Related
Bought a new Nexus 7 because my wife and I have them and love them. We had bought our daughter a cheap 'funtab' from walmart just so she could play a few games she loves and hopefully leave ours alone, the funtab was a complete POS so it was returned to WM and just bought her a N7 instead.
When booted, the tablet it immediately notified me of the update from 4.1.2 to 4.2.1. Each time it tried to update it would fail partially through, not sure why. So I thought I'd download and use the toolkit to force the update. After unlocking, rooting, installing busybox and so on. I choose the option to flash stock image. The update process started OK there but part way through gave an error, something about needing to be 'X' but is instead 'x' before going back to the home screen. Now the tablet is stuck in fastboot mode, and cant boot to either recovery or android. I think I may be in trouble here.... Any suggestions?
#1 reason why people shouldn't use tool kits to root. You have no idea what went wrong or where the problem occurred.
I'm assuming that your tablet is unlocked so you need to download a custom recovery and install it via fastboot.
Then download the Stock 4.2.1 ROM from the Android development section and flash it in the recovery.
This should give you an idea of how to do it.
http://www.androidcentral.com/how-unlock-bootloader-and-root-your-nexus-7
Sent from my Nexus 7
I've done more research and I'm currently working on getting the android sdk going. I've downloaded it, jdk, the proper factory image (i think I f'd up by accidentally downloading the factory image for the hspa model). My question now is can the factory image be flashed from what appears to be fastboot mode, or do i need to flash custom recovery first (via the sdk)? I can confirm that the bootloaded is unlocked.
Ok so I was able to flash the stock image using the instructions found at http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1907796
This process went extremely well once I had all my ducks in a row. Thanks for the help.
Hi.
So, a quick overview. My laptop suddenly stopped recognizing my Nexus 10 while in the midst of transferring some files over. I decided to finally root. I used the cf-autoroot tool for Nexus 10 Lollipop. The last step of the rooting involves an automatic reboot. Now my Nexus 10 is stuck in the boot.
Details:
theunlockr (DOT) com/2014/11/22/how-to-root-the-nexus-10-on-android-5-0/
That is the guide I used, including the linked cf-autoroot. Sorry for the formatting, I don't have enough posts to post links.
My Nexus 10 is stuck on the step where it shows the four circles moving around. Not sure if that's important.
The cf-autoroot appeared to work successfully except for a piece in the middle that reads:
Same problem. The procedure seemed to go well, except maybe the mounting failed? It says:
Mounting...
- System
- Cache
--- Fail
I tried using the tool several times on two computers, and did my best to update drivers directly from Google (it appears the drivers are all up to date).
My Nexus 10 was on Lollipop. As far as I know, it was up to date, so I think that means it was on 5.0.1
Help?
Hello autoroot is no longer required. Supersu from recovery is enough.
You could just reflash original kernel
Does
Fastboot boot boot. Img works? It boots on the given image without flaging. The boot image is located in the archive to update
Sent from my Xiaomi MI2s
Khaon said:
Hello autoroot is no longer required. Supersu from recovery is enough.
You could just reflash original kernel
Does
Fastboot boot boot. Img works? It boots on the given image without flaging. The boot image is located in the archive to update
Sent from my Xiaomi MI2s
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is what I have come here to find out. I'm receiving my Nexus 10 in the mail today. I'm familiar with Nexus devices so I just assume everything is the same with the Nexus 10. But I know since Lollipop came out, there have been changes to how to root on certain devices. Are you saying that everything has been fixed to where I can just install the latest TWRP and flash the latest beta SuperSU on stock ROM and I will be good? If so, then it's the same as my Nexus 5 so I shouldn't have any issues.
jsgraphicart said:
This is what I have come here to find out. I'm receiving my Nexus 10 in the mail today. I'm familiar with Nexus devices so I just assume everything is the same with the Nexus 10. But I know since Lollipop came out, there have been changes to how to root on certain devices. Are you saying that everything has been fixed to where I can just install the latest TWRP and flash the latest beta SuperSU on stock ROM and I will be good? If so, then it's the same as my Nexus 5 so I shouldn't have any issues.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yep, just flash once SU through twrp(in order to get the su binary in the system partition) and then you can use play store to update the binary and the program itself.
CM12 has built in su and nighties are official now.
Khaon said:
Yep, just flash once SU through twrp(in order to get the su binary in the system partition) and then you can use play store to update the binary and the program itself.
CM12 has built in su and nighties are official now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks. I just wanted to double check before I went jumping into it. I'm looking forward to tinkering with it when I get home from work.
Khaon said:
Yep, just flash once SU through twrp(in order to get the su binary in the system partition) and then you can use play store to update the binary and the program itself.
CM12 has built in su and nighties are official now.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So I attempted to do all this when I got home yesterday. I found that after unlocking the bootloader, I got stuck in a boot loop. After doing some research I found that this has been an issue with the Nexus 10. Is there a reason for this? I read that locking the bootloader again fixed it, which it did. But I didn't want it locked. So I researched more and found that a a factory reset in stock recovery would fix it. I still had a boot loop. I managed to somehow get everything straightened out with a series of random tries and after installing TWRP and rooting and, again, getting the boot loop I attempted to go back into recovery but accidentally did a simple restart. For some reason, it booted right up after the restart so now I think everything is fine. But why is the Nexus 10 being so difficult? I never had these issues with other Nexus devices. Maybe some of this info will help the OP as well.
Hm unlocking the bootloader does erase whole content but I guess you are already aware of that.
How long did you wait? First boot can take ages much longer than before.
I never had any issues and I have my bootloader unlocked
Khaon said:
Hm unlocking the bootloader does erase whole content but I guess you are already aware of that.
How long did you wait? First boot can take ages much longer than before.
I never had any issues and I have my bootloader unlocked
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I let it sit for a while. I own a Nexus 5 and I'm familiar with the long first boot. It just seemed like a long time to me. I thought maybe since it was a two year old device that it may take longer. The device is new to me so I'm not familiar with boot times and all that are specific to it yet. But compared to the boot time after I relocked the boot loader, there was a big difference. After re-locking, it booted up in about a minute or two. Flashing TWRP even seemed to mess up some stuff. I think it may have deleted the OS or something. It couldn't mount anything afterwards and even selecting reboot boot loader gave me the prompt that there was no OS installed. So I flashed the system.img, cache.img and userdata.img manually. Which seemed to fix it. And even after I got everything straightened out, it boot up in about a minute or two again. The only time I had issues with getting it to boot is unlocking the boot loader coming from complete stock.
nexus 10 stuck on bootload up
jsgraphicart said:
I let it sit for a while. I own a Nexus 5 and I'm familiar with the long first boot. It just seemed like a long time to me. I thought maybe since it was a two year old device that it may take longer. The device is new to me so I'm not familiar with boot times and all that are specific to it yet. But compared to the boot time after I relocked the boot loader, there was a big difference. After re-locking, it booted up in about a minute or two. Flashing TWRP even seemed to mess up some stuff. I think it may have deleted the OS or something. It couldn't mount anything afterwards and even selecting reboot boot loader gave me the prompt that there was no OS installed. So I flashed the system.img, cache.img and userdata.img manually. Which seemed to fix it. And even after I got everything straightened out, it boot up in about a minute or two again. The only time I had issues with getting it to boot is unlocking the boot loader coming from complete stock.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I getting the exact same thing after following instructions to root the machine
I'm not the most experience but I did my nexus 4 & 7 on 4.4.4. now on this 5.0 it seemed a lot hard this time around
I left it on boot load up screen for 3hrs and its still going round? what do I do?
Quick update: I press power +vol up + down and it comes up with the screen saving its unlocked. but the recovery mode just comes up with a android and red exclamation mark.
please help?
regards
Tom
tomistrouble said:
I getting the exact same thing after following instructions to root the machine
I'm not the most experience but I did my nexus 4 & 7 on 4.4.4. now on this 5.0 it seemed a lot hard this time around
I left it on boot load up screen for 3hrs and its still going round? what do I do?
Quick update: I press power +vol up + down and it comes up with the screen saving its unlocked. but the recovery mode just comes up with a android and red exclamation mark.
please help?
regards
Tom
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Once you get in recovery mode with the android and the red explanation mark, hit all three buttons (Vol up , down and power) until (It can be tricky keep trying) you get a menu. Then use the volume buttons to select "Wipe Data/Factory rest" let it do its thing and reboot. Allow it to boot for 5-10 minutes.
Good luck
I have rooted many phones before without an issue, and during the root process for this phone, everything was going great, I flashed SuperSU zip in TWRP and rebooted, since it was the first boot I expected a decently long wait, after about 25 minutes I followed the guide's instructions for Verizon since it did say some Verizon users were experiencing long first boot times. I took the battery out like it said, put it back in, then proceeded to fastboot boot2.img, like the guide said. After letting it sit for an hour this time, I got the idea that something was obviously wrong. After multiple attempts with no success I tried to fix it myself. So far I have learned that on the fastboot screen it says my bootloader is locked again, even after unlocking it. I have tried flashing TWRP as a recovery, just to at least have a recovery boot, that does not work either unfortunately. So as of right now, all I have is a v20 that has no OS, a locked bootloader, no way of booting recovery, I can fastboot with no ADB, and its virtually a paperweight. If anyone has a solution to at least get back to Stock, I would greatly appreciate it! Thanks!
First off. It will say: Bootloader Unlocked: No
Thats normal. 2nd. you are not bricked. You have TWRP installed. You just need to redo some steps.
PM me. and I will help you.
Did you get it fixed?
frome901 said:
Did you get it fixed?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
He has not responded to my pm
What roms can we use with dirty santa root?
me2151 said:
First off. It will say: Bootloader Unlocked: No
Thats normal. 2nd. you are not bricked. You have TWRP installed. You just need to redo some steps.
PM me. and I will help you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Bricked 2 LG V20s this way any help would be appreciated lol what steps do I need to redo...
TheDantee said:
Bricked 2 LG V20s this way any help would be appreciated lol what steps do I need to redo...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In his case we needed to redo from step 3.
I managed to un-brick mines after returning sadly from the Sprint store.
First, get to the boot loader screen and try running thru the steps again, especially step 3. You need to make sure you have TWRP.
Use this link to make sure you can get into the different modes (Download mode, fastboot, etc) http://www.hardreset.info/devices/lg/lg-v20/
Once you can get TWRP to show up,then you are good. In the mean time I downloaded "LS997-deODEXd-signed"
When I got into TWRP, I transferred the file to my phone. Rebooted from TWRP back into TWRP and flashed the ROM.
During my reboots, I do get a message saying my phone is corrupt, blah blahblah, but I just wait a few seconds and it will boot up.
Hope this helps.
I had managed to brick mines only 3 hours after upgrading from my Note 4. It took me from 9pm to almost 2am to get it back up again. I can live with the message about my phone being unbootable until someone comes up with a work thru.
Bricked T-Mobile v20
I have rooted many phones before without an issue, and during the root process for this phone, everything was going great, I flashed SuperSU zip in TWRP and rebooted, since it was flash a new rom on it then i get boot loop with TWRP. so i decide to OEM LOCK again after that everything was stuck on my phone just boot loop with LG so any solutions please help me...... THx u for help me.
Kinda nerve wrecking to read about all these "bricked" phones popping up after trying this method lol.. Perhaps I'll just wait until a more tried and true way comes out...
Dirty Santa root is not for the average user who has a couple of experience in rooting.
You have to at least have background on Hard bricking phones to fully understand what you are getting yourself into
For anyone that isnt on sprint that has "bricked" their phone. There are kdz's that will allow you to reflash back to 'stock". Someone had an issue with the kdz, but it was an easy fix. If you failed the process, it can be restored. Just if it doesnt want to boot, just lock and unlock the bootloader...
If your phone doesnt have a kdz, I know TeamDev is working on a custom kdz for such phones. Don't bug him if it isn't finished as I type this.
Anyone that can't get into TWRP, or has failed the process. Either start back at step 3, or if you have TWRP installed but can't get to it, the manual way to get into TWRP is a pain.
Keep your back cover off and hold the volume down button for ease. Now press the power button and as soon as you see an LG logo, let go and repress the power button. Its tricky.... If you get the corrupted screen, pop your battery out and put it back in quick and repress volume down and power. Usually if Im quick enough the first LG logo will hang a lot longer than usual and that gives me time to enter TWRP. A factory reset screen will pop up. Hit Yes twice.
Please help urgent
lcovel said:
I managed to un-brick mines after returning sadly from the Sprint store.
First, get to the boot loader screen and try running thru the steps again, especially step 3. You need to make sure you have TWRP.
Use this link to make sure you can get into the different modes (Download mode, fastboot, etc)
Once you can get TWRP to show up,then you are good. In the mean time I downloaded "LS997-deODEXd-signed"
When I got into TWRP, I transferred the file to my phone. Rebooted from TWRP back into TWRP and flashed the ROM.
During my reboots, I do get a message saying my phone is corrupt, blah blahblah, but I just wait a few seconds and it will boot up.
Hope this helps.
I had managed to brick mines only 3 hours after upgrading from my Note 4. It took me from 9pm to almost 2am to get it back up again. I can live with the message about my phone being unbootable until someone comes up with a work thru.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Please can u help ke unbrick mine i bought this mobile in my country its expensive and has no support. I have tried all tools but still getting the error model unknown please help sir
Jaistah said:
Dirty Santa root is not for the average user who has a couple of experience in rooting.
You have to at least have background on Hard bricking phones to fully understand what you are getting yourself into
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What does that mean? Not for the average user who has a couple of experiences in rooting.
I've only rooted 2 phones, this is my 3rd (maybe 4th). I am on Sprint. Instructions worked fine for me. I did have one hiccup, but it was my fault, and I was able to root just fine. I've been running for a few months now.
I have not flashed any custom ROM yet, I'm going to wait for the next major version of Android to come out. The only mods I've done so far are Titanium Backup install so I can remove Sprint crap.
yuppicide said:
What does that mean? Not for the average user who has a couple of experiences in rooting.
I've only rooted 2 phones, this is my 3rd (maybe 4th). I am on Sprint. Instructions worked fine for me. I did have one hiccup, but it was my fault, and I was able to root just fine. I've been running for a few months now.
I have not flashed any custom ROM yet, I'm going to wait for the next major version of Android to come out. The only mods I've done so far are Titanium Backup install so I can remove Sprint crap.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
it means dirty santa root got a high posibility rate of bricking a device compared to other root methods for other devices and if you have no experience in bricking phones before then you're screwed if it happens to you
Actually, if you follow the directions, almost none of the problems create a true brick-- which means unrecoverable. For most of the cases, you might get a soft brick, meaning you have to back out, use a KDZ to repair it or reflash something else, or start over from scratch and try again-- but usually (maybe with some help from here) you can pull the phone back into a usable state.
I would hazard to guess for the vast majority the process works fine, maybe with a hiccup, but I've not seen many reports of a truly unrecoverable brick from this method. It's complicated, yes, and you need to be ready to read a LOT to understand what's going on, but it seems pretty difficult to end up with a $700 paperweight with this.
So i have been trying tonroot my sprint lg v20 and everytime i try and go to the phone on mobile terminal to enter id
Then enter the apply patch /system/bin/atd /storage/emulated/0/dirtysanta i get this message and i cant go to step 2 to boot into recovery
Any help would be appreciated: i have a sprint v20 and i wanted to know if i have to flash the stock sprint rom or can i just flash lineage rom following this guide? I have it running on AT&T and i want to keep it on AT&T...
can you please assist
Could you help out, please? I don't believe I have hard bricked my LG V20 H910. However, I have read and tried all of the unbrick info out. It seems my screw up is unique. I completed dirty Santa then went to flash a custom. in the boot between that. I get a black screen and cant do anything even download mode will not come up. My PC does make its usual noises when i connect or disconnect, but my phone does nothing.
Ok, I managed to brick mine too. It's a VS995, it was running stock 1AC. I used the LGUP tool to downgrade it to VS99512A, and then did Dirty Sanata and TWRP. After booting into TWRP I decided to try lineage OS with Android 8.0, I did not make a backup of the Stock ROM, which was very stupid. Lineage OS 15.1 flashed but I had no cell service so I panicked and instead of wiping it in TWRP and using the backup of stock I should have created, I just opened LGUP and tried to downgrade it back to stock VSS99512A. Well LGUP said it worked, but when it went to boot it would hang at the Verizon logo with 4 pastel dots. Device manager could see an ADB device and I could connect to it with ADB. So I did and read the logcat. I could see it was trying to update as part of the rollback, but it appeared that some components from Android 8x could not be "upgraded" to Andoird 7.x. There was a repeated error about failing to update SQLite instance version from 3 to 1.
The one feature that could fix this is if the refurbish function worked with any of the VS995 KDZ files we all have access to. But alas, none work instead we only get the upgrade function... or so I thought. Somewhere in my search for the past 2 weeks I found a modified LGUP https://forum.xda-developers.com/v20/how-to/guide-patch-lgup-to-unlock-features-t3652222
**Please be warned what I did was absolutely ****ing stupid, and it was sheer luck I didn't screw anything up.**
From what I can tell if you only flash ("LGUP Upgrade") the KDZ from the same model it never clears the partition it just adds to it. My problem was there was stuff from lineage OS 15 stuck on one of the partitions that was making the rollback to stock fail because it kept saying it couldn't update the SQLLite DB from 3 to 1. So no "upgrade" within LGUP would work because the upgrade function does not clear internal storage. But the link above is to a version someone modded so you can force a partition update from any KDZ onto the system. So I started playing around with forcing KDZs from other models onto my VS995, and I noticed when using the Partion DL function with non-VS995 KDZ files it would say something about the partition changing. All I can assume is that the partition layout is so different on each model and it forces LGUP to re-partition the storage.
**Again I state for the record this was stupid, and I'm only fortunate it worked.**
I forced Partion DL of H91510d_00_VTR_CA_OP_1110.kdz, then H990N10b_00_OPEN_HK_DS_OP_1017.kdz, then back to VS99512A_06_1114_ARB00.kdz, then when it booted it gave the Verizon hello, and moved on finally but the setting service kept crashing while it was trying to load the Secure Boot screen. So I yanked the battery and went into the boot menu and did the Factory Reset function, and it worked.
Lesson learned, always make a backup and don't be so hasty to use tools that aren't fully functional (LGUP).
Perhaps what I've done may help others, maybe I've found out how to reimage or unbrick our V20s. Or maybe I just got really stupid lucky.
After using the megapixel rom. I tried flash back to stock with root tool kit.
During the process it told me I had to manual boot in recovery to a factory restore. That would not work so I ended up soft bricking my phone. I was able to side load twrp and the latest build and flash it (thank god). No when I do oem lock boot loader, my nexus 6p won't boot. As soon as I oem unlock, it will boot. Any ideas what could be cause that?
If you did not restore the recovery it probably throws a flag and says the configuration is invalid. You need to restore completely (recovery, boot, system, vendor, etc) through fastboot so that it is truly stock.
Cheers,
B.D.
This is a perfect time to remind folks that "locking" the bootloader is something that should be done with great care. There are dozens, if not hundreds of "my phone is bricked" threads centered around locking their bootloader without understanding the requirements and risks. If you don't have a reason to do it, leave it unlocked. If I need to do it, I flash 100% back to stock using a full factory image before locking.
Sent from my Nexus 6 using XDA-Developers Legacy app
BostonDan said:
If you did not restore the recovery it probably throws a flag and says the configuration is invalid. You need to restore completely (recovery, boot, system, vendor, etc) through fastboot so that it is truly stock.
Cheers,
B.D.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So you wouldn't recommend using the Nexus toolkit to flash factory? Can you give me the string in order that I would use to flash factory via fastboot? Fast boot is also hit or miss with the commands for me.
Blackfish77 said:
So you wouldn't recommend using the Nexus toolkit to flash factory? Can you give me the string in order that I would use to flash factory via fastboot? Fast boot is also hit or miss with the commands for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No offense intended, but this always irks me quite a bit.
Absolutely DO NOT use toolkits for anything at all, ever. They're not easier, they're not faster. It's just doing fastboot / adb with a UI that has buttons you can click instead of typing in fastboot.
This. This is the exact reason you shouldn't use toolkits. Especially if you don't know the manual way. It borks something up and now you need to wait possibly hours to get a working phone again when the solution would only take about 15 seconds to fix.
You need to fully familiarize yourself with this guide here;
https://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-6p/general/guides-how-to-guides-beginners-t3206928
ADB/Fastboot is absolutely not "hit or miss." If you have trouble with it then you need to make sure that your drivers are properly installed and you're entering commands correctly. Also make sure to ALWAYS keep your ADB & fastboot drivers up to date via the Android SDK. All of this is covered in the link above.
As far as your bootloader issue. You cannot return to a locked bootloader with anything other than 100% complete unadulterated stock factory images. No TWRP, no root, no Xposed, no Magisk, no build.prop edits etc., ...Nothing.
Use fastboot to flash your factory images you downloaded. You can use the flash all bat file or individually flash each separate. Again it's all covered in the link I posted above.
Also, what do you mean you couldn't wipe/reset from stock recovery? When you flash stock recovery and boot to it, you will see an Android on its back with an exclamation mark in a red triangle. You may or may not see text that reads "No Command". Either way, from that point hold down the power button and then press and release volume up. You will boot to stock recovery where you can wipe your data.
Not for nothing, but as mentioned above, people have hard bricked their 6P from locking bootloader's on combos besides stock. You got extremely lucky you didn't as well. Please take some time to read and fully understand what you're doing with your ~600$ device.
This is also, for the most part, pretty standard stuff as far as flashing / modding goes. At least since 2010 when I got into it. If you want to know the exact string of fastboot commands please read and use the guide I linked. It teaches you literally everything. There's nothing it doesn't cover and once you get used to it you will never use a toolkit again.
Hope I didn't come off rude, but basically since 2010 when I got into this across all my devices I try to help out in the Q+A sections. I've probably participated in hundreds and hundreds of "help, I used a toolkit and my phone is bricked and I have no idea how to fix it, I just wanted cool stuff on my phone" threads. They're absolutely 100% not worth the trouble and headaches from them. Especially if you have no idea what they're doing on the back end. Know Fastboot and ADB like the back of your hand and just prefer to use them? That's a different story, if something fails then you fix it yourself in 10 seconds. But for the love of God, please please please please please stop using toolkits if you don't know how to fix issues on your own. You will eventually hard brick. I've seen it happen dozens of times. Thread turns into a circlej*rk about whether toolkits are bad or not, OP hard bricks their phone and commits fraud, which is illegal by trying to RMA it. Just don't use them. It's simple enough without them. Why reinvent the wheel when it works just fine?
You should only lock bootloader when you are on stock factory image from nexus developers site. Either use flash_all script or flash everything manually. As others said keep away from toolkits.. You never know what can go wrong or what they re doing in background.
As I understand you restored TWRP and Megapixel rom and tried to lock the bootloader when you had that combination installed on your phone? That can not be done. You are either full stock (rom, kernel, recovery...) and locked bootloader or unlocked bootloader and any combo of kernel, rom, recovery that you want.
RoyJ said:
No offense intended, but this always irks me quite a bit.
Absolutely DO NOT use toolkits for anything at all, ever. They're not easier, they're not faster. It's just doing fastboot / adb with a UI that has buttons you can click instead of typing in fastboot.
This. This is the exact reason you shouldn't use toolkits. Especially if you don't know the manual way. It borks something up and now you need to wait possibly hours to get a working phone again when the solution would only take about 15 seconds to fix.
You need to fully familiarize yourself with this guide here;
https://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-6p/general/guides-how-to-guides-beginners-t3206928
ADB/Fastboot is absolutely not "hit or miss." If you have trouble with it then you need to make sure that your drivers are properly installed and you're entering commands correctly. Also make sure to ALWAYS keep your ADB & fastboot drivers up to date via the Android SDK. All of this is covered in the link above.
As far as your bootloader issue. You cannot return to a locked bootloader with anything other than 100% complete unadulterated stock factory images. No TWRP, no root, no Xposed, no Magisk, no build.prop edits etc., ...Nothing.
Use fastboot to flash your factory images you downloaded. You can use the flash all bat file or individually flash each separate. Again it's all covered in the link I posted above.
Also, what do you mean you couldn't wipe/reset from stock recovery? When you flash stock recovery and boot to it, you will see an Android on its back with an exclamation mark in a red triangle. You may or may not see text that reads "No Command". Either way, from that point hold down the power button and then press and release volume up. You will boot to stock recovery where you can wipe your data.
Not for nothing, but as mentioned above, people have hard bricked their 6P from locking bootloader's on combos besides stock. You got extremely lucky you didn't as well. Please take some time to read and fully understand what you're doing with your ~600$ device.
This is also, for the most part, pretty standard stuff as far as flashing / modding goes. At least since 2010 when I got into it. If you want to know the exact string of fastboot commands please read and use the guide I linked. It teaches you literally everything. There's nothing it doesn't cover and once you get used to it you will never use a toolkit again.
Hope I didn't come off rude, but basically since 2010 when I got into this across all my devices I try to help out in the Q+A sections. I've probably participated in hundreds and hundreds of "help, I used a toolkit and my phone is bricked and I have no idea how to fix it, I just wanted cool stuff on my phone" threads. They're absolutely 100% not worth the trouble and headaches from them. Especially if you have no idea what they're doing on the back end. Know Fastboot and ADB like the back of your hand and just prefer to use them? That's a different story, if something fails then you fix it yourself in 10 seconds. But for the love of God, please please please please please stop using toolkits if you don't know how to fix issues on your own. You will eventually hard brick. I've seen it happen dozens of times. Thread turns into a circlej*rk about whether toolkits are bad or not, OP hard bricks their phone and commits fraud, which is illegal by trying to RMA it. Just don't use them. It's simple enough without them. Why reinvent the wheel when it works just fine?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I ended up using fastboot to flash factory. I then re locked bootloader and everything booted without and issue. I was happy about that. I re rooted and everything is working great. :good:
I can say I learned a lot from this experience. Thanks to everyone for your advice. I am now comfortable using the fastboot method. Almost bricking my phone was scary but it taught me a lesson. Cheers everyone.
Hey, Thanks for taking the time to help.
Device: Nexus 6P
Previously Working ROM: Pure Nexus
Recovery Type Was: TWRP
So, I was on Pure Nexus just fine and decided okay! It's been a few updates I'll just update to the newest version. Went ahead and did a Clean Flash, wiped everything in TWRP except the Internal Data, proceeded with a Flash for the new Vendor Image and then to the newest ROM. Restarted and an immediate boot loop.
Thought okay, whatever. I'll just use the my backup that I have! booted into TWRP did backup.. still boot loops. At this point I'm pretty upset cause I know I'm in a pretty terrible spot now, so I decide to do a Factory Image complete restore through Fastboot flash-all.bin.
CONTINUES to boot loop after that, also doesn't even install the stock recovery or something because after a stock flash it shows "No Command". Decided okay, I'll flash TWRP and attempt a factory reset in there, do so. Still boot loop.
So yeah, here I am.
Any advice?
The bootloop of death may have caught up with your phone. When did you get the phone, you may have to rma the device. There is a thread here that many have the same issue. Some have gotten rma out of warranty some didn't. You may want to try.
Hey, the "No Command" is actually stock recovery. You should see the Android on its back with it's chest plate open or something like that. A red exclamation mark in a triangle as well, IIRC.
When you're on that screen, hold power and press and release volume up and that'll take you into stock recovery. If that doesn't work, do it the other way around. Hold volume up and press power.
If you can get into stock recovery, you should be able to use ADB to pull your files, at least.
My 6P screen crapped out yesterday and I just had to pull data myself, let me know if you need any help.
Thanks for the replies, still stuck in a boot loop even after trying another Factory Image in case the one I got was just no good.
Still nothing, was able to get into the recovery even with the no command thing to Factory Reset/Wipe Cache and the problem still persists.
I'm at a loss at this point, I even tried to flash each file in order manually instead of with the flash-all command anddddddd nothing In the end, I'll probably try and RMA since I'm still within a year.
Anyone been through the RMA process want to give any tips on the process? Should I re-lock the boot loader before sending it in?
Don't even bother, you're screwed basically. Call Google or Huawei were you bought it from and ask for a out of warranty RMA. I got mine only last week after they had it for a week. Prepared to be given the run around if this is with Huawei. Google is currently out of 6P's so you might be given credit if you bought from them, that's a big BUT. Good luck and I hope you have a backup of your files off the phone.
bammyman said:
Don't even bother, you're screwed basically. Call Google or Huawei were you bought it from and ask for a out of warranty RMA. I got mine only last week after they had it for a week. Prepared to be given the run around if this is with Huawei. Google is currently out of 6P's so you might be given credit if you bought from them, that's a big BUT. Good luck and I hope you have a backup of your files off the phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually, I'm still within the 12 months. But I know that the whole Custom Rom thing kind of voids that. I did end up calling Huawei and ended up getting the in-warranty RMA started but... kind of scared cause I'm not sure if the whole flashing the thing with a non-offical ROM gets flagged some how.
Should I call back and specifically request an OOW RMA? Or just take my chances with the In-warranty RMA?
They do not care about custom roms. Just send it in with a factory reset. I sent mine in with Android O and they were fine with it
I'm sorry I don't know who to turn to for help. I have a Nexus 6p and it is stuck in bootloop. I'm phone illiterate so I don't even know how to go about fixing it. There are very important photos and voice notes on there of my father that I would like to preserve as they are the last things I have of him before he passed away. Willing to pay $ to get this fixed. Any ideas?
BB12345 said:
I'm sorry I don't know who to turn to for help. I have a Nexus 6p and it is stuck in bootloop. I'm phone illiterate so I don't even know how to go about fixing it. There are very important photos and voice notes on there of my father that I would like to preserve as they are the last things I have of him before he passed away. Willing to pay $ to get this fixed. Any ideas?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Are you able to get into recovery?