If you have trouble with the QuemuRoot-Script (nothing happens, after starting demon), uninstall your old Kindle USB Driver and install this one.
https://dl.dropbox.com/s/vprplelu9zx7s2o/kindle_fire_usb_driver.rar?dl=1
adb_usb.ini file
Also, These instructions helped me get over the hurdle of not seeing my device when typing adb devices. Not sure if I didn't have the folder and file to begin with or if it was hidden. Either way, when I attempted to create the .android folder it appeared with the said file in it and the correct 0x1949 line in it. After that it worked great! saved me hours of frustration i'm sure
4. Hold down the Windows key and press R to bring up the run dialog and type %USERPROFILE% then click OK.
5. Open the .android folder.
6. Open the adb_usb.ini using Notepad or Wordpad.
7. Type 0x1949 at the end of the file, then save and close adb_usb.ini. (Note, some people are saying the ‘X’ has to be upper-case in order to work. See comments.)
ADB Communication Issues
Thank you for the post, just FYI if you use our download links, our utilities use the latest ADB daemon and API's
so these steps can be ignored.
If you have an old version of the utility and need the update in Zip form, here is another link: https://dl.dropbox.com/u/54456659/ADB%20Update.zip
The key is that the API's and daemon has the following stamp
adb.exe 12/28/2012 4:52 PM 796 KB
AdbWinApi.dll 12/28/2012 4:52 PM 94 KB
AdbWinUsbApi.dll 12/28/2012 4:52 PM 60 KB
Anything older need to be replaced.
The exact location of the files is
Root_with_Restore_by_Bin4ry_v17 move the files to the Stuff Folder
Qemu move the files to the root of the Qemu folder
Note: We apologize to the XDA Community for anyone who experienced trouble downloading from Dropbox.
We were unaware that the Dropbox free service is VERY limited in the amount of download traffic allowed
so we decided to upgrade our Dropbox account to the Team Premium version (ouch $795 Year) which allows
unlimited traffic. We upgraded our account yesterday, you should no longer experience 404 Errors
when using our download links. We thank everyone who is involved with the XDA Community.
It's great to know dropbox has been updated. Great addition for the community. Hopefully it allows potential for it to grow.
Sent from my KFTT using xda app-developers app
Follow Up - Feedback
bbanghyung said:
It's great to know dropbox has been updated. Great addition for the community. Hopefully it allows potential for it to grow.
Sent from my KFTT using xda app-developers app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
bbanghyung,
We hope so as well. Thank you for the feedback, we work hard to improve the Kindle each day.
Hopefully our passion helps others, even if we do not make money. So far we are several tens
of thousands in the hole but this is OK. We will work hard each day hoping the word is passed
to others. In the end, if we do not make money, we can say we loved what we were doing and
at the moment, we are having lots of fun helping people like yourself.
THANK YOU
bbanghyung said:
Also, These instructions helped me get over the hurdle of not seeing my device when typing adb devices. Not sure if I didn't have the folder and file to begin with or if it was hidden. Either way, when I attempted to create the .android folder it appeared with the said file in it and the correct 0x1949 line in it. After that it worked great! saved me hours of frustration i'm sure
4. Hold down the Windows key and press R to bring up the run dialog and type %USERPROFILE% then click OK.
5. Open the .android folder.
6. Open the adb_usb.ini using Notepad or Wordpad.
7. Type 0x1949 at the end of the file, then save and close adb_usb.ini. (Note, some people are saying the ‘X’ has to be upper-case in order to work. See comments.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR THAT LINK FOR SO LONG,
I finally rooted my device thanks to you!
I can't believe I'm having such a hard f***** time doing this.
For the first, after I install the ADB drivers it brings up the same error message on 3 different computers "drivers not installed properly".
But when I plug in my Kindle, I go to the device management and there under Kindle it says "Android Composite ADB driver".
So when I try either the KF First Aid or QemuRoot the bring up the same darn error message "Unable to find ADB"!
This is driving me crazy! I followed the guide step for step, Enabled ADB on the device, no freaking luck.
Also there is no ".android" folder, I can only assume that's part of this mistery.
All help will be greatly appreciated.
Stuck on logo/windows7 not recogonizing
I was given a Kindle Fire 7" HD the other day. Turns on then there is a bit of a flash/interruption then the "Kindle Fire" logo appears and proceeds to slightly animate. That is all it does. I have tried the hard resets many times but to no use. Upon connecting the USB cable to my windows7 pc there is no response other than the Kindle turning on when I do so.
I need to know step by step how to start the process of correcting this from the very beginning.
I look forward to donating!
Thanks in advance.
Related
FIRST OF ALL, I CAN NOT BE HELD RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY DAMAGE YOU DO TO YOUR DEVICE! PROCEED AT YOUR OWN RISK!!!
Now that we got that out of the way...
I have noticed that some people`s Marketplaces simply refuse to update by themselves (exactly what happened in my case) and as most of the people visiting this forums are not tech-savvy and simply want a step-by-step guide to get things working, I decided no harm can be done by me posting this info.
Installing Android SDK revision 8
First of all, you will need to have Android SDK (and ADB of course) installed with the drivers ready to go. In order to get the SDK installed go to the official Android website and download the latest revision (r08 at the time I posted this). You can download any of those files, but I prefer using the executable installer so I can make sure everything is at its place. Now, there are two major flaws with this whole process which have almost made me quit the whole process several times, but I got them sorted out and will help you solve them aswell.
FLAW #1: After beginning the installation process, the installer will prompt you to download a JDK (Java Developer Kit) in order to continue installation. Hit the "Visit sun.java.com" button and download the latest Java SE (currently this one). But before proceeding be sure to download the 32 bit one, as the Android SDK only recognises this version. I know it`s not a big deal, but I spent about two hours trying to figure out what the heck went wrong and it became quite frustrating.
Install the JDK, then the SDK. Once Android SDK is done, simply go ahead and launch SDK Manager (you can find it in Program Files\Android\android-sdk-windows\) and when you get to choose the packages to install, simply check "Accept All" and click "Install". Once it`s done, it`s time to download the drivers. Click "Available packages", tick "Third party Add-ons" and under "Google Inc. add-ons" you should find "Google Usb Driver package". Tick it and click "Install". IF YOU GET AN ERROR SAYING THAT PERMISSION WAS DENIED AND YOU ARE UNDER WINDOWS 7, COPY THE WHOLE "Android" FOLDER CONTAINING THE SDK TO YOUR DESKTOP (OR ANY OTHER PLACE) AND REPEAT THE STEPS ABOVE. I know it`s quite rudimentary, but it does its job. Once it`s done, a folder named "google-usb_driver" will be created under Android. Be sure to correctly copy it to the original location in case you had permission issues.
FLAW #2: Ever since Android SDK r08, Google decided to remove the ADB files so now they have to be manually placed in the folder. I have uploaded them for you, so click here to download them. Once downloaded, extract the archive to the "Android\android-sdk-windows\tools" folder.
OPTIONAL: Go to Start Menu, right click on Computer, click Properties. The System window will appear, where you need to go to "Advanced system settings". Once there, click on "Environment variables" and where it says "System variables", look for PATH. Once found, highlight it and click "Edit..." then add the line "C:\Program Files\Android\android-sdk-windows\tools;" at the end. Click "Ok", "Ok" and "Ok", then restart your computer.
Right now everything should be working as expected. Connect your HD2 to the PC via USB and hope for the best. If the drivers are working and it is recognized as a HTC device, open a command prompt and type "adb devices". If you get anything such as "List of devices attached" followed by some code such as "0123456789ABCDEF device", everything is working well. Good job, you just correctly and completely installed Android SDK on your PC!
If not...
Check your device manager and if you see any devices related to your HD2 having problems, simply right click on them and update the drivers with the ones downloaded earlier in the "google-usb_driver" folder then reboot your computer.
We`re all set! ...What now?
The whole process is actually quite simple. First of all, download the new 2.2.6 Marketplace and put it somewhere accessible, such as your desktop. Open a command prompt and enter the following:
Code:
adb remount
adb shell
rm /system/app/Vending.apk
This will basically delete the old Marketplace from your device.
Now go to the folder where you placed the new Marketplace, hold down Shift, right-click and select "Open command window here". A command prompt should pop up at the exact location. Now execute the following command:
Code:
adb push Vending.apk /system/app
And that is it! Now restart your device and try to run your Marketplace, it will load for half a minute or so then it will start normally. Enjoy!
I know this is rather a tutorial for installing the SDK, but I figured it would be useful to let everyone know how I managed to solve my problem. In case I skipped any steps or you notice anything wrong/wish to add anything, please feel free to do so!
If you feel my post has helped you in any way, do not hesitate to hit the "Thank" button!
Reserved post for further mini-tutorials.
At least on my r08 install if you install the platform tools component then adb will be available under the platform-tools directory (moved from the tools directory).
@OP
Did you test this on a non sense build?
This procedure will most likely not work with Cyanogenmod ROMs. That and I'd suggest you give the newest market version (2.2.7) instead. I'm not willing to destroy my ROM again by trying it on CM.
Ok, I have had multiple Android devices and have never had a problem with any of them with adb however, my computer had done some weird thing and every time I opened SDK Manager, it would open, but then time out and freeze..
SO.
I uninstalled both java development kit, and sdk manager, but now the manager wont open at all.. It just flashes a command prompt and exits out... So I ran the android.bat batch file in a command window, and i got this error
'xcopy' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
ERROR: SWT folder 'lib\x86_64' does not exist.
Please set ANDROID_SWT to point to the folder containing swt.jar for your platform.
If anyone can help me, I would be much appreciated, I just got two new devices this month. I was able to root my SGS2 before, and now I am trying to root my Kindle, and all this is happening... Any help would me much appreciated...
Oh, and I did check my system32 file, and I do have xcopy in my system files
UntamedDeviance said:
Ok, I have had multiple Android devices and have never had a problem with any of them with adb however, my computer had done some weird thing and every time I opened SDK Manager, it would open, but then time out and freeze..
SO.
I uninstalled both java development kit, and sdk manager, but now the manager wont open at all.. It just flashes a command prompt and exits out... So I ran the android.bat batch file in a command window, and i got this error
'xcopy' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
ERROR: SWT folder 'lib\x86_64' does not exist.
Please set ANDROID_SWT to point to the folder containing swt.jar for your platform.
If anyone can help me, I would be much appreciated, I just got two new devices this month. I was able to root my SGS2 before, and now I am trying to root my Kindle, and all this is happening... Any help would me much appreciated...
Oh, and I did check my system32 file, and I do have xcopy in my system files
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure why you'd be running the android.bat file? It's not really required to get things working. I have no idea why the SDK Manager would be hanging, but if you really want to have that, then I'd do a full uninstall of everything, reboot, and then try again. Did you download the SDK from here?
Technically you don't HAVE to install the SDK to get access to the Kindle Fire. You only really need fastboot.exe, and adb.exe, and the Android drivers. All of these are available in a single download via the following post. You also don't have to use the actual utility if you don't want to, although it is actually quite cool and recommended if you are new to this.
sl0ttedpig said:
I'm not sure why you'd be running the android.bat file? It's not really required to get things working. I have no idea why the SDK Manager would be hanging, but if you really want to have that, then I'd do a full uninstall of everything, reboot, and then try again. Did you download the SDK from here?
Technically you don't HAVE to install the SDK to get access to the Kindle Fire. You only really need fastboot.exe, and adb.exe, and the Android drivers. All of these are available in a single download via the following post. You also don't have to use the actual utility if you don't want to, although it is actually quite cool and recommended if you are new to this.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, I appreciate that... I was only trying to run android.bat because it is what SDK Manager first runs when it first boots and that is why SDK won't boot... I have tried a full uninstall, reboot, install, reboot... But I have done this for a while, so I am really comfortable with adb, so I will just get the files there... Thank you for those links.. I will do it that way, something to make it easier for always helps
EDIT:
I must have messed with something in my system settings somewhere to corrupt a bunch of stuff... I did a system restore to the 18th of December, reinstalled, and everything works perfect now... Oh well! Haha
Previous "first try" threads are pretty old, I'm concerned that information is outdated.
First, I wouldn't have done it, but the Fire just cries out to be uncrippled. It is 6.3. I am pretty new to this. I stopped tearing into stuff about 11 years ago, I was OK with it then but I stopped caring about it and haven't paid attention since. But I know one thing, and that is how to ask for help.
I downloaded the SDK Manager and ran the installer, installing SDK Tools and SDK Platform-Tools, then tried to install the drivers from the Kindle Fire Utility; it is the most recent version, 9.5 I believe (from yesterday).
I got:
***********************************************
* Installing Permanent Root *
***********************************************
***********************************************
* Activating Fastboot (4002) *
***********************************************
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
The kindle has been told to reboot in Fastboot Mode.
twrp.img is missing.
So we will download it for you!
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
The system cannot find the path specified.
Download successful.
***********************************************
* NOTICE *
***********************************************
Installing TWRP...
If we get stuck here for awhile, power the kindle on and off a few times.
You should also check device manager for "kindle" If so, rerun the driver
installer that came packaged with KFU.
The system cannot find the path specified.
***********************************************
* READ ME *
***********************************************
If we get stuck here a long time, check the ADB drivers in windows.
Fastboot uses a different device than ADB, so make sure it is installed as an
ADB device. If you see "kindle" in device manager, you need to install the
drivers. You can also try running install_drivers.bat in the drivers folder.
Do NOT unplug the kindle if we are stuck here, leave it plugged in and on.
Do NOT touch the kindle at all if we are stuck.
Setting Recovery Bootmode.
Please wait...
...And that's it, about half an hour ago. I know one thing, that when "NOT" is capitalized, you "don't touch the big, beautiful, shiny red button."
How long do I wait? What is going on, and if something is wrong, what do I do next?
Thanks for looking.
edited to add: I tried running install_drivers.bat; "UNC paths are not supported... Defaulting to Windows directory. The system cannot find the path specified."
Did you extract the contents of the Kindle Fire Utility zip archive before running anything?
Did you install the drivers?
Did you read this guide?
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
kinfauns said:
Did you extract the contents of the Kindle Fire Utility zip archive before running anything?
Did you install the drivers?
Did you read this guide?
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1552547
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you, yes I did. I read the guide several times. I did extract the contents first, before running anything.
I did manage to install the drivers manually, in between writing the first post and your response, by going through Device Manager and pointing it toward the Kindle Fire Utility folder.
I am confident that I won't permanently destroy anything, but at the same time I feel blind.
M0sca said:
Thank you, yes I did. I read the guide several times. I did extract the contents first, before running anything.
I did manage to install the drivers manually, in between writing the first post and your response, by going through Device Manager and pointing it toward the Kindle Fire Utility folder.
I am confident that I won't permanently destroy anything, but at the same time I feel blind.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
All of those "The system cannot find the path specified." errors are because it can't find the directories within the KFU folder. Did you move the run.bat file or something? Within the KFU directory, you should have...
drivers
files
tools
install_drivers.bat
run.bat
Like the first 5 errors after "Activating Fastboot (4002)" it's looking for the tools directory. Most of the time this is caused by users who try to run the batch file from within the zip archive.
EDIT: I'm not a Windows guru by any means, but I was just looking at some docs about UNC paths. Do you have the KFU directory on some shared directory or mapped network drive or something? Try moving it to some place local like your user directory and run it from there.
kinfauns, I thank you for your patience.
Is it possible that the fact that I am running Windows in a vm on a Mac is part of the problem, that I downloaded Kindle Fire Utility (for Windows) in the Mac environment, then tried running it in the Windows environment?
I finally said screw it, and unplugged the Kindle. It is fine. I have to go to bed now, I will try doing it all from Windows (including the download) tomorrow.
Thank you again for your patience. I'm sorry that I ran out of time in the middle of requesting your assistance, that is rude and implies that I don't value the help. On the contrary, I value it very much. But the hours in between now and tomorrow morning mean nothing to the machines, and everything to my biological recharging. I apologize.
M0sca said:
kinfauns, I thank you for your patience.
Is it possible that the fact that I am running Windows in a vm on a Mac is part of the problem, that I downloaded Kindle Fire Utility (for Windows) in the Mac environment, then tried running it in the Windows environment?
I finally said screw it, and unplugged the Kindle. It is fine. I have to go to bed now, I will try doing it all from Windows (including the download) tomorrow.
Thank you again for your patience. I'm sorry that I ran out of time in the middle of requesting your assistance, that is rude and implies that I don't value the help. On the contrary, I value it very much. But the hours in between now and tomorrow morning mean nothing to the machines, and everything to my biological recharging. I apologize.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, that's fine... no apologies necessary. It's good to step away from the situation for a while and regroup when things don't seem to go right. In the interest of full disclosure, Mac OS X Lion is my primary OS. All of this Windows stuff I do through Parallels Desktop VM and I don't have any problems with it. I don't know what you are using, but I'll warn you now that if you are trying to use Oracle's VirtualBox, it's not going to do the job for you. There seems to be some bug in their USB implementation that breaks adb and fastboot.
My guess right now is that you are trying to run KFU from a shared directory that resides on your Mac. If you look at post #2 of the guide I mentioned previously, I suggest putting everything in C:\kfu before running things. It doesn't necessarily have to be that directory, but you should trying putting it somewhere on the boot drive. The 2 minutes I spent looking at UNC paths seems to indicate cmd.exe doesn't like them and that might be the cause of your troubles. Good luck.
kinfauns, I followed the instructions better this time, downloading KFU in the Windows environment and extracting directly to C:, and everything proceeded perfectly. Thank you!
Having just purchased another Atrix that was running stock Gingerbread 2.3.6 (4.5.141), I was frustrated by the lack of a complete rooting guide and appropriate files. There is a guide in this forum (Link) which is based on an article from Android Advice (Link), but I noticed that both lack a lot of basic information for the inexperienced user. Also, the zip file available from Android Advice was missing a key file (Superuser!). So, I made a guide.
This may look complicated, but is super easy. If you don't feel comfortable using this method, you can use this automated tool (yes, it works on 4.5.141). It won't be as satisfying, or even feel good. You won't learn anything, but you will be rooted. Download tool here (link in OP is broken).
Pre-work:
1) Read the xda Atrix Beginners Guide (then read it again)! (Link)
2) Download and install 7zip. (Link)
3) If they are not already installed on your PC, download and install the Atrix drivers for Windows. (Link)
4) Download the attached files (sorry, had to break them in to two files due to forum size constraints). Create a new folder on your hard drive named "Android" (c:\Android). Extract both attached zip files to this folder (all the files need to be in "Android", not in a sub folder).
5) On your phone go to Settings, Applications, Development, then tick USB Debugging.
Notes:
Do not type quotes.
After each command hit enter.
Be mindful of spaces.
You can simply copy each command and paste in to the command prompt.
If you encounter any errors after entering a command, just ignore and keep going (assuming you entered the command properly).
Work:
1) Attach your phone to the PC via USB. In the USB settings make sure USB Mass Storage is selected.
2) Reboot phone while holding volume down until you see "fastboot".
3) Press volume up to initiate fastboot.
4) On your PC click the Start menu, then in the search box type "cmd"
5) In the command prompt type "cd c:/android"
6) "fastboot.exe flash preinstall preinstall.img"
7) "fastboot.exe reboot"
8) Wait for phone to reboot.
9) "adb shell"
10) "/preinstall/dosu". If you get an error (I did), type "/preinstall/su"
11) "/bin/mount -o remount,rw /system"
12) cp /preinstall/su /system/bin/"
13) "chmod 6755 /system/bin/su"
14) "PATH=/system/bin:$PATH pm install /preinstall/Superuser.apk"
15) Reboot phone.
16) On your phone go to your apps and make sure the Superuser icon is there. Open the app, go to settings, then update the SU binary.
17) Open a terminal emulator, then type "su" and hit enter. You should see "#" if you are rooted. Or, download Root Checker from the Play Store.
My phone rebooted itself after step 11, so I had to re-open the adb shell.
I copied and pasted the text from the command prompt for reference (attached).
If I missed anything or have any errors, let me know and I will update the post.
Good luck!
Note: If you experience problems with updating superuser after rooting, try going in to Manage Applications and clear Superuser data. If that doesn't work go to the Play Store and Install Superuser Update Fixer.
Downloads:
My Atrix AFH Folder
*****
Thanksssss
Just want to show my appreciation. Your guide followed step by step worked flawlessly on my atrix. Ive been trying to root this darn thing for about a week and a half with no luck. found your guide and worked perfect first time around. Thanks..
David
Thanks for the information. Just wanted to do this, and while reading the procedure, I found that there is no Superuser.apk in the attachments. Do I have to get it from some other place.
Thanks
upndwn4par said:
Having just purchased another Atrix that was running stock Gingerbread 2.3.6 (4.5.141), I was frustrated by the lack of a complete rooting guide and appropriate files. There is a guide in this forum (Link) which is based on an article from Android Advice (Link), but I noticed that both lack a lot of basic information for the inexperienced user. Also, the zip file available from Android Advice was missing a key file (Superuser!). So, I made a guide.
Remember to click THANKS if this guide helped you!
Pre-work:
1) Read the xda Atrix Noob Guide (then read it again)! Link
2) Download and install 7zip. Link
3) If they are not already installed on your PC, download and install the Atrix drivers for Windows. Link.
4) Download the attached files (sorry, had to break them in to two files due to forum size constraints). Create a new folder on your hard drive named "Android" (c:\Android). Extract both attached zip files to this folder (all the files need to be in "Android", not in a sub folder).
5) On your phone go to Settings, Applications, Development, then tick USB Debugging.
Notes:
Do not type quotes.
After each command hit enter.
Be mindful of spaces.
Work:
1) Attach your phone to the PC via USB. In the USB settings make sure USB Mass Storage is selected.
2) Reboot phone while holding volume down.
3) Press volume up to initiate fastboot.
4) On your PC click the Start menu, then in the search box type "cmd"
5) In the command prompt type "cd c:/android"
6) "fastboot.exe flash preinstall preinstall.img"
7) "fastboot.exe reboot"
8) Wait for phone to reboot.
9) "adb shell"
10) "/preinstall/dosu". If you get an error (I did), type "/preinstall/su"
11) "/bin/mount -o remount,rw /system"
12) cp /preinstall/su /system/bin/"
13) "chmod 6755 /system/bin/su"
14) "PATH=/system/bin:$PATH pm install /preinstall/Superuser.apk"
15) Reboot phone.
16) On your phone go to your apps and make sure the Superuser icon is there. Open the app, go to settings, then update the SU binary.
My phone rebooted itself after step 11, so I had to re-open the adb shell.
I copied and pasted the text from the command prompt for reference (attached).
If I missed anything or have any errors, let me know and I will update the post.
Good luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
RE super user pkg.
aksma said:
Thanks for the information. Just wanted to do this, and while reading the procedure, I found that there is no Superuser.apk in the attachments. Do I have to get it from some other place.
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well for me what happen is down at the bottom he has two links for two of the files you need to zip. in one of those, there is a superuser file. When doing the cmd commands at the end you will end up installing the superuser. The best thing to do which really helped me was to download the command prompt text file, that way you can mimic exactly what you see. Hope this helps.
-David
Thanks David, I just started doing the same. Lets see how it goes.
good luck
aksma said:
Thanks David, I just started doing the same. Lets see how it goes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
no problem. Believe me i was in the same position. I must of tried rooting mine like 15 times to no avail ,then i found this thread and it worked.
Worked like a Champ!! Thanks David... Was quick and easy.. ..
excellent
aksma said:
Worked like a Champ!! Thanks David... Was quick and easy.. ..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good deal. So glad i found this thread haha.
Glad I could help!
good one.
Thanks a lot
was so expected that this guide
Going to give it a try
I read through everything and think I have somewhat of a clue on what I need to do..LOL. Whatever the results I will post back and let you know. I have had my atrix since it was first released and have never had the time to root it as I cannot be without a phone couldn't take a chance.
I retire soon so hopefully will have more time to get invovled in things as this is a great forum.
Mac
Thanks!
Rooted phone
dmacdog said:
I read through everything and think I have somewhat of a clue on what I need to do..LOL. Whatever the results I will post back and let you know. I have had my atrix since it was first released and have never had the time to root it as I cannot be without a phone couldn't take a chance.
I retire soon so hopefully will have more time to get invovled in things as this is a great forum.
Mac
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Welcome to the wonderful world of messing with your phone!
You really can't harm your phone trying to root it. If you type a command wrong, just re-type it. No worries. There are lots of good guides out there for whatever you want to do. The noob guide (linked on the first page) is a great place to start. And there are plenty of members willing to help.
Let us know how things go!
thanks
that was cool!
very usefull!! thank you!
very useful
Sent from my MB860 using xda premium
condor7272 said:
that was cool!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes it is. Awesome feeling to look in your app drawer and see this:
THANKS!!
upndwn4par said:
Welcome to the wonderful world of messing with your phone!
You really can't harm your phone trying to root it. If you type a command wrong, just re-type it. No worries. There are lots of good guides out there for whatever you want to do. The noob guide (linked on the first page) is a great place to start. And there are plenty of members willing to help.
Let us know how things go!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
followed the directions and am now rooted!!
next to look for boot load unlock - not sure why but 'im gonna figure it out - and then an ics rom or wait for the q3 'official' motorola release . . . decisions
1iJakk said:
followed the directions and am now rooted!!
next to look for boot load unlock - not sure why but 'im gonna figure it out - and then an ics rom or wait for the q3 'official' motorola release . . . decisions
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Don't unlock your bootloader if you think you will want official Moto ICS update (major hard brick risk).
This is for those on ICS only. If you have upgraded to jellybean, this will not work.
There have been other posts, and this one is nothing new, in fact it's a remake of DebugfsRoot so that author gets all credit. I just made a couple of tweaks to help those that might be having a fuss with it. First, this is assuming you are using a windows PC. I don't work on MACs. Next, make sure you have ADB working properly on your PC. To do this:
Go to your start menu and open a command prompt, usually by typing "cmd" in the run blank.
Type adb
If you don't get a whole heap of feedback of how to use adb returned to you, and instead get an error, you don't have it set right. If you're sure you installed the development kit and you have ADB on your PC, do the following:
FIND IT... and add it to your system path variable. adb.exe comes with the root extract, so if you don't have the kit installed, you can use that instead, but seriously, if you want to root and enjoy this hobby to its fullest, install the android kit. The most common location is "C:\Program Files (x86)\Android\android-sdk-windows\platform-tools" - but hey, get this, did you know the asus sync software available from their site also includes it? I just now found that out haha...
To add whichever absolute path to your system path variable, start menu > control panel > system > advanced system settings > environment variables button > In the system variables window, scroll down to path, click it, click EDIT > move your cursor to the very end and add ; again that's (semi-colon) - you'll see other entries there which show you, just follow the pattern. Remember, you only need to do this if your original attempt at typing adb didn't work. Save your settings, return to that command window, and try adb again, you should have better results this time.
Now then, download the root package here:
https://dl.dropbox.com/u/33560221/DebugfsRoot_v1.8.exe
This is the original software with slight enhancements by me...those enhancements are all to the BAT file, and are as follows:
The EXE file is a self-extracting archive which will extract the contents to C:\tabletroot Please don't change this install location. You'll see why in a moment. the RootDebugfs.bat was edited as follows:
Within each push command, I preceeded the file name with C:\tabletroot so it knows exactly where to find what it needs. I found if you just pushed without it, it didn't like it too much.
Last, after each "wait-for-device" command, I added TIMEOUT 120 This forces the batch file to sleep for 2 minutes allowing plenty of time for your tablet to reboot. I found if you didn't do this, it would try to do the next commands way too soon causing failure. This should give enough time for you to get to your desktop before the next command is issued. If you find it's too long and you're ready to go, just press a key and that will kill the clock. If not long enough, edit the batch file with any text editor, and increase the timeout time.
All other files are what was originally found. I didn't update any of the apks or edit any other file than the main batch file. That's it. I used these exact files to root my tf300t on firmware version .30 with no issue of any kind. I hope this helps someone. If you run into trouble, not sure how much help I can be. I'm simply posting exactly what I did. I didn't author anything other than the edits mentioned above. Good luck.
Did the your_path thing and it didn't work.
Could you describe just a bit more which part you're having trouble with and what happened?
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T using xda app-developers app
I added ;<your_path> at the end of the path and it did not change anything in the CMD window after imputing adb, when nothing happened before.
I'm sure it's something that I did not do that went wrong.
The your path thing was just a descriptor. You need to replace that with the location of your adb.exe file so it would look like ;c:\program files\ ... and so on. I gave a sample path of where mine is but it could vary between systems.
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T using xda app-developers app
Well if my previous answer doesn't prove I've never rooted anything...
Where do you DL the adb file from?
Couple Choices
10010110 said:
Well if my previous answer doesn't prove I've never rooted anything...
Where do you DL the adb file from?
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OK, I will assume you do not have the android development kit installed, so you still have a couple of choices here:
ADB comes with the archive I directed you to download, so if you download it and run the EXE, you'll find ADB inside the newly created folder I mentioned, so using this method, you would add... ;C:\tabletroot
ADB also comes with the ASUS sync software found on the ASUS website. If you have / will download and install this software, the ADB file will be located here: C:\Program Files (x86)\ASUS\ASUS Sync or it might be in C:\Program Files\ASUS\ASUS Sync just depends on the type of system you have. I have a 64-bit OS, so I have a Program Files and a Program Files (x86) folder (the x86 is for 32-bit programs) - in this situation, you would want to add ;C:\Program Files (x86)\ASUS\ASUS Sync or ;C:\Program Files\ASUS\ASUS Sync
Remember if you go with option one, download the archive I provided and run it before you add / test to your path variable, because that's what puts ADB in place. Once you have that all done, just go run the BAT file - after you connect your tablet and can see it on your PC as a media device that is
Clarification
So using this method do we need the blob files or was that just for downgrading, and since we don't need to downgrade using this method, everything that we need is in that self extracting exe file? I'm not interested to unlock bootloader -for now-...just want a few tweaks and to install a few root apps
Sorry, I only have experience rooting a couple HTC devices and they were both 1 touch and rooted.
I hear you, and they are legit questions. This is for rooting only. This procedure doesn't unlock your bootloader, which is why i used it. All you need is in the archive.
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T using xda app-developers app
Another question, do you have to put the tablet into any special mode in order for the batch file to work? If I remember correctly, the phones just had to be on, plugged in via usb (duh) and the batch files did the rest. The batch file has the 120 second pause, but it seems like it does the first part with -
1. waiting for device to be detected
2. daemon not started
3. daemon started successfully
then it just sits there, and its been longer than 2 minutes...what am I missing?
Only mode i know of is to put it in media mode mentioned above. Also I've read to turn off asus sync found in the sync section of settings.
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T using xda app-developers app
HandicapFailure said:
Another question, do you have to put the tablet into any special mode in order for the batch file to work? If I remember correctly, the phones just had to be on, plugged in via usb (duh) and the batch files did the rest. The batch file has the 120 second pause, but it seems like it does the first part with -
1. waiting for device to be detected
2. daemon not started
3. daemon started successfully
then it just sits there, and its been longer than 2 minutes...what am I missing?
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Either unknown sources, or USB debugging might need to be on.
Ah yes forgot those. I'd do both thankya.
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T using xda app-developers app
FYI the batch file does not work with windows xp, I searched and seems timeout is not supported. Sucks having an old OS..
I ran the commands manually and the root worked, so thanks anyway!
rickc3k said:
FYI the batch file does not work with windows xp, I searched and seems timeout is not supported. Sucks having an old OS..
I ran the commands manually and the root worked, so thanks anyway!
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Wow, I didn't know that. Thanks for the tip.
Sent from my ASUS Transformer Pad TF300T using xda app-developers app