Requirements for new ROMs with different size paritions - HD2 Android Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting and Genera

Hey everyone.
Can any senior member write me a bit of a guide as of what do I have to do in order to switch ROMs with different partition requirements?
I am looking for as little work as possible. I am having problem making ADB run on my computer, so I need a way to do it without need of ADB. Preferably something straight from the phone. So:
Of course, first I do nandroid backup through CMR. Then what?
Do I have to get to fastboot somehow and manually change values?
Or when I download the cLK ROM version, do I just flash it through CMR by zip from SD and it will repartition automatically to fit the requirements?
Currently my system partition is 190MB, and I'd like to try a 2 roms that are 150MB and 220MB required.
Thanks in advance.

while you wait for someone to link you to the (easily findable ) guide stickies, you can flash a 150 rom to a 190 partition if you are just playing. you will waste 40 meg, but if you're planning to flash again it hardly matters.

Yeah, I figured that, but I am more interested in a quick and safe way to switch system partition size, without ADB.
and when looking at roms, i only see different requirements, but no way to change the sizes.
Would you be so kind to explain, how this repartitioning works for flashing new roms? (clk)

When you flash clockwork, there is a file in the clockwork folder on your PC called flash.cfg (beware of the second file flash.cfg.txt, , if you only see "flash" and "flash.cfg" then you need to unhide file extensions)
anyway, open notepad, drag the flash.cfg file into it and you will see something like
Boot yaffs 8m
System yaffs 150m
Data allsize
(More than just that but you get the idea)
Well, if I change the 150m to 200m, save the file, run daf.exe to instal clockwork, it will be flashed with a 200 Meg system partition.
That's all there is to it.
Each line is one partition, boot, cache, system, data,, data doesn't have a size, it has allsize so will take up whatever space is left. You generally only ever alter the system.
The nand toolkit is the easier way to do it. Same principle, but point and click.
Either way, you perform this from within magldr, "USB flasher" option.
If you are on clk not magldr, I can't help, never used it.
Edit - "without adb " ... hmm, do you mean without USB? You can't.
If you are just having driver problems, there's an install drivers (or something) button in nand toolkit, try it.

samsamuel said:
When you flash clockwork, there is a file in the clockwork folder on your PC called flash.cfg (beware of the second file flash.cfg.txt, , if you only see "flash" and "flash.cfg" then you need to unhide file extensions)
anyway, open notepad, drag the flash.cfg file into it and you will see something like
Boot yaffs 8m
System yaffs 150m
Data allsize
(More than just that but you get the idea)
Well, if I change the 150m to 200m, save the file, run daf.exe to instal clockwork, it will be flashed with a 200 Meg system partition.
That's all there is to it.
Each line is one partition, boot, cache, system, data,, data doesn't have a size, it has allsize so will take up whatever space is left. You generally only ever alter the system.
The nand toolkit is the easier way to do it. Same principle, but point and click.
Either way, you perform this from within magldr, "USB flasher" option.
If you are on clk not magldr, I can't help, never used it.
Edit - "without adb " ... hmm, do you mean without USB? You can't.
If you are just having driver problems, there's an install drivers (or something) button in nand toolkit, try it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks mate. That's exactly the problem, I have found guides for magldr, but never for clk.
And about adb - my pc would need an OS reinstall to run well again - vista, and i already got it pretty screwed up.
Anyway, thanks for your help, I understand it more!

Related

[Q] Edit clockworkmod flash.cfg file?

Hello all, I'm totally newb to flashing ROM so please take it easy if the question is redundant. I have flashed and got this Gingerbread ROM from MDJ (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=877777) running perfectly fine. In his instruction, he uses the 250MB partition. So after installation of a lot of apps, my system storage is listed as:
Total: 250MB, Free: 123MB. (I got these numbers from Quick System Info)
I guess the ROM only used 127MB? I'm thinking changing the flash.cfg file like this,
From "system ya 250M" to "system ya 130M" so that would give me a few more MB in the userdata partition.
Is that gonna break something I don't know about?
erythrophilia said:
Hello all, I'm totally newb to flashing ROM so please take it easy if the question is redundant. I have flashed and got this Gingerbread ROM from MDJ (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=877777) running perfectly fine. In his instruction, he uses the 250MB partition. So after installation of a lot of apps, my system storage is listed as:
Total: 250MB, Free: 123MB. (I got these numbers from Quick System Info)
I guess the ROM only used 127MB? I'm thinking changing the flash.cfg file like this,
From "system ya 250M" to "system ya 130M" so that would give me a few more MB in the userdata partition.
Is that gonna break something I don't know about?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First of all that will wipe your existing installation / data clean. Hope you understand that. Secondly, it should work fine but doesn't leave you much space at all on your system partition. I would add a little more- maybe 135M or 140M.
I see. I already have a CWM backup so the data won't be a problem. So that means the size specified in flash.cfg isn't directly linked to other things? I mean like if I change it, and the ROM boots up, it looks for the right size, and then if the original size isn't there, it will refuse to boot.
But anyway, I'll experiment with it later today. Thanks.
erythrophilia said:
From "system ya 250M" to "system ya 130M" so that would give me a few more MB in the userdata partition.
Is that gonna break something I don't know about?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have been flashing Nand roms but until now i dont understand how to edit flash cfg. there is no choice in the clockwork recovery that has such option. I know it may sound silly.Thank you
jad71 said:
I have been flashing Nand roms but until now i dont understand how to edit flash cfg. there is no choice in the clockwork recovery that has such option. I know it may sound silly.Thank you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have to edit the flash.cfg in notepad before you flash it on your phone
Cant find flash.cfg
acho07 said:
You have to edit the flash.cfg in notepad before you flash it on your phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i also face similar issues, can u explain where to find the flash.cfg file.
azi43far said:
i also face similar issues, can u explain where to find the flash.cfg file.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
When you download clockwork recovery on your computer, in the extracted folder there should be a file "flash.cfg" open that in notepad and change the values to whatever you require then flash it using the daf.exe via usb flasher in magldr.
Just adding this information if someone stumbles onto this article again :
Description of flash.cfg format
===============================
1. each line define one partition
2. maximum number of partitions is 16
3. order of partitions are same like lines in the file
4. line format: <partition name> <flags/type> <size> <data filename>
partition name - up to 15 chars, shown in MTD later
size - can be related to filesize: "filesize", "filesize+10M", "filesize+10b",
or have fixed size: "10M", "100b"
[M - means Megabytes, b - menas blocks (each NAND block is 128kbytes)]
can be "allsize" for auto size partition.
flags/type - can be different values:
types:
"ya" - YAFFS2 partition. MAGLDR can show root directory context or read kernel/initrd from it
"raw" - RAW data.
flags:
"ro" - disable add extra 5% to partition size and count bad blocks into size
"boot" - this partition contains zImage and initrd.gz for NAND boot (it must have YAFFS2 type)
"asize" - auto size. this partition will use all available space after other partitions. only one partition can have this type.
"nospr" - binary data have not spare data. (2048+0 format), otherwise 2048+64 format used.
"nors" - use exactly specified size for partition. no resize is done.
"hr" - this partition must be erased if user select "AD HardReset" in MAGLDR menu.
different flags and types separated via "|" symbol, like "boot|ya|ro"
bamit99 said:
Just adding this information if someone stumbles onto this article again :
Description of flash.cfg format
===============================
1. each line define one partition
2. maximum number of partitions is 16
3. order of partitions are same like lines in the file
4. line format: <partition name> <flags/type> <size> <data filename>
partition name - up to 15 chars, shown in MTD later
size - can be related to filesize: "filesize", "filesize+10M", "filesize+10b",
or have fixed size: "10M", "100b"
[M - means Megabytes, b - menas blocks (each NAND block is 128kbytes)]
can be "allsize" for auto size partition.
flags/type - can be different values:
types:
"ya" - YAFFS2 partition. MAGLDR can show root directory context or read kernel/initrd from it
"raw" - RAW data.
flags:
"ro" - disable add extra 5% to partition size and count bad blocks into size
"boot" - this partition contains zImage and initrd.gz for NAND boot (it must have YAFFS2 type)
"asize" - auto size. this partition will use all available space after other partitions. only one partition can have this type.
"nospr" - binary data have not spare data. (2048+0 format), otherwise 2048+64 format used.
"nors" - use exactly specified size for partition. no resize is done.
"hr" - this partition must be erased if user select "AD HardReset" in MAGLDR menu.
different flags and types separated via "|" symbol, like "boot|ya|ro"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is what i get when I open flash.cfg. Where do I insert the values!

NAND kernel open failed

Hello,
I tried to install the latest version 7 CyanogenMod Typhoon v2.8.6 + RC3 [2.3.3] [A2SD] [tytung r8.3] CWM but comes installed with the "nand kernel open failed" I have the version with 150 MB partition, I read that I should use the 400 mb but how can I change the recovery?
go to the cement recovery thread. it will have links for CWM 1.13 in different sizes, 150, 250,400mb. pick whichever size is suggested by the rom u want to flash. boot into magdlr by turning off phone and then power back on and just hold power button down till a black screen pops up with 12 different options. choose USB FLASHER. plug phone to computer. unzip whichever cwm version u downloaded to your desktop. run daf.exe
Sent from my HTC HD2 using XDA Premium App
Ok, is possible overwrite the old cwm? But my previous partition will be erased with my data....
Sent from my HTC HD2 using XDA App
Yes its possible to flash over the top.
I use typhoon with 140meg size, u don't need 400 and indeed will have 250meg wasted space.
I'd look at the versions of magldr and cwm you are running,. There are differences.
also, no need to download the different cwm sizes, if you want 400 just edit the flash.cfg file and change the system size line to whatever you want.
samsamuel said:
Yes its possible to flash over the top.
I use typhoon with 140meg size, u don't need 400 and indeed will have 250meg wasted space.
I'd look at the versions of magldr and cwm you are running,. There are differences.
also, no need to download the different cwm sizes, if you want 400 just edit the flash.cfg file and change the system size line to whatever you want.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wanna give him atleast a tiny clue of how to do that???
Sent from my HTC HD2 using XDA Premium App
chrisgto4 said:
wanna give him atleast a tiny clue of how to do that???
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
well for checking magldr and cwm versions, i wouldnt bother, id just go get the latest versions and flash them. Ten minutes to be sure you're bang up to date.
For editing flash.cfg, (mine pasted below for reference) open notepad, drag and drop into it the flash.cfg file.
Each line is for the creation of one partition, so look for the system line, and change it to the size system partition you want.
=============<paste of flash,cfg contents for setting a 135meg partition,>
misc ya 1M
recovery rrecov|ro|nospr filesize recovery-raw.img
boot yboot|ro 5M
system ya 135M
cache ya 44M
userdata ya|asize|hr allsize
=============</paste>
example for 250 meg system use
system ya 250M
save the file, flash cwm and it is now a 250meg system partition..
Sorry,.... my error. I try to update a rom for clk with MAGLDR :-(
I'm stupid....now it works. Thanks
Sent from my HTC HD2 using XDA App
Well that doesn't help me at all, I've got the clk version of the latest typhoon, tried installing with clk...
Nand kernel open failed...
Tried clean install of clk, still fails.
I guess I'll try a clean install of MAGLDR, too...
Okay, I get it now, clk is not CLocKworkmod, I needed the MAGLDR version.
any news on that? I also get this error.
nand open kernel failed
do all beginners understand this? you are probably putting the 'clk' version of the rom in your storage card for installation. you need the 'magdlr' version of the rom for clockwork mod to correctly install android

clockworkmod

Hi guys, I had clockworkmod 5.0.2.6 installed but it was small(partition). I've found some clockwork mods with bigger partition(250, 400) in guide and downloaded them. I flashed them via daf and they've flashed successfully. Now, the problem is none of newer roms(ics, jb) work with that version of cwm. How to install other recovery(for eg. newer cwm)? Don't give me the guide, I'm sick of them and have a few bookmarked but there is no solution for that. Oh, I forgot. I have mag1.13 and cwm 3.0.0.8(orange one)..
Thanks in advance.
Shaumaaa said:
Hi guys, I had clockworkmod 5.0.2.6 installed but it was small(partition). I've found some clockwork mods with bigger partition(250, 400) in guide and downloaded them. I flashed them via daf and they've flashed successfully. Now, the problem is none of newer roms(ics, jb) work with that version of cwm. How to install other recovery(for eg. newer cwm)? Don't give me the guide, I'm sick of them and have a few bookmarked but there is no solution for that. Oh, I forgot. I have mag1.13 and cwm 3.0.0.8(orange one)..
Thanks in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your just looking to increase system partition then there is a file (flash.cfg I think) that you need to modify, open it and it should be fairly clear what to modify to increase the partition size.
I edited the flash.cfg with notepad++ and wanted to flash the same recovery again but daf is showing me some error.
first, in case you handt realised, increasing teh system size is only needed when the size required by your rom needs it, , , , so for example flashing a 200mb rom to a 400mb partition will waste 200mb, the system wont use that extra space. Your total available storage does NOT include teh system partition, sop teh bigger system partition you create, the lesws available internal storage you will have for data.
Look in the folder where flash.cfg is, , find recovery-raw.img and replace it with the new recovery .img you want to use.
Then, because of the line
recovery rrecov|ro|nospr filesize recovery-raw.img
in flash.cfg, when you run the flash it will create the correct recovery partition size.
(If the newer recovery didnt use a larger recovery partition, or if you wanted to reinstal recovery again after already doing the above, ((meaning the recovery partition is already big enough)) you would simply start cwm, and flash the new recovery from sd card, just like flashing a rom)
showing me some error.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
completely useless sentence, you may as well not bother, how do we know what error it shows? mind reading?
This error
An error has occurred
Read below for more information
Error Description: Config load failed.
Info: .\RSPL\RSPL.cpp (725)
Error Description: CONFIG: bad data size format
Info: .\RSPL\RSPL.cpp (428)
**** yeah! I did it!
Thanks bro'
I dindn't Heeeeeeeeelp..
I installed the cwm touch and when installing rom with aroma(pacman) it stays at 0% but it's putting files to system. Then it passes the mag and stays at bootanimation. Whats wrong?
EDIT: I'm uploading video of my problem
Fixed
Fixed with magldr repartitioning. Thanks anyway.

Lost A LOT of storage after installing a new rom

Hi everyone, this is my first thread
I recently rooted my 16gb WiFi only nexus 7. After installing 3 different roms (touchwiz, cyanogenmod 10, and xenon HD) I didn't like touch wiz or cyanogenmod, and I'm currently running xenon HD. However, when I opened my storage today, of said I had 3.6gb remaining. I thought it may have been all the apps, so I factory reset it, reset the partition, and deleted all data via recovery mode. That gave me about 1 more gigabyte. I opened ES file explorer and deleted everything there. I still have only 4.6 gigabytes usable. Anyone else have this issue?
Thanks
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda app-developers app
Well, I deleted some old backups and now I have 7.5 gb of storage, which should do for now. But I still have that 6 GB leftover, anyone know whats wrong?
Thanks
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda app-developers app
OK. Now I mucked around in the mounting/unmounting stuff, and now it won't boot. It's stuck at the Google screen. Someone help please???
Sent from my Nexus 7 using xda app-developers app[/QUOTE]
You are not the only person who has experienced this.
Bottom line is you need to rebuild the /data filesystem, which necessitates getting everything off of it including any nandroid backups plus anything worth saving in /sdcard
Either the "format data" option in TWRP, or using fastboot.
Code:
fastboot erase userdata
fastboot format userdata
I've had the latter create short file systems - and also not create short file systems.
Whatever causes this it seems to depend on prior state in the filesystem, even though I don't think things should behave this way. I've also had TWRP's "Format data" menu option create new, empty, & corrupted ext4 file systems. Ugh - I hope your luck is better than mine.
Note that you can run "df -k /data" in the recovery (after you have created the new filesystem by either method) to find out how big it is; better to check things are OK right away, rather than after you've put effort into restoring things or flashing ROMs.
Long boring thread, but related.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2184486
good luck
Edit: no point in restoring the wedged /data backup. I hope you have earlier backups.
bftb0 said:
You are not the only person who has experienced this.
Bottom line is you need to rebuild the /data filesystem, which necessitates getting everything off of it including any nandroid backups plus anything worth saving in /sdcard
Either the "format data" option in TWRP, or using fastboot.
Code:
fastboot erase userdata
fastboot format userdata
I've had the latter create short file systems - and also not create short file systems.
Whatever causes this it seems to depend on prior state in the filesystem, even though I don't think things should behave this way. I've also had TWRP's "Format data" menu option create new, empty, & corrupted ext4 file systems. Ugh - I hope your luck is better than mine.
Note that you can run "df -k /data" in the recovery (after you have created the new filesystem by either method) to find out how big it is; better to check things are OK right away, rather than after you've put effort into restoring things or flashing ROMs.
Long boring thread, but related.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2184486
good luck
Edit: no point in restoring the wedged /data backup. I hope you have earlier backups.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I basically have nothing I need on my tablet, so I'm fine deleting everything on it, if that's what you mean. I'll try, but thanks:good:
nicetaco said:
I basically have nothing I need on my tablet, so I'm fine deleting everything on it, if that's what you mean. I'll try, but thanks:good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wait, is that for getting back the storage or actually letting it boot up? Because right now the storage is the least of my concerns.
What I described is for getting back lost space (by recreating from scratch the ext4 filesystem in the userdata partition).
As it doesn't touch either the boot partition or the system partition, your tablet should certainly be able to boot. If you don't do a restore of /data from a backup, the result will be like a factory reset of whatever rom you had on the tablet.
Just make sure to check the size of the data partition before you start re-customizing or restoring data from backups to make sure that you got the full size of the partition.
bftb0 said:
What I described is for getting back lost space (by recreating from scratch the ext4 filesystem in the userdata partition).
As it doesn't touch either the boot partition or the system partition, your tablet should certainly be able to boot. If you don't do a restore of /data from a backup, the result will be like a factory reset of whatever rom you had on the tablet.
Just make sure to check the size of the data partition before you start re-customizing or restoring data from backups to make sure that you got the full size of the partition.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ughhh its still not turning on...
nicetaco said:
Ughhh its still not turning on...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Please re-read this quote from your 2nd thread in this fiasco.
Nico_60 said:
How do you want to know what's happening to your device if don't tell us which commands you have done exactly with fastboot and why ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you screwed around with your system partition and it wouldn't boot before, then with a freshly formated and empty /data filesystem, of course it still will not boot. The instructions I provided in this thread only involved the userdata partition!
But you didn't say "I did such and such and it still hangs during the initial boot phase where the X logo is flashing on the screen"; instead you said:
"Ughhh its still not turning on".
WTF? Has your problem now morphed into a dead battery problem, or is the language you are using just incredibly imprecise?
Anyway, Flash a new ROM using the custom recovery. Any ROM - you pick. Maybe not that Xenon ROM or whatever it is called. See if the new ROM boots. And then immediately after it boots, check to see what size the /data partition is.
And if you come back into this thread anymore please be specific about what you are attempting and exactly what symptoms you are observing.
good luck
bftb0 said:
Please re-read this quote from your 2nd thread in this fiasco.
If you screwed around with your system partition and it wouldn't boot before, then with a freshly formated and empty /data filesystem, of course it still will not boot. The instructions I provided in this thread only involved the userdata partition!
But you didn't say "I did such and such and it still hangs during the initial boot phase where the X logo is flashing on the screen"; instead you said:
"Ughhh its still not turning on".
WTF? Has your problem now morphed into a dead battery problem, or is the language you are using just incredibly imprecise?
Anyway, Flash a new ROM using the custom recovery. Any ROM - you pick. Maybe not that Xenon ROM or whatever it is called. See if the new ROM boots. And then immediately after it boots, check to see what size the /data partition is.
And if you come back into this thread anymore please be specific about what you are attempting and exactly what symptoms you are observing.
good luck
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK. I tried to install a new rom, but I can't because I have USB debugging off, which I can't turn on
bftb0 said:
You are not the only person who has experienced this.
Bottom line is you need to rebuild the /data filesystem, which necessitates getting everything off of it including any nandroid backups plus anything worth saving in /sdcard
Either the "format data" option in TWRP, or using fastboot.
Code:
fastboot erase userdata
fastboot format userdata
I've had the latter create short file systems - and also not create short file systems.
Whatever causes this it seems to depend on prior state in the filesystem, even though I don't think things should behave this way. I've also had TWRP's "Format data" menu option create new, empty, & corrupted ext4 file systems. Ugh - I hope your luck is better than mine.
Note that you can run "df -k /data" in the recovery (after you have created the new filesystem by either method) to find out how big it is; better to check things are OK right away, rather than after you've put effort into restoring things or flashing ROMs.
Long boring thread, but related.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2184486
good luck
Edit: no point in restoring the wedged /data backup. I hope you have earlier backups.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you, bftb0!
I was looking around for this after I discovered my lack of space. I read about it before, but couldn't dig up the post. Thanks for informing us! Enjoy the thanks!
nicetaco said:
OK. I tried to install a new rom, but I can't because I have USB debugging off, which I can't turn on
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ADB is available in the custom recovery... so long as you have the right drivers installed on your PC. And that is NOT controlled by some setting in the most recent ROM that you flashed - it is always running in the custom recovery.
One of the quirks about ADB in the recovery with the Nexus7 is that it claims a different USB address than "ADB Composite Interface" that the regular OS does. This might mean that ADB works correctly with the regular OS booted, but not when the custom recovery is booted, depending on what drivers you have installed. Yes, you need yet another driver installed even though they are both "ADB" connections. But that is a Windows driver issue, not a problem with the N7.
You can also use an OTG cable and a USB drive with TWRP if that is easier. Put your ROM on the memory stick and then use TWRP's "external memory". To be most compatible, make sure the USB stick is formatted in a FAT format. (I don't know if TWRP can handle NTFS).
upichie said:
Thank you, bftb0!
I was looking around for this after I discovered my lack of space. I read about it before, but couldn't dig up the post. Thanks for informing us! Enjoy the thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I wonder if I can I trade them in for some coupons or something
@bftb0, I was not able to use adb while in TWRP but i found THIS and it was the solution, what do you think about this "fix"?
bftb0 said:
ADB is available in the custom recovery... so long as you have the right drivers installed on your PC. And that is NOT controlled by some setting in the most recent ROM that you flashed - it is always running in the custom recovery.
One of the quirks about ADB in the recovery with the Nexus7 is that it claims a different USB address than "ADB Composite Interface" that the regular OS does. This might mean that ADB works correctly with the regular OS booted, but not when the custom recovery is booted, depending on what drivers you have installed. Yes, you need yet another driver installed even though they are both "ADB" connections. But that is a Windows driver issue, not a problem with the N7.
You can also use an OTG cable and a USB drive with TWRP if that is easier. Put your ROM on the memory stick and then use TWRP's "external memory". To be most compatible, make sure the USB stick is formatted in a FAT format. (I don't know if TWRP can handle NTFS).
I wonder if I can I trade them in for some coupons or something
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Holy crap I forgot about the OTG cables. Thanks, I'll try it!
nicetaco said:
Holy crap I forgot about the OTG cables. Thanks, I'll try it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you so much. That did it.
First problem fixed through XDA developers
Enjoy my thanks
Nico_60 said:
@bftb0, I was not able to use adb while in TWRP but i found THIS and it was the solution, what do you think about this "fix"?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The ADB daemon - "adbd" is definitely sitting there running inside the custom recovery. Even if you can't communicate with it because of a lack of a driver, you should nevertheless be able to see it as an unknown device in the PC's device manager.
I have done the same hack - hand editing the .INF file - with both the Google SDK drivers and the Asus drivers, and in both cases it worked fine (one driver for everything: ADB in the OS, ADB in TWRP/CWM, and fastboot with the bootloader).
I have also used the Google SDK driver without modification plus the XDA Universal Naked driver. That means using the Google driver for fastboot and ADB when the OS is booted, and the XUN driver for custom recoveries only.
At the present time the ONLY driver I have installed is a hacked version of the Asus drivers.
Win 7 complains about signing when doing this (for the Asus drivers for sure, I can't remember if the Google driver is signed or not).
As I mentioned, Win 7 Pro x64. I suppose the whole "violated signing" might make life even more difficult with Win 8 though.
bftb0, did you personally experience the problem of losing space on the internal memory? I tried your advice, but it didn't work. I'm on PAC(man) ROM. I booted into TWRP, did the data wipe (not factory reset, the full wipe that wipes the everything) but I still only have 13 gb available (on my 32 gb Nexus 7). I rebooted into TWRP and did a factory reset AND wipe data, but I am still missing half of my internal memory.
Do you need to do this on the stock ROM for it to work? Any other tips would be greatly appreciated.
upichie said:
bftb0, did you personally experience the problem of losing space on the internal memory? I tried your advice, but it didn't work. I'm on PAC(man) ROM. I booted into TWRP, did the data wipe (not factory reset, the full wipe that wipes the everything) but I still only have 13 gb available (on my 32 gb Nexus 7). I rebooted into TWRP and did a factory reset AND wipe data, but I am still missing half of my internal memory.
Do you need to do this on the stock ROM for it to work? Any other tips would be greatly appreciated.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, it really did happen to me.
After it happened I took the trouble to download 4 different versions of TWRP (2.4.1.0-2.4.4.0), and I re-created the ext4 filesystem with:
- each of the different versions of TWRP and
- fastboot format userdata
after each, I did a "e2fsck -f -n <block-device>" on the (unmounted) userdata partition to see that they were clean, and I also dumped the output of "tune2fs -l <block-device>" to a file for comparison. Other than things that I would expect to be different (e.g. partition UUID identifier strings and timestamps), I noticed no differences. And also, I couldn't reproduce the problem for the life of me.
Above you mention full "data wipe". In TWRP (v2.4.1.0), this is presented as a separate button in the "Wipe" sub-menu where it (the last button in the first column) is labeled "Format Data". I suppose this is what you mean, but thought I would be explicit to avoid any confusion. (The "factory reset" procedure in the two custom recoveries - both CWM and TWRP - can not possibly re-create the ext4 filesystem in /data, as the /data/media/0 SD card files are in there. But the "Format Data" button does destroy & recreate the whole filesystem).
If you press on this button and at the same time capture the output of the "ps" command, you will see that TWRP recovery invokes the /sbin/make_ext4fs in the following way
Code:
make_ext4fs -l -32768 /dev/block/mmcblk0p<PARTNUM>
(CWM probably uses a different external command as it does not seem to have a "make_ext4fs" command in it's ramdisk. Probably mke2fs with ext4 options on the command line)
Anyways, I can't say I have my finger on exactly how to resolve the problem as I can not re-created it. But it did happen to me.
One thing you can try rather than using TWRP's "make_ext4fs" command (underneath that button "Format Data") is to reboot into the bootloader from TWRP, and do the file system formatting in fastboot instead of TWRP, as in:
Code:
fastboot format userdata
(noobs: caution, this is a full userdata wipe)
and then bop back into the recovery and check things with "tune2fs" report
Code:
tune2fs -l /dev/block/mmcblk0p<PARTNUM>
My 32G N7 shows a total block count of 7503608 (x 4k/block = 29.3 GiB) doing this.
As I mentioned before, it's a good idea to check to see you have the right size before you start restoring stuff to avoid wasting time. You can do it above with "tune2fs -l", or because TWRP seems to want to mount /data and /sdcard when it boots, just run
adb shell df -k /data
to get a report of total and used size.
Sorry this isn't more definiitve. I would have spent more time looking at this, but it is tedious as you need to unload the whole d*mn SD card in order to experiment. Thank goodness my 30GB partition only has about 10Gigs of stuff on it.
good luck
bftb0 said:
Yes, it really did happen to me.
After it happened I took the trouble to download 4 different versions of TWRP (2.4.1.0-2.4.4.0), and I re-created the ext4 filesystem with:
- each of the different versions of TWRP and
- fastboot format userdata
after each, I did a "e2fsck -f -n <block-device>" on the (unmounted) userdata partition to see that they were clean, and I also dumped the output of "tune2fs -l <block-device>" to a file for comparison. Other than things that I would expect to be different (e.g. partition UUID identifier strings and timestamps), I noticed no differences. And also, I couldn't reproduce the problem for the life of me.
Above you mention full "data wipe". In TWRP (v2.4.1.0), this is presented as a separate button in the "Wipe" sub-menu where it (the last button in the first column) is labeled "Format Data". I suppose this is what you mean, but thought I would be explicit to avoid any confusion. (The "factory reset" procedure in the two custom recoveries - both CWM and TWRP - can not possibly re-create the ext4 filesystem in /data, as the /data/media/0 SD card files are in there. But the "Format Data" button does destroy & recreate the whole filesystem).
If you press on this button and at the same time capture the output of the "ps" command, you will see that TWRP recovery invokes the /sbin/make_ext4fs in the following way
Code:
make_ext4fs -l -32768 /dev/block/mmcblk0p<PARTNUM>
(CWM probably uses a different external command as it does not seem to have a "make_ext4fs" command in it's ramdisk. Probably mke2fs with ext4 options on the command line)
Anyways, I can't say I have my finger on exactly how to resolve the problem as I can not re-created it. But it did happen to me.
One thing you can try rather than using TWRP's "make_ext4fs" command (underneath that button "Format Data") is to reboot into the bootloader from TWRP, and do the file system formatting in fastboot instead of TWRP, as in:
Code:
fastboot format userdata
(noobs: caution, this is a full userdata wipe)
and then bop back into the recovery and check things with "tune2fs" report
Code:
tune2fs -l /dev/block/mmcblk0p<PARTNUM>
My 32G N7 shows a total block count of 7503608 (x 4k/block = 29.3 GiB) doing this.
As I mentioned before, it's a good idea to check to see you have the right size before you start restoring stuff to avoid wasting time. You can do it above with "tune2fs -l", or because TWRP seems to want to mount /data and /sdcard when it boots, just run
adb shell df -k /data
to get a report of total and used size.
Sorry this isn't more definiitve. I would have spent more time looking at this, but it is tedious as you need to unload the whole d*mn SD card in order to experiment. Thank goodness my 30GB partition only has about 10Gigs of stuff on it.
good luck
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
.
I'm a total command prompt beginner here, so could you explain where I'm doing the fastboot format command? In a terminal on the device? Using adb on my windows machine? I tried all that I could think of, but none of it worked. No form of wiping the device (yes, via "format data" in TWRP) seems to work. I'm still missing half of my storage.
EDIT: Okay, so I ran the command--I had to have the device in the bootloader, duh. Unfortunately, it still did not work. When recreating the file system, it said there was a total of ~3.5 million blocks--half what I saw reported in the other thread. Not surprising, since I'm missing half of my storage. How come this is working for other people but not me? I tried doing both at the same time, but to no avail. This is getting stupid.
upichie said:
EDIT: Okay, so I ran the command--I had to have the device in the bootloader, duh. Unfortunately, it still did not work. When recreating the file system, it said there was a total of ~3.5 million blocks--half what I saw reported in the other thread. Not surprising, since I'm missing half of my storage. How come this is working for other people but not me? I tried doing both at the same time, but to no avail. This is getting stupid.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Arrgh. Did you do the "fastboot erase userdata" first?
Here's what the fastboot format looked like on my device when I did this last (3/13):
Code:
$ fastboot erase userdata
******** Did you mean to fastboot format this partition?
erasing 'userdata'...
OKAY [ 4.974s]
finished. total time: 4.979s
$ fastboot format userdata
erasing 'userdata'...
OKAY [ 4.454s]
formatting 'userdata' partition...
Creating filesystem with parameters:
Size: 30734811136
Block size: 4096
Blocks per group: 32768
Inodes per group: 8192
Inode size: 256
Journal blocks: 32768
Label:
Blocks: 7503616
Block groups: 229
Reserved block group size: 1024
Created filesystem with 11/1875968 inodes and 161774/7503616 blocks
sending 'userdata' (139197 KB)...
writing 'userdata'...
OKAY [ 33.733s]
finished. total time: 38.194s
As I said, I was unable to reproduce the problem even though I tried. But it almost seems like the creation of the new filesystem is inferring something from somewhere (but where?) about the userdata partition size which is incorrect. Almost like it happens because of something it sees in the prior filesystem (which is being destroyed). So it becomes irreproducible unless you can recreate the same starting condition.
There's other mysterious crap going on here too. See the output above? The part where it says "sending 'userdata' (139197 KB)" ? It will say this no matter where you run the command from, and there is no 139 MB "userdata.img" file in the folder it runs from!!! 139 MB? For a filesystem which is empty when you mount it?
I don't know. Here's one more thing to try, though. In addition to doing the "erase" & "format" commands, perhaps you could actually flash the userdata image from the stock ROM
Code:
fastboot erase userdata
fastboot format userdata
fastboot flash userdata userdata.img
and then when you boot to the custom recovery, perform a "factory reset" - or try doing the "Format Data" thing in TWRP after (or before?) the above steps.
If none of this works, I suppose you could try the equivalent sorts of things with CWM and see if you get a different result.
You don't need to permanently install CWM with a hard flash - you can just soft-boot it for a single session:
Code:
fastboot boot recovery-clockwork-touch-6.0.2.3-grouper.img
Sorry this is so vague, but you know how it goes - you stumble into a problem, start fooling around until it gets fixed - and because you weren't really expecting the problem in the first place, you haven't written down the exact conditions and steps. Like I said, I tried to re-create the problem a variety of ways - but failed at that effort.
good luck

[Tutorial] LG Gpad v410 5.1 to 4.4 downgrade, root, & internal storage fix.

EDIT: If you are coming here for the first time, this guide should still work, but @PorygonZRocks has created a flashable zip that should deal with a lot of these issues automatically. You can check out his post here:
https://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=75787067&postcount=699
This method will indirectly allow you to root the LG Gpad v410 after it has been upgraded to Lollipop 5.1.1. Yes. Rooting LG v410 Lollipop. It's through a downgrade, but it works.
It took a while to get working, but here's how I did it. The process is straightforward, but the details matter greatly. You will brick your device if you mess up. Please read everything *first* before you do anything. Be sure you understand the process. I'll try to explain what's going on along the way.
An external SD card is extremely helpful for this process. You *could* adb push everything, but that will tedious.
First, you need some files.
The 4.4.2 KDZ which is a TEST OS, but it can be rooted and it downgrades to a Bump'able bootlaoder:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/g-pad-10/general/kdz-lg-g-pad-7-0-v410-t3224867
The LG 2014 Flash Tool:
http://www.mediafire.com/download/fwrcd3pdj0svjtb/LG_Flash_Tool_2014.zip
Android LG Drivers:
https://www.androidfilehost.com/?fid=24052804347802528
Parted for Android. You can probably find it other places, but I found this file:https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/84115590/LG%20G2%2016GB%20Solution/sdparted-recovery-all-files.zip
EDIT: There seems to be a lot of confusion here. My bad. All you need is the file named "parted" from this zip file - nothing else. Just put that one file in the root of your external SD card.
https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/84115590/LG G2 16GB Solution/sdparted-recovery-all-files.zip linked from here: http://www.**********.com/your-32gb-lg-g2-shows-only-16gb-storage-space-heres-the-fix/
EDIT2: The dropbox link is down. I've attached the file directly.
The Candy5 ROM (This will potentially save you some manual steps. Somewhat optional, but highly recommended):
http://forum.xda-developers.com/g-pad-10/development/rom-candy5-g-pad-v410-lollipop-5-1-1-v2-t3111987
Flashify APK:
http://www.apkmirror.com/apk/christian-gollner/flashify/flashify-1-9-1-android-apk-download/
TWRP for the v410:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/g-pad-10/development/recovery-twrp2-8-5-0lgv400-410-t3049568
LG One Click Root:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/lg-g3/general/guide-root-lg-firmwares-kitkat-lollipop-t3056951
(You may use Purple Drake or whatever else you want. They all use the same root script as this does and the GUI is helpful for novices.)
Android SDK (specifically adb.exe. After installing go to SDK Manager and ensure that Android SDK Platform Tools is checked):
http://developer.android.com/sdk/index.html
For clarification below, when I have commands in "quotes" they are Windows commands. When they are in `backticks` they are commands that you run inside of ADB which actually run on your device....as root. Root can screw things up. Please be extra cautious. If you blame me for messing up your device I will laugh at you. But that's not gonna happen, right? Good. Let's go.
Now that you have everything, put it all into a folder where you can access it easily.
Install the LG Drivers.
Install Android SDK (or otherwise get adb.exe).
Extract all of the archives.
Move the KDZ to the LG Flash Tool 2014 folder.
Put the tablet into Download Mode by powering it off, holding VolUp, and plugging in the USB cable. Press VolUP when instructed. You must be in Download mode before continuing.
Run LGFlashTool2014.exe. Select the KDZ file. Click "CSE Flash". Click "Start". Select "English" and click OK. Do not change anything else.
WAIT for the flash to continue. If you really want to brick your device, here's a good opportunity.
The device will reboot into Android 4.4.2. You will only have 4GB of internal storage at this point. DON'T PANIC! We are fixing it.
Enable USB debugging.
Connect the device.
Install and run LG One Click Root. Wait for the device to be rooted before proceeding.
Copy the Flashify apk, TWRP image, and Candy5 ROM to your external SD card.
Install Flashify and flash TWRP to the recovery partition.
Use the Flashify menu to reboot in to recovery.
DON'T PANIC! You will get white vertical lines on the boot screen from now on. They only show up during boot animations. A small price to pay. This may be fixed at a later date. for the time being! Thanks to marcsoup's first post ever, we have a fix! Details below. PLEASE click this link and thank him!
Things get tricky here. Copy parted to your external SD card and then run "adb shell" from Windows to get a shell in TWRP.
In TWRP, unmount /data by tapping Mount > uncheck Data.
`cp /sdcard/parted /sbin/` This copies the parted binary to /sbin so it can be executed in the path. I had trouble running `/sdcard/parted`, but YMMV.
`chmod +x /sbin/parted` Make it executable.
`parted /dev/block/mmcblk0` Run parted against the internal mmc
`p` Prints the partition table.
`rm 34` Deletes partition 34 labeled "grow". This is the root of our problem. The KDZ apparently only creates a 4GB partition, I assume so the test build has maximum compatibility with all sized devices.
`rm 33` Deletes partition 33 "userdata"
`p` Print to verify
`mkpartfs` Create a partition and put a filesystem on it. If we only expand the partition it won't help us because the filesystem is still only 4 GB.
a) name: userdata
b) type: ext2 (the tool only supports ext2. This is ok for now.)
c) start: 3439MB (the end of part 32. IT MAY BE DIFFERENT FOR YOU!) Be sure you do not omit the MB part otherwise the offset will overwrite another critical partition.
d) end: 15.8GB (where "grow" ended above. IT MAY BE DIFFERENT FOR YOU!) Be sure you do not omit the GB part otherwise the offset will overwrite another critical partition.
`p` Verify. For me it did not name the partition properly. Gotta fix that.
(if necessary) `name 33 userdata` This is critical for mount to find it in /dev/block/platform/msm.sdcc.1/by-name/ on some/all ROMS.
`p`. Verify one last time. Compare it to my partition table in the attachments. If you want to brick, delete some random partitions here.
Flash Candy5 with TWRP. It's only 239 MB, so it will flash quickly. I do this because Candy5 will reformat mmcblk0p33 from ext2 to ext4 for you. It does this as part of it's system boot, apparently. If you install a different ROM that does not do this, you can reformat it by running `make_ext4fs /dev/block/mmcblk0p33`. If your ROM does not have make_ext4, it likely has some differnt method to make an EXT4 filesystem. `/system/bin/mke2fs -t ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk0p33` may work better. Just flash Candy5 and be done with it.
Tap Wipe > Swipe to Factory Reset.
Tap Reboot > System.
WAIT!!! It will take a minute for the ROM to start the first time. You will have white lines and and possibly a white screen. WAIT. It's moving the DEX files to cache, formatting a partition, creating default folders on the internal storage, and several other things. WAIT! When the screen goes dim or turns off then it's ready.
Cycle the display or turn it on. You should be at the Candy5 lock screen.
USB debugging is on by default. Run "adb shell".
`mount | grep userdata` Make sure mmcblk0p33 is mounted.
`df` Make sure /data is 11.3 GB (or whatever size it is on non-16GB devices).
HELL YEAH, you downgraded, rooted, and fixed the partition problem. Enjoy your tablet!
Thanks to dopekid313 for finding the KDZ.
Thanks to timmytim for Candy5.
Thanks to the creators of the root script, flashify, TWRP, and XDA for being so awesome.
Thanks to marcsoup for fixing a fix to the white lines.
Thanks to navin56 for the partition dumps. PLEASE thank his post!
White lines fix.
What we are going to do is flash the aboot partition with the stock image provided by navin56. I've removed the extra files from the dump, so simply download aboot.img.7z below. Unzip it using 7zip.
These commands are to be run in TWRP. Reboot to TWRP recovery and connect with "adb shell". All of the following commands will be run in ADB under TWRP. If you cannot figure out how to get here, please post in the thread and someone will help you. Onward:
If you do everything correctly then you don't have to reflash your ROM and you won't lose data. This process can be done any time after flashing the KDZ, even before you follow the steps above to resize the userdata partition. It's a completely separate process.
Unzip aboot.img.7z so you have the file named aboot.img. You should also make sure that aboot.img's MD5 sum is e97431a14d1cee3e9edba513be8e2b52. Do not flash the 7z file. Please.
Copy aboot.img to your external SD card. It should live at /sdcard/aboot.img
Boot to TWRP and run "adb shell"
`ls -al /dev/block/platform/msm_sdcc.1/by-name/` Let's make sure we are flashing the right partition. On my device "aboot" is /dev/block/mmcblk0p6. You should verify this on your device or you WILL brick your tablet.
`dd if=/dev/block/mmcblk0p6 of=/sdcard/aboot-fukt.img` Let's back up our current aboot partition before we go flashing things just in case there are unintended consequences later. Be sure you have the same partition that "aboot" referred to in the 4th step or you have just backed up the wrong partition.
`dd if=/sdcard/aboot.img of=/dev/block/mmcblk0p6` Be sure the file exists, is the correct aboot.img, and you are flashing the right partition. You have been warned!!
Reboot TWRP and enjoy your boot animations again.
If I missed anything, please let me know. As far as I know this is the very first tutorial that details what is necessary to accomplish this. Please hit the Thanks button on every thread that you visit to download files!
FAQ:
Q: Why do I only have 11.3 GB of space when my device is 16GB?
A: The entire internal SD card (eMMC) is 16 GB. Gotta have someplace to install the bootloader, recovery, android, the modem OS, the secondary bootloader, the cache, the resource and power manager, and all of the other partitions necessary for the table to operate. Please look at the second screenshot in the OP. All of those 33 partitions take up room on the internal card. Fortunately ALL of those partitions ONLY take up about 4.4 GB. Hence the 'userdata' partition is ~11.3 GB.
If anyone wants to use my work to create a flashable zip to make it easier for novices, please do so. My problem is solved and I don't have the time to create the zip. Please post any questions and I'll gladly answer them! I'm so stoked that we have a usable downgrade method now!
Thank You, Worked Great
Thanks for making this I was gonna do it but was to lazy lol and thanks for linking my thread and giving cred instead of just linking straight to the kdz thank you
grandamle91 said:
Thank You, Worked Great
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Glad to be of help!
dopekid313 said:
Thanks for making this I was gonna do it but was to lazy lol and thanks for linking my thread and giving cred instead of just linking straight to the kdz thank you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Of course! If you hadn't obtained the firmware then we'd all still be looking for a solution. It pisses me off to no end when people try to take credit for other people's work. We all just need to realize and acknowledge that we are simply standing on the shoulders of those who did the work necessary for each of us to do our work.
I just noticed since we formatted the userdata it screws up TWRP. It won't mount Data and it says the settings are corrupted
grandamle91 said:
I just noticed since we formatted the userdata it screws up TWRP. It won't mount Data and it says the settings are corrupted
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Is this after you've rebooted into Candy5 and the partition is reformatted as ext4 (or you've done so manually)? TWRP may not be able to mount an ext2 partition.
EDIT: I just tested this. Following my instructions and flashing to Candy5, TWRP sees mmcblk0p33 (userdata) as the full size and mounts it at /emmc.
For clarification, after you run the parted commands, it will mess with the partition table and TWRP will most likely not be able to see it to remount it - at least not until after a reboot. This is why you need an external SD card from which to install ROMs.
/data not mounted
Edit: nevermind. The partition 33 was still ext2. I had to run make_ext4fs /dev/block/mmcblk0p33 and now I am able to mount /data. Thanks.
Thanks for taking the time to help us.
I followed the steps and till 33 I am good. But once I am in Candy5, I am not able to adb shell (adb not recognizing device eventhough usb debugging is on). I rebooted to recovery and adb works there. But my /data partition is not enabled in TWRP. I am not able to check it either under Mount in TWRP.
Code:
mount | grep userdata
is empty
Code:
df
does not show data
I tried this and my tablet bootlooped. I was able to get into fastboot and restore. I would GREATLY appreciate it if someone who has the time, would kindly donate their valuable time to into making an exe zip or something.
gridironbear said:
I tried this and my tablet bootlooped. I was able to get into fastboot and restore. I would GREATLY appreciate it if someone who has the time, would kindly donate their valuable time to into making an exe zip or something.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
At what point did it bootloop? What was the last step that you took before rebooting?
Zip
I would really appreciate a zip file as I have never been savvy with adb and for whatever reason it doesn't want to work on Windows 10.
drumm3rb0y said:
I would really appreciate a zip file as I have never been savvy with adb and for whatever reason it doesn't want to work on Windows 10.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A zip file for what part? The only part that requires ADB directly is to fix the internal storage. You absolutely have to flash the KDZ and then root before you can do anything. If you are on 5.x then you have no possible way to root, much less flash a zip file.
If you tell me what exactly you are having issues with I will try to help.
fatbas202 said:
A zip file for what part? The only part that requires ADB directly is to fix the internal storage. You absolutely have to flash the KDZ and then root before you can do anything. If you are on 5.x then you have no possible way to root, much less flash a zip file.
If you tell me what exactly you are having issues with I will try to help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The adb part is the part im having issue with. Everything else is flashed already. I was wondering if you could make a zip for the adb part so I can just flash it through twrp.
thanks for the great help. it did work perfectly to regain the lost space.
what about white lines ? is there any solution for that problem ?
I have tried flashing back stock recovery extracted from kdz, dd' but didn't help.
Now i am thinking of flashing back the aboot.bin extracted from original kdz or i can dump ".img" from another working device. (i have 4 similar devices)
what is your opinion i m not a developer and i need your advise. should i go ahead and which partition should i dd ? aboot or abootb or boot ?
regards
shahidmianoor said:
thanks for the great help. it did work perfectly to regain the lost space.
what about white lines ? is there any solution for that problem ?
I have tried flashing back stock recovery extracted from kdz, dd' but didn't help.
Now i am thinking of flashing back the aboot.bin extracted from original kdz or i can dump ".img" from another working device. (i have 4 similar devices)
what is your opinion i m not a developer and i need your advise. should i go ahead and which partition should i dd ? aboot or abootb or boot ?
regards
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have no solid evidence of this, but I suspect that the white lines are caused by a display driver issue where when the bootloader hands over control of the display to the kernel it doesn't get reinitialized properly. I have no ideas as to how to get rid of that at the moment but if I stumble across something I'll be sure to post here.
While I'm not an Android developer, I've been a Linux admin for 10+ years and have a lot of experience with Android devices. I'd be really hesitant to go flashing things ad hoc. While Download Mode may save you if you flash the wrong thing, I'm not entirely sure what the limitations that you may run in to with a locked bootloader are.
After having this device for months on 5.x and FINALLY being able to downgrade and run custom ROMs with root, not seeing a boot animation is a pittance to pay. But I'll keep looking.
i have same problem entered in TWRP but when ADB sheel thorough DP tools it didn't connect to my device. i m also using windows 10
Do I need to Re-mount Data ? I press format data button at TWRP and mount data. It looks work great.
After all process, it shows 16Gb total at storage, 11.04GB available. it works perfectly.
I need the stock V41010d, so I reflash the stock rom rooted at [ROM][STOCK](V410 ONLY)KOT49I.V4101d | 4.4.2 | Rooted + Busybox
Now, my Gpad is at stock V41010d, but I have a question about the boot screen, is it still with white lines and white screen? Any method to fix it?
Hello,
Thanks for the great work. unfortunately I am facing some difficulty, starting from step# 16 "Things get tricky here", how to run"adb shell in TWRP?
also can I use minimal_adb_fastboot_v1.1.3_setup.exe as mentioned in the link in the OP http://www.droidviews.com/your-32gb-lg-g2-shows-only-16gb-storage-space-heres-the-fix/ ?
also I noticed the path have been used includes 'parted' folder, but the folder I have after unzipping the parted zip called 'sdparted-recovery-all-files', do I rename the folder to 'parted' instead?
please help and excuse my broken English.
I'm also having trouble with the adb shell step. When my device is powered on normally, adb commands work. However, in TWRP mode my computer can't recognize the tablet, mount properly, and copy over parted. All the steps have been identical to this point. Any ideas?
iphone5sf said:
Do I need to Re-mount Data ? I press format data button at TWRP and mount data. It looks work great.
After all process, it shows 16Gb total at storage, 11.04GB available. it works perfectly.
I need the stock V41010d, so I reflash the stock rom rooted at [ROM][STOCK](V410 ONLY)KOT49I.V4101d | 4.4.2 | Rooted + Busybox
Now, my Gpad is at stock V41010d, but I have a question about the boot screen, is it still with white lines and white screen? Any method to fix it?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You shouldn't need to remount or format data. The parted command nukes the filesystem and creates a new one formatted as ext2. At this point the running kernel has the old partition table loaded and won't know that the partition has been extended. Simply flash Candy5 and reboot at this point and it will reformat the userdata partition.
See above for the white lines during the boot animation. Known issue, no fix in sight, doesn't really matter.
nmnm4alll said:
Hello,
Thanks for the great work. unfortunately I am facing some difficulty, starting from step# 16 "Things get tricky here", how to run"adb shell in TWRP?
also can I use minimal_adb_fastboot_v1.1.3_setup.exe as mentioned in the link in the OP http://www.droidviews.com/your-32gb-lg-g2-shows-only-16gb-storage-space-heres-the-fix/ ?
also I noticed the path have been used includes 'parted' folder, but the folder I have after unzipping the parted zip called 'sdparted-recovery-all-files', do I rename the folder to 'parted' instead?
please help and excuse my broken English.
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You only need the sdparted-recover-all-files.zip from that site. "parted" is not a folder, but the binary (without a file extension) inside of that zip file. Copy that file to /sbin and you are in business.
zmali1 said:
i have same problem entered in TWRP but when ADB sheel thorough DP tools it didn't connect to my device. i m also using windows 10
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summonholmes said:
I'm also having trouble with the adb shell step. When my device is powered on normally, adb commands work. However, in TWRP mode my computer can't recognize the tablet, mount properly, and copy over parted. All the steps have been identical to this point. Any ideas?
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I'd recommend installing the SDK and pulling the drivers from that. Alternatively, you can try the drivers here: https://github.com/koush/UniversalAdbDriver.
Technically, when I ran the "parted" commands I was actually booted in to rooted 4.4.2 from the KDZ; I wasn't actually in TWRP. It's just not a very recommended way of going about it. I explained how to run all of this from TWRP, but there's no technical reason that you *can't* run this from Android. You just *shouldn't* because you can't cleanly unmount the filesystem and it theoretically could cause filesystem corruption. I just figured that I don't care about that partition getting corrupted since it's getting wiped out.

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