I've used multiple apps from Google Play and checked the md5 value on multiple files that I downloaded and knew were good because I flashed them and everything worked perfectly yet every single file that I check fails the md5 check on every app that I try. I don't have a single file that I have flashed that passes an md5 check. I assume I am doing something wrong but the apps seem pretty straightforward in terms of how to use them. Is there any legitimate reason that a good file would fail an md5 check?
jhs39 said:
I've used multiple apps from Google Play and checked the md5 value on multiple files that I downloaded and knew were good because I flashed them and everything worked perfectly yet every single file that I check fails the md5 check on every app that I try. I don't have a single file that I have flashed that passes an md5 check. I assume I am doing something wrong but the apps seem pretty straightforward in terms of how to use them. Is there any legitimate reason that a good file would fail an md5 check?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello... How do you download the files that fail the md5 check?
A browser?
Is your connection stable enough?
Try with this download manager: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.dv.adm
And try checking the same files that fail on your current download method. I've never had or seen such issue before. Did you update the app you use to download lately?
Good luck...
5.1 said:
Hello... How do you download the files that fail the md5 check?
A browser?
Is your connection stable enough?
Try with this download manager: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.dv.adm
And try checking the same files that fail on your current download method. I've never had or seen such issue before. Did you update the app you use to download lately?
Good luck...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
A lot of the files that I'm downloading are from XDA. Some download through Chrome and I think some might download through whatever download manager is built into Android. I've downloaded the latest version of Flash Kernel 3 times and it fails the md5 check every time. I flashed the kernel and it seems to be operating perfectly anyway.
The apps are all a little different but this is the basic procedure I'm using. I open the downloaded file and the app calculates the md5 value and stores it. Then I open the md5 file that I downloaded alongside the other download. The app always says the values don't match. Does it sound like I'm doing something wrong?
I will check out the download manager you mentioned. Thanks for the suggestion.
jhs39 said:
A lot of the files that I'm downloading are from XDA. Some download through Chrome and I think some might download through whatever download manager is built into Android. I've downloaded the latest version of Flash Kernel 3 times and it fails the md5 check every time. I flashed the kernel and it seems to be operating perfectly anyway.
The apps are all a little different but this is the basic procedure I'm using. I open the downloaded file and the app calculates the md5 value and stores it. Then I open the md5 file that I downloaded alongside the other download. The app always says the values don't match. Does it sound like I'm doing something wrong?
I will check out the download manager you mentioned. Thanks for the suggestion.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No. The way you do it should work I guess. Give me a link of the app you use to check the md5 and at least two links of files you downloaded that fails checking. I'll try it myself and report back...
5.1 said:
No. The way you do it should work I guess. Give me a link of the app you use to check the md5 and at least two links of files you downloaded that fails checking. I'll try it myself and report back...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Here is a link for one of the apps I tried:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=sa.afvx
I deleted them all from my phone since I couldn't get any of them to work for me.
Here are links for various builds of Flash Kernel. They all fail md5 check for me though I flashed them and they seem to function perfectly:
http://nchancellor.net/Downloads/Kernels/
I checked md5 for the 3 most recent builds and like every other file on my phone it failed the md5 check on multiple apps from Google Play.
jhs39 said:
Here is a link for one of the apps I tried:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=sa.afvx
I deleted them all from my phone since I couldn't get any of them to work for me.
Here are links for various builds of Flash Kernel. They all fail md5 check for me though I flashed them and they seem to function perfectly:
http://nchancellor.net/Downloads/Kernels/
I checked md5 for the 3 most recent builds and like every other file on my phone it failed the md5 check on multiple apps from Google Play.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hello...
The problem is: with the app you used (afv), I haven't found an option to compare the md5 of the kernel zip against the hash generated in the md5sum file. So I used the PC. Open the md5sum file with a text editor rename to .txt on Android and open it. Check the kernel md5, they match.
The three last kernel match their respective md5sum. Check the attached screenshots.
That's what the program is for so I'm not sure why you couldn't find an option to compare the md5 values. I tried several other apps as well. I guess I'm either doing something wrong or everything that downloads to my phone is screwed up. Thanks anyway.
jhs39 said:
That's what the program is for so I'm not sure why you couldn't find an option to compare the md5 values. I tried several other apps as well. I guess I'm either doing something wrong or everything that downloads to my phone is screwed up. Thanks anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Check this: http://winmd5.com
There are several apps that allow you to compare a file, with an existing md5 file...
The md5 hash of the file you want to test, is stored in the *.md5 or *.md5sum file, which is nothing more than a txt file with an "md5" or "md5sum" extension.
As you can see on the link above, you can add a file to generate a hash and you can add a *.md5 or *.md5sum file at the bottom. The app will generate a hash for the file which will be compared to the hash stored in the md5 or md5sum file.
If you simply generate a hash of each file, they won't match at all...
If you.foumd a way to do that thing with the AFV app, let me know. I haven't found it... :good:
It seem you can also do it on Android with BusyBox in a terminal emulator, but I haven't checked yet...
Unfortunately I don't want to transfer files downloaded onto my phone onto my computer so I can check the Md5. I want to actually be able to do it on my phone and I'm not technically adept enough to do it with a terminator emulator within Busybox. I'm obviously missing something here because there are more than a dozen apps in the Play Store that supposedly allow you to check the md5 value of a file but I can't get anything to work for me.
jhs39 said:
Unfortunately I don't want to transfer files downloaded onto my phone onto my computer so I can check the Md5. I want to actually be able to do it on my phone and I'm not technically adept enough to do it with a terminator emulator within Busybox. I'm obviously missing something here because there are more than a dozen apps in the Play Store that supposedly allow you to check the md5 value of a file but I can't get anything to work for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well... Let me try to explain again :angel:
You dl flash kernel zip... It's md5 is supposed to be: dj358df39fk359sde (for example)
Flash generated a *.md5sum file which you can use to compare against the flash zip... You can't use an app from the play store, because the hash of the flash zip and the *.md5sum file won't be the same...
The fact is: the hash value of the flash zip is stored in the *.md5sum file. But if you generate a hash for this *.md5sum file, it will be something else than the flash zip...
You can use the *.md5sum file in an app as in my previous post. It will generate a hash for the flash zip and "read the value" stored in the *.md5sum file, just like the screenshots I posted, and of course it will match...
Hoping I've been clear enough...
5.1 said:
Well... Let me try to explain again :angel:
You dl flash kernel zip... It's md5 is supposed to be: dj358df39fk359sde (for example)
Flash generated a *.md5sum file which you can use to compare against the flash zip... You can't use an app from the play store, because the hash of the flash zip and the *.md5sum file won't be the same...
The fact is: the hash value of the flash zip is stored in the *.md5sum file. But if you generate a hash for this *.md5sum file, it will be something else than the flash zip...
You can use the *.md5sum file in an app as in my previous post. It will generate a hash for the flash zip and "read the value" stored in the *.md5sum file, just like the screenshots I posted, and of course it will match...
Hoping I've been clear enough...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No I understand what you did and why you are saying what I did with the Android apps didn't work--the apps were generating a new md5 hash value rather than simply copying it from the file. What I don't understand is why I can't find an Android app that does what you did on the computer. I appreciate your help but like I previously stated I have no interest in transferring files to my computer so I can check their integrity. I want to do this completely on my phone.
jhs39 said:
No I understand what you did and why you are saying what I did with the Android apps didn't work--the apps were generating a new md5 hash value rather than simply copying it from the file. What I don't understand is why I can't find an Android app that does what you did on the computer. I appreciate your help but like I previously stated I have no interest in transferring files to my computer so I can check their integrity. I want to do this completely on my phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah... I think I just misunderstood you understood me..!
Of course, moving files on PC and back on the phone is not convenient at all.
About Android apps... I don't get it either. I searched yesterday on the play store as well. In app reviews, i also saw some requests for such feature, but unfortunately, it seems like devs didn't notice are not interested in adding the feature in their app.
Hopefully one will do it... :good:
jhs39 said:
I've used multiple apps from Google Play and checked the md5 value on multiple files that I downloaded and knew were good because I flashed them and everything worked perfectly yet every single file that I check fails the md5 check on every app that I try. I don't have a single file that I have flashed that passes an md5 check. I assume I am doing something wrong but the apps seem pretty straightforward in terms of how to use them. Is there any legitimate reason that a good file would fail an md5 check?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You could try using either Solid Explorer or Root Explorer. Both give MD-5, SHA-1 under properties. If one of these mismatch, I don't flash. I'm looking for a solution for SHA-256 which Google uses for images. @5.1
v12xke said:
You could try using either Solid Explorer or Root Explorer. Both give MD-5, SHA-1 under properties. If one of these mismatch, I don't flash. I'm looking for a solution for SHA-256 which Google uses for images. @5.1
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is probably a stupid question but I assume you write down the value you get from root explorer so you can compare it with the value in the md5 value. It's a very long number to match in your head unless you have a fantastic memory.
jhs39 said:
This is probably a stupid question but I assume you write down the value you get from root explorer so you can compare it with the value in the md5 value. It's a very long number to match in your head unless you have a fantastic memory.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good question. SE has both a generated checksum and a "compare" field you paste the known good MD5 into and it compares it for you.... but I just look at the first few leading and trailing digits. That's really all you need. One byte out of place and the MD5 blows up. RE just gives you the MD5 under file properties, but it is enough using the method above. SE is great!
jhs39 said:
This is probably a stupid question but I assume you write down the value you get from root explorer so you can compare it with the value in the md5 value. It's a very long number to match in your head unless you have a fantastic memory.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Got an idea. Maybe not the best, but a workaround for the time being. Tap twice recent button to switch from file explorer file properties to md5 checker app... Or use multi window.
This way you can keep an eye on both hash...
Cheers...
---------- Post added at 12:32 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:29 AM ----------
v12xke said:
Good question. SE has both a generated checksum and a "compare" field you paste the known good MD5 into and it compares it for you.... but I just look at the first few leading and trailing digits. That's really all you need. One byte out of place and the MD5 blows up. RE just gives you the MD5 under file properties, but it is enough using the method above. SE is great!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Still an issue when having this case: http://nchancellor.net/Downloads/Kernels/
Where do you find the proper md5 hash? If not in the *.md5sum?
5.1 said:
Still an issue when having this case: http://nchancellor.net/Downloads/Kernels/
Where do you find the proper md5 hash? If not in the *.md5sum?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It is within *.md5sum... open it with any text editor and the first line is the hash. As an example the md5 hash from flash-angler-20170315-1537.zip.md5sum is e88c47c885a0e03e7944569e839022e9. @jhs39
Edit: If using Windows, you may have to use "open with" the first time and let Windows know you want to use Notepad or Wordpad to open files with the *.md5sum extension
v12xke said:
It is within *.md5sum... open it with any text editor and the first line is the hash. As an example the md5 hash from flash-angler-20170315-1537.zip.md5sum is e88c47c885a0e03e7944569e839022e9. @jhs39
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Read my previous posts and see the screenshots, I know about that.
It is just a waist of time. Just looking for a proper solution, not involving messing with files. Still the best though...
Related
Just trying to put DK28 on my friend's epic here and it keeps saying that the MD5 has value is invalid.
i got the file from the epic wiki, so it's a legit one.
any idea why this is happening?
i've done it on my phone and this didn't happen.
Two things
1. see if you are using the pit file
2. If that doesn't help you then rename the file to not have the md5 ending
ex Winpro.zip.md5 to winpro.zip
Could be a corrupt download as well, may need to simply re-download.
Edit: odin should also flash .tar and .tar.md5 files no problem.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
So many say bad download but every time this happened to me it was the file name change that fixed it for me. Try that first. Don't waste your time re downloading.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
rocket321 said:
Could be a corrupt download as well, may need to simply re-download.
Edit: odin should also flash .tar and .tar.md5 files no problem.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I ran into the same issue yesterday, just remove the .md5 extension and it should work.
I stand corrected, thanks for the info!
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
Thanks guys!
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
Ugh. I've been seeing far too many people on this forum recommending to remove the .md5 from the .tar.
The MD5 has a purpose, and that's to ensure (to a fairly high degree of probability at least) that the file is not corrupt in some way. If the file does not pass the MD5 check, the smart thing to do is re-download the file.
If you ignore the failed checksum and apply the file anyways, you risk bricking your phone. Sure, a good percentage of the time it'll work fine; the corrupted data could be non-critical or have minimal impact on system stability. But it's bad practice to make that assumption.
We're talking an operating system here, not some video file where it doesn't matter if a few bytes happen to be AWOL. Run your checksums and pay attention when MD5 values don't match up! Don't put the resources of the forum and its developers to waste trying to figure out the weird error you start posting about a few days later because you couldn't be bothered to download a file a second time.
You can also grab a md5 checker for free and test the file yourself. Most roms list the md5 under the download link. Then you know you are getting the exact data that was intended.
Sent from my SPH-D700 using XDA App
Rename "SPH-D700-DK28-8Gb-REL.tar.md5" to "SPH-D700-DK28-8G-REL.tar.md5".
Sometime after DK28 was leaked the file was renamed from the latter to the former, despite the fact that the MD5 checksum contains the latter as the file name. If you don't rename it back, it will always fail the check.
mkasick said:
Rename "SPH-D700-DK28-8Gb-REL.tar.md5" to "SPH-D700-DK28-8G-REL.tar.md5".
Sometime after DK28 was leaked the file was renamed from the latter to the former, despite the fact that the MD5 checksum contains the latter as the file name. If you don't rename it back, it will always fail the check.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sounds like the wiki may need updated to reflect this information. Any way to have the file re-hosted with the correct name or MD5 hash?
agreed, removing the 'b' worked for me after the MD5 hash failed.
Thanks for the tip though
Hello everyone, I'm having a problem with my Data connection after flashing a few different ROMs.
My internet connection seems fine but even after a fresh flash I still cannot use my data. It seems to be a problem with a setting of some sort seeing as on 3 different ROMs this is happening.
(Could someone direct me with exactly how to flash a new radio, PC10IMG.zip on SD card and going into bootloader doesn't work, it simply says image/file not found)
Cheers
have you tried changing your radio?
Ravaged0ne said:
(Could someone direct me with exactly how to flash a new radio, PC10IMG.zip on SD card and going into bootloader doesn't work, it simply says image/file not found)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First and foremost, make sure the md5 sum is consistent or you will end up with a brick.
I can think of two reasons for it says image/file not found:
1) File is actually named PC10IMG.zip.zip (go to windows explorer Tools > Folder options... > View > uncheck "Hide extensions for known file types"
2) sdcard filesystem needs to be fat32. If it's not, you have to backup your stuff then reformat the card.
c00ller said:
First and foremost, make sure the md5 sum is consistent or you will end up with a brick.
I can think of two reasons for it says image/file not found:
1) File is actually named PC10IMG.zip.zip (go to windows explorer Tools > Folder options... > View > uncheck "Hide extensions for known file types"
2) sdcard filesystem needs to be fat32. If it's not, you have to backup your stuff then reformat the card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hmm, I forgot that I changed SD cards and didn't format into Fat32. But about the md5 sum, isn't this different for most ROMs? seeing as how if I flash another rom, it wouldn't match my radio which means I'd have to constantly flash radios corresponding to my md5 sum?
Currently on Virtuous Sense v2.0.0 (MD5:b11fa8b0aaf14221f259a88efcfef978), but after looking the official radios none of them match up.
The purpose of the MD5 in general is to make sure whatever file you downloaded (in this case radio) has 100% data integrity, i.e. not a corrupted download. The radio MD5 just has to match what it should be, as listed here http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=970809
There is no ROM matching aspect of MD5; the MD5 is unique to only one file in existence
Description:
The AndroidLib Expansion Project was created to bring support of more Android devices to my AndroidLib.dll project I'm working on. This project is a Windows executable (compiled batch script) that you will run on your computer with your Android device connected. This will NOT run automatically; it will give you a prompt to run after opening.
The main purpose of this project is to collect data about new phones for AndroidLib.dll, not about your specific phone, but about how it transfers specific data through it's shell and through the Android Debug Bridge (ADB), and more importantly, how that output is formatted.
This information will not be shared with anyone other than myself, and will only be used for further developing AndroidLib.dll to support many more Android devices than it currently does.
Source Code is available under "Download Info"
What it does:
Starts an Adb server
Checks Device List
Checks Device Type
Checks Device Serial (only for unique .zip filename)
Checks For SU
Checks UID
Checks BusyBox
Checks File System
Checks Battery Statistics
Checks Running Processes
Checks /data/system/packages.xml for existance
Checks Build Properties
Checks Shell Environment
Creates Zip of Data Above
Opens Upload Form in Browser After Exiting
NOTE: Does NOT Upload Automatically
Usage:
Download the Windows Executable below and run from any directory on your computer with your Android device connected.
Requirements:
Windows Computer
Android device to test
Download Latest Release
AndroidLibExpansion.exe
Download Info
AndroidLibExpansion.exe MD5: 3a8971f452ab7e3da63e375a859033d4
VirusTotal Report
Source Code
No zip file on my desktop to send...
drcell said:
No zip file on my desktop to send...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Check the Desktop folder in %USERPROFILE%\Desktop as well instead of just the graphical desktop. I have tested it working on 5 different computers here...
Can you upload to another site
Like http://www.mediafire.com/
TarekNajem04 said:
Can you upload to another site
Like http://www.mediafire.com/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, you can, if you send me the link to it.. but I just wrote that upload script so it would just go straight to my server.. Upload it to mediafire if you would like.
I realize now that this exe may not have worked correctly. I've had 3 reports now of no zip being created on the desktop. I am working to solve this issue, as you see in the source.. it really has no reason not to be creating on the desktop.
I'll be glad to help, if only it created a zip file for me to upload.
EDIT: I checked the %USERPROFILE%/Desktop as well as running a search for anything containing "androidlib" in C:\Users... nothing.
2 things.
1st, it won't make a zip file for anyone that doesn't have 7zip or the required folder structure (there is no standard environment variable of %myfiles% - just use %temp% instead), and it's assuming subfolders exist for output of the adb commands.
2nd, why is it an exe file when it's a batch file? Please link the bat file instead of an exe. I'm running the bat file I copied and pasted from the source and it runs just fine.
Archer said:
2 things.
1st, it won't make a zip file for anyone that doesn't have 7zip or the required folder structure (there is no standard environment variable of %myfiles% - just use %temp% instead), and it's assuming subfolders exist for output of the adb commands.
2nd, why is it an exe file when it's a batch file? Please link the bat file instead of an exe. I'm running the bat file I copied and pasted from the source and it runs just fine.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well, if you knew who I was or looked at anything else I have written, you'd realize that I know what I'm doing, and that I would not assume everyone has the standard environment variable %MYFILES% or have 7zip installed. I am assuming in this program, actually, that the end user does NOT have the android sdk set up (or in their path) and does NOT have any 7 zip binaries. I created a self extracting exe out of my batch file that includes adb.exe, the 2 required adb dlls, and the 7 zip binary, all in the global variable %MYFILES% (aTemp folder in %temp%). It works fine. Just need to figure out why it creates a zip on all of my computers, and not any of yours. I appreciate the feedback though.
FredFS456 said:
I'll be glad to help, if only it created a zip file for me to upload.
EDIT: I checked the %USERPROFILE%/Desktop as well as running a search for anything containing "androidlib" in C:\Users... nothing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for letting me know you ran a full search and nothing came up still, that actually does help me out, telling me it didn't write to anywhere else. I'll have a working version for you guys in a little bit.
Ok guys, fixed the problem. Works great now. Check the source code and VirusTotal report in the first post if you need to. Thanks again for everyone helping with this! And special thanks to nebenezer for testing the new builds!
regaw_leinad said:
Well, if you knew who I was or looked at anything else I have written, you'd realize that I know what I'm doing, and that I would not assume everyone has the standard environment variable %MYFILES% or have 7zip installed. I am assuming in this program, actually, that the end user does NOT have the android sdk set up (or in their path) and does NOT have any 7 zip binaries. I created a self extracting exe out of my batch file that includes adb.exe, the 2 required adb dlls, and the 7 zip binary, all in the global variable %MYFILES% (aTemp folder in %temp%). It works fine. Just need to figure out why it creates a zip on all of my computers, and not any of yours. I appreciate the feedback though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Lol - calm down mate. I wasn't criticising - I was trying to help. I get why it's an exe now you've explained and that makes sense. Glad you got it working anyway. I'll upload a couple of files for you later.
Archer said:
Lol - calm down mate. I wasn't criticising - I was trying to help. I get why it's an exe now you've explained and that makes sense. Glad you got it working anyway. I'll upload a couple of files for you later.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok thanks for clarifying. The way you presented your self in your post sounded like somewhat of "this n00b doesn't know what he's doing, and I'm gonna let him know that" lol I'm a pretty chill guy, I just don't appreciate when people do that.
And thank you for doing some uploads later! I appreciate it!
This is my upload link because i couldn't upload with your page. It says "The file you are trying to upload is not a .zip file. Please try again."
http://db.tt/0HoRAK11
It works and I have uploaded the zip
Burned from my laser torch using pencil cells
Uploaded .zip file.
regaw_leinad said:
Ok thanks for clarifying. The way you presented your self in your post sounded like somewhat of "this n00b doesn't know what he's doing, and I'm gonna let him know that" lol I'm a pretty chill guy, I just don't appreciate when people do that.
And thank you for doing some uploads later! I appreciate it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Apologies if that's how I came across - it wasn't intended. I've just uploaded a couple of zip files for you.
Thank you to everyone who has uploaded a zip so far! This is really helping development on AndroidLib. I am still accepting more uploads, so if you feel like helping develpment of AndroidLib, feel free to download and run the exe! I'm needing a few more Samsung devices in particular, those seem to vary in output between themselves.
Have you got an upload from an Motor ATRIX 4g yet? If not ill see if I can sort it for you.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA
The-Milkybar-Kid said:
Have you got an upload from an Motor ATRIX 4g yet? If not ill see if I can sort it for you.
Sent from my MB860 using XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope haven't got one yet, that'd be awesome! Thanks!
Since some noobs like me does not know about Checksum and how to calculate it I share this topic.
You may have seen there is a number called "MD5" together with long digit in some threads. You may be confused what this number for.
Actually, MD5 is a number verifying whether the file you have downloaded is alright or broken, by comparing with the original's MD5.
Some can compute this number using solidexplorer.apk in their phone however some would like to figure out this number before transferring their file, specially a big zip into their memory card. So here is a very easy way to calculate this number by a software in windows.
WinMD5 is a small and easy tool to calculate md5 hash or checksum for different files (including files larger than 4 GB).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Features:
Supports almost all Windows platforms including Microsoft Windows 95, 98, 2000, Me, XP, 2003, Vista and Windows 7.
Fast and multi-threaded. It can compute a 2 GB file less than 1 minute.
Supports big files larger than 4 GB.
Low resource usage. It uses less than 5 MB RAM.
Don’t require .NET runtime installed. It is a standalone EXE file and the startup is speedy. There are MD5 tools for Windows on the market, but most of them requires .NET runtime and they may take a few seconds to start. This is also the reason I wrote the program.
Supports “Drag & Drop”. You may either select a file, or drag and drop a file to the program window to get the MD5 hash value.
Supports verification of original MD5 value and current MD5 value.
Most important, it is FREE. No spyware or adware bundle.
Small size, an effective and tiny tool for data security.
Here is the software
View attachment WinMD5.7z
Just extract the exe file and address you file. It would begin to calculate MD5, then click verify so see number is matched or not. That's it.
Thank you for your post.
As an addition, almost all download managers (free or otherwise) automatically calculate this for you after a download and report any discrepancies as well.
There are several Browser Plugins as well which are quite handy. That is one area to look into as well.
But yes a handy tool is always good to have
Sent from my GT-N7000 using xda premium
A quick applications for this stuff is also HashCalc, it can show u several Hashes so you can compare it better.
I use it all of the time and got no problems with it.
Try hash tab. It will insert a new tab in the file properties and you do not need to run a software everytime
Yeah! That really helpful...thanks
Guys sorry for noob question ahead of time but... i downloaded the app hashcalc app and uploaded the zip file i have md5 code but what i need to do next?? Im not really understanding all of this. What is it that im trying to achieve with this?
Once again thank you for ur help and patience on my noobiie questions. Thanks ahead of time
revilo155 said:
Guys sorry for noob question ahead of time but... i downloaded the app hashcalc app and uploaded the zip file i have md5 code but what i need to do next?? Im not really understanding all of this. What is it that im trying to achieve with this?
Once again thank you for ur help and patience on my noobiie questions. Thanks ahead of time
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I've never used this app but it looks like you are on the right track. Now you have generated the checksum by finding file on your phone you need to go to website or wherever you have the reference checksum stored, highlight it and copy it, then just click the clip board icon as shown on your screen, then press the compare button at the bottom.
I'm running Marshmallow 6.0, not rooted.
This morning I had a message in my notifications area that a file had been downloaded. When I went to Downloads to look I saw a file named 'authorize' with a size of 1.36 KB, no other information except for time of the download. The phone was sleeping at that time.
Does anyone know what this 'authorize' file is?
Thanks.
No... Why not look in your Downloads folder and see what it is, and if it concerns you attach it here?
It downloaded to my Downloads folder. I don't know how to see properties other than what I have listed above. I tried to attach a copy of it to this message but XDA said invalid file type.
opti1 said:
It downloaded to my Downloads folder. I don't know how to see properties other than what I have listed above. I tried to attach a copy of it to this message but XDA said invalid file type.
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Google Drive it and post a link, use a file manager app like Solid Explorer, or open it in something like QuickEdit and see what's in it.
I was able to look at the file in Total Commander. It was something to do with Comcast Xfinity. I deleted it. We will see what happens.