GoodLink Debugging info - Palm Treo 750

Howdy all,
I was talking with some internal Goodlink support people yesterday and they forwarded me a list of debugging commands for their app that can be run to troubleshoot and fix some issues with GoodLink. To use these commands you have to be in the GoodLink app, then press the <Shift> key and then type debug this will bring up a command prompt where you can input the commands from the list. If this has been posted before my apologies but as an IT Support guy this came in very handy to me and I wanted to share it. This works with any GoodLink installation on any device.

Related

Setting up ADB on macbook

I've been trying to setup ADB on my Mac book and followed a tutorial but after typing "ADB devices" it says devices connected and then no serial number as it is supposed to. I'm wondering if anyone had this problem with their thunderbolt? Here is the tutorial it used:
http://esausilva.com/2010/10/02/how-to-set-up-adb-android-debug-bridge-in-mac-osx
Any help would be appreciated.
Sent from my Thunderbolt
Does this at least mean that the thunderbolt is not connected?
Sent from my Thunderbolt
Double check USB Debugging is on.
It works just fine on my iMac. Though the way I have it set up, I have to type "./adb devices"
Have you tried doing anything past there? See if any other commands actually work. Try to install something, or read the log.
Just in case someone comes to is problem i've found the answer. I have the Easythether app installed and the driver for it conflicts with allowing adb and your computer to connect with your phone. The solution is pretty simple you have to either disable the driver on the mac everyone you want to debug or remove it altogether. Here is a page explaining the process.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/...and-adb-devices-fails-to-list-android-devices
Sent from my Thunderbolt

Kyocera-E4710

the Kyocera-E4710 is probably the best flip phone on the market. It's made in Japan and sold in the U.S. and Canada via a few carriers. But many people from other nations purchase it for it's rugged features that make it usable where a smartphone just can't be used. Unfortunately, some of the features, like tethering, won't work because, although it's been unlocked, it still needs the settings for the carrier (like AT&T).
I don't understand how this works but I'm sure someone on here does? I'm hoping some bright person on XDA can help the many people who have purchased this awesome handset in other nations, to be able to unlock the tethering feature. As well as to perhaps remove some features, such as the incredibly annoying AT&T address book that pops up every time you go to your contacts or add apps to the android operating system.
Any help with these issues would be so greatly appreciated!!
Kyocera-E4710 - T-Mobile Tethering
I too have purchased one of these excellent flip phones. I really want to be able to tether using T-Mobile's service. Has anyone risen to the challenge yet?
kotton666 said:
the Kyocera-E4710 is probably the best flip phone on the market. It's made in Japan and sold in the U.S. and Canada via a few carriers. But many people from other nations purchase it for it's rugged features that make it usable where a smartphone just can't be used. Unfortunately, some of the features, like tethering, won't work because, although it's been unlocked, it still needs the settings for the carrier (like AT&T).
I don't understand how this works but I'm sure someone on here does? I'm hoping some bright person on XDA can help the many people who have purchased this awesome handset in other nations, to be able to unlock the tethering feature. As well as to perhaps remove some features, such as the incredibly annoying AT&T address book that pops up every time you go to your contacts or add apps to the android operating system.
Any help with these issues would be so greatly appreciated!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Rooting Kyocera E4710
Is it possible to root this phone? I would like to install an Android SIP client, the operator said it's not possible to install anything on it. Even though I enabled apps from Unknown Sources.
kotton666 said:
the Kyocera-E4710 is probably the best flip phone on the market. It's made in Japan and sold in the U.S. and Canada via a few carriers. But many people from other nations purchase it for it's rugged features that make it usable where a smartphone just can't be used. Unfortunately, some of the features, like tethering, won't work because, although it's been unlocked, it still needs the settings for the carrier (like AT&T).
I don't understand how this works but I'm sure someone on here does? I'm hoping some bright person on XDA can help the many people who have purchased this awesome handset in other nations, to be able to unlock the tethering feature. As well as to perhaps remove some features, such as the incredibly annoying AT&T address book that pops up every time you go to your contacts or add apps to the android operating system.
Any help with these issues would be so greatly appreciated!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not sure if anyone still needs to remove the AT&T address book on this phone without root BUT I managed to do it.
Enable Developer mode on the phone by clicking:
"Menu" from the home screen. Choose Settings-->System-->About Phone.
Scroll down to "Build Number" and hit the "ok" button a few times until it tells you that you're a developer.
Back up one menu and go into "Developer Options".
Enable USB Debugging. (I also enabled OEM Unlocking but I don't think this is necessary)
Next install the Universal ADB drivers onto your computer. Google will help you find them. (I used the ones from clockworkmod but I'm sure any of them would be fine.)
Connect your phone and ALLOW any of the prompts that come up.
Open up an administrative command prompt/terminal and then type "adb devices". Make sure you can see a device listed. I'll look something like:
* daemon started successfully *
6689467283 device
Next run the command:
adb uninstall --user 0 com.borqs.aabsync
You should see a "success" below.
If so run the command: adb reboot
Your phone will reboot and you can disconnect the phone from the computer at this point.
Give it a moment to start up and then hit the "down" arrow on the keypad as normal. You will likely see an empty contact list. Press the key for "Options" then choose "Contacts to display" and choose wherever you have the contacts saved. Let it load them in and you're done.
Hope this helps someone!
david11717 said:
Not sure if anyone still needs to remove the AT&T address book on this phone without root BUT I managed to do it.
Enable Developer mode on the phone by clicking:
"Menu" from the home screen. Choose Settings-->System-->About Phone.
Scroll down to "Build Number" and hit the "ok" button a few times until it tells you that you're a developer.
Back up one menu and go into "Developer Options".
Enable USB Debugging. (I also enabled OEM Unlocking but I don't think this is necessary)
Next install the Universal ADB drivers onto your computer. Google will help you find them. (I used the ones from clockworkmod but I'm sure any of them would be fine.)
Connect your phone and ALLOW any of the prompts that come up.
Open up an administrative command prompt/terminal and then type "adb devices". Make sure you can see a device listed. I'll look something like:
* daemon started successfully *
6689467283 device
Next run the command:
adb uninstall --user 0 com.borqs.aabsync
You should see a "success" below.
If so run the command: adb reboot
Your phone will reboot and you can disconnect the phone from the computer at this point.
Give it a moment to start up and then hit the "down" arrow on the keypad as normal. You will likely see an empty contact list. Press the key for "Options" then choose "Contacts to display" and choose wherever you have the contacts saved. Let it load them in and you're done.
Hope this helps someone!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for posting your solution above.
Unfortunately for me I got as far as installing the adb drivers on my PC, reconnecting the phone, and no prompts came up, neither on the phone nor the PC.
I opened a command prompt window and typed "adb devices" and got the following message:
adb devices is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
Any suggestions?
As long as ADB driver isn't made system-wide accessible ( i.e. got added to PATH environment variable of Windows OS ) you get the message mentioned.
My Kyocera E4710 outer screen has an alarm that I can't get to go away. I can't see who is calling me because the alarm blocks the caller info. I have a few alarms but they are all turned off and there is not a way to delete them. I've gone through the user manual and it doesn't show how to get rid of this alarm (which shouldn't show since there isn't one enabled). Does anyone know how to get rid of this alarm on the outer screen? Thanks.

Sending Android Keyevents via Leonardo Arduino

I hope I am posting this to the right forum, if not, can someone point me to a more appropriate one.
I am trying to send keyevent commands from my Leonardo Arduino to my Android tablet, part of a head unit. I can send the commands via ADB shell on my laptop, but I cannot figure out how to send them via the arduino.
I have been looking for weeks on how to do this, I have gotten some close hits (http://www.instructables.com/id/USB-Pedal-HID-Keyboard-With-Arduino-Leonardo/) but they are in the area of sending the standard ASCII keyboard codes, and I am looking to send screen diming/brighten and sleep/wake.
Has anyone had experience in this area?
Thanks,
-Erik
I have noticed that I can execute an "input keyevent" in a serial terminal via a USB keyboard, but the instruction is just ignored, no errors, and if I just type "input" it gives me the usage method so I know it is there. Does the Android need to be rooted to execute the command, or is it a permission issue?
Thanks,
-Erik

Shield Tablet Bug Fix "missing home button, recent tabs, notification centre" Nougat

Shield Tablet Bug Fix "missing home button, recent tabs, notification centre" Nougat
Hello Everybody. I have a Shield Tablet running Nougat. I have been experiencing the bug described in the Title a few times, and I finally found a way to solve such bug, at least in my specific scenario. It might not work for everybody but, as I have seen a lot of Users experiencing such bug and being forced to deal with it through a factory reset, I thought posting an easy guide might be helfpful to some. It is not rocket science, but for me it does the trick well. Should you feel there is an easier way to solve the same issue, please, do not hesitate to add it to this post.
I already posted this guide on the official Shield Tablet forum, but I cannot add the link because I am a new User (c'mon dudes, I am not spamming.. just trying to help ). Therefore, I am just gonna copy paste the guide. I apologise if the formatting is not ideal.
Hello Everybody, I know that there is an Android bug that has been creating issues for many years, also on shield tablets. When the bug starts, the home button disappears, it is impossible to open the "recent app" tab, the notification centre cannot be pulled down, and there are many other side effects. Since I started having this issue, I did quite a lot of research. Apparently, all I could find were information regarding how to solve the bug on Lollipop and Marshmallow, but nothing regarding Nougat. The way this bug is usually fixed is by starting the Setup Wizard on the device. Unfortunately though, I was not able to open it due to permission restrictions. Some guides mentioned installing Nova from the appstore, and setting up an action Widget in order to start the Setup Wizard. This did not work for me as well. What I was able to do, instead, was creating and setting up a new User profile, which then fixed the bug on my main User.
I am sure people more experienced and talented than me probably would have been able to find a neater way to make this happen. However, as I am quite a noob with these kind of things, I thought that writing a basic guide might be helpful for others as well.
Before going on, you should know that in my case, the only way to fix the problem is to have "debug settings" enabled on your device BEFORE the bug starts. When I first got the bug, I had not unlocked "debug settings" and I could not do it afterward, as tapping 7 times on the build number did nothing. You also need to have Android Debug Bridge (adb) installed on your computer and configured with the tablet.
Also, the process I will describing now creates a new User and switches to it by using terminal commands and Adb. I am aware that there would be an easier way to achieve the same result by going on "settings>Users" on the tablet. However, if you experience the same bug I was having, you will find out that clicking on the "Users" tab does nothing.
Here is a step by step guide of what I did:
1
Normally boot your tablet and connect it to the computer via usb cable
2
Run a command prompt windows on the computer and run Adb. Even if, due to the bug, you won’t be able to transfer files to the tablet via USB, adb should be able to interact with the shield anyway. To double check this, type the command: adb devices . You should be able to see your device listed.
3
It is now time to create a new User through the command prompt. You can do that by typing the command:
adb shell pm create-user User_Name
Once the new user has been created, the prompt will show you the respective User_ID. You will need to type such number in order to switch to that user, by typing the command:
adb shell am switch-user User_ID
eg. adb shell pm create-user Charlie
Success: created user id 11
adb shell am switch-user 11
4
Your shield should have now switched to the new user just created. At this stage, finish the new user configuration stage on the tablet. Skip all the google services related options, as you do not need them. When the configuration process is finished, the home button, the notification centre, the recent app, etc. should be back. Now that the bug is fixed, it should be possible to go back to your main User profile by simply switching User from the settings menu on the shield: settings>Users. At this stage, if everything went well, you should be logged with your main User, and the bug should have been fixed. It is now possible to go again on settings>Users and delete the new User created on step 3.
This is it. It works well for me and, even if I do not exclude that the bug will present itself again at some point, this is a 5 minutes solution to fix it. I apologise for any english mistake, as English is not by main language. Also, somebody might know of an easier way to solve the issue on Nougat, although I was not able to find any online, and that is why I wrote this short guide. I hope it will be able to help some of you!
Have a nice day!
Alberto

The settings Facebook doesn't want you to see

I was just tooling around in my new Quest 2 and, while my level of technical expertise is sufficient to be dangerous, I don't have any real idea what I'm doing as far as rooting, bootloader mods, etc. However, I seem to have stumbled into the regular Android settings after an app I was trying asked for usage permissions, which it seems Oculus doesn't expect any of its bespoke apps to do.
The Android settings behave oddly, though, but more like there's some kind of watcher app that's preventing access to most of these non-Oculus options. Case-in-point, the app that wants usage access, when I enter the Usage permissions screen and select the app from the menu to be taken to the screen where it displays what the app will do with usage permissions and presents the toggle for it, the screen comes up only briefly before the settings dialogue disappears entirely with an error saying that "System has stopped responding". I'm pretty sure if I were fast enough, I could probably toggle it in time, but I could also try to grant those perms via adb (which I only now remembered I could do and thus haven't done yet).
I also found and enabled the actual Developer Options, not the basic one Oculus gives us if we sign up as a developer organization. I am certain that they have actually been enabled: Even though the "{ } Developer Options" menu item keeps reloading the page that its on, settings that you'd expect to find within now turn up in the settings search dialogue.
One of these options is to enable OEM bootloader unlock. Selecting that options from the search results screen (or any other search result you'd find within Developer Options) however does like before, drops you at the menu page with the "{ } Developer Options" option.
It would be absurd if it were to be as simple as enabling that option to gain access to the bootloader and do whatever, even moreso if it was me that first wrote about it -- but, since I'm under the impression that the settings aren't actually broken so much as they are being suppressed, is there a way to toggle these various developer options, including the OEM bootloader unlock, via adb?
(Another point in favor of suppression rather than breakage, the Oculus refuses to take a screenshot of anything I'm doing with a message stating that the device is forbidden from doing so, although in less nefarious language.)
tl;dr -- how might I go about programatically toggling developer options on the device to find out what happens? More broadly, what's a good place to start being more dangerous vis-à-vis my Android technical expertise? I find its structure in every way baffling and nightmarish.
And then just for kicks, there's some oddities, like how the machine name in adb shell comes back as "hollywood" (which I found a bit Baader–Meinhof-y, since I was watching a bunch of Modern Vintage Gamer vids including his one on the Wii and its "Hollywood"-benamed graphics coprocessor). Also, fastboot oem unlock returns a curious error directing the user to visit https://oculus.com/unlock, which doesn't exist, and as far as the Wayback Machine is concerned, has basically never existed.
This settings menu is (or at least it was) fully accessible on my Quest 1 last time I tried it. There does not seem to be an entry point on Quest 2 though.
I am currently enjoying the "Bugjaeger" app from the play store. That is a good ADB solution for the Quest 2. Have fun.
rickthecabbie said:
I am currently enjoying the "Bugjaeger" app from the play store. That is a good ADB solution for the Quest 2. Have fun.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Could you please elaborate? Link to any guides or anything?
dwkindig said:
I was just tooling around in my new Quest 2 and, while my level of technical expertise is sufficient to be dangerous, I don't have any real idea what I'm doing as far as rooting, bootloader mods, etc. However, I seem to have stumbled into the regular Android settings after an app I was trying asked for usage permissions, which it seems Oculus doesn't expect any of its bespoke apps to do.
The Android settings behave oddly, though, but more like there's some kind of watcher app that's preventing access to most of these non-Oculus options. Case-in-point, the app that wants usage access, when I enter the Usage permissions screen and select the app from the menu to be taken to the screen where it displays what the app will do with usage permissions and presents the toggle for it, the screen comes up only briefly before the settings dialogue disappears entirely with an error saying that "System has stopped responding". I'm pretty sure if I were fast enough, I could probably toggle it in time, but I could also try to grant those perms via adb (which I only now remembered I could do and thus haven't done yet).
I also found and enabled the actual Developer Options, not the basic one Oculus gives us if we sign up as a developer organization. I am certain that they have actually been enabled: Even though the "{ } Developer Options" menu item keeps reloading the page that its on, settings that you'd expect to find within now turn up in the settings search dialogue.
One of these options is to enable OEM bootloader unlock. Selecting that options from the search results screen (or any other search result you'd find within Developer Options) however does like before, drops you at the menu page with the "{ } Developer Options" option.
It would be absurd if it were to be as simple as enabling that option to gain access to the bootloader and do whatever, even moreso if it was me that first wrote about it -- but, since I'm under the impression that the settings aren't actually broken so much as they are being suppressed, is there a way to toggle these various developer options, including the OEM bootloader unlock, via adb?
(Another point in favor of suppression rather than breakage, the Oculus refuses to take a screenshot of anything I'm doing with a message stating that the device is forbidden from doing so, although in less nefarious language.)
tl;dr -- how might I go about programatically toggling developer options on the device to find out what happens? More broadly, what's a good place to start being more dangerous vis-à-vis my Android technical expertise? I find its structure in every way baffling and nightmarish.
And then just for kicks, there's some oddities, like how the machine name in adb shell comes back as "hollywood" (which I found a bit Baader–Meinhof-y, since I was watching a bunch of Modern Vintage Gamer vids including his one on the Wii and its "Hollywood"-benamed graphics coprocessor). Also, fastboot oem unlock returns a curious error directing the user to visit https://oculus.com/unlock, which doesn't exist, and as far as the Wayback Machine is concerned, has basically never existed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Would you mind explaining how you got the settings page to open on the Quest 2? I am an OG root dev and just picked up a Quest 2 myself, would love to crack into this.
Oh, dang, yeah, sorry things have been mad hectic and I didn't see these responses. I'll provide a write-up tomorrow, ping me again if I don't reply later cause I'm a forgetful idiot.
dwkindig said:
Oh, dang, yeah, sorry things have been mad hectic and I didn't see these responses. I'll provide a write-up tomorrow, ping me again if I don't reply later cause I'm a forgetful idiot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
All good, I actually figured out how to launch the settings page from this command:
adb shell am start -a android.intent.action.VIEW -d com.oculus.tv -e uri com.android.settings/.DevelopmentSettings com.oculus.vrshell/.MainActivity
Everything works in this page, except for launching the Developer settings option. This crashes the app as you mentioned, even though I can see the OEM Unlock option in the settings search bar.
This repo is also very helpful, I am getting told to visit the same non-existent page you were as well when running fastboot oem unlock.
GitHub - QuestEscape/research: Sharing our security research on the Oculus Quest
Sharing our security research on the Oculus Quest. Contribute to QuestEscape/research development by creating an account on GitHub.
github.com
Honestly Annoying said:
All good, I actually figured out how to launch the settings page from this command:
adb shell am start -a android.intent.action.VIEW -d com.oculus.tv -e uri com.android.settings/.DevelopmentSettings com.oculus.vrshell/.MainActivity
Everything works in this page, except for launching the Developer settings option. This crashes the app as you mentioned, even though I can see the OEM Unlock option in the settings search bar.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh, cool, I spent some time myself looking for a similar command, but I don't know much about the inner workings of Android. Do you know if there's a way to programmatically toggle the OEM Unlock switch?
I'll still post my circuitous method of getting there tonight (US/Central), maybe it will be enlightening in some way. I can't take screenshots or video of the process, cause the security policy configured by Facebook disallows it in those places.
Honestly Annoying said:
This repo is also very helpful, I am getting told to visit the same non-existent page you were as well when running fastboot oem unlock.
GitHub - QuestEscape/research: Sharing our security research on the Oculus Quest
Sharing our security research on the Oculus Quest. Contribute to QuestEscape/research development by creating an account on GitHub.
github.com
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay, things are a bit different since when I first posted -- I can grant packages usage access without crashing back to Android settings (`com.android.settings`). However, I can launch Android settings directly using App Manager (https://muntashirakon.github.io/AppManager/). Still can't screengrab, though, and still can't access the Developer Options, can only search for them. Interestingly, the breadcrumbs in the search results refer to the uppermost level as `null`.
So i connected my Quest 2 to Android studio and used the debug and the log tool to see why the settings app crashes when trying to enter the developer settings. I got the exception and maybe i can paste it in here when i get home. Also i managed to sign out of my Facebook account and remove the oculus system administrator but that made the headset useless. I also created an app for the oculus that search for all the installed packages and when you click on one of them it's trying to launch the package in vr shell and found some interesting things such as a oculus assistant and a battery charging mode setting.
Honestly Annoying said:
This repo is also very helpful, I am getting told to visit the same non-existent page you were as well when running fastboot oem unlock.
GitHub - QuestEscape/research: Sharing our security research on the Oculus Quest
Sharing our security research on the Oculus Quest. Contribute to QuestEscape/research development by creating an account on GitHub.
github.com
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
maybe the page does exist, but you don't have the authority to visit it, so oculus redirect you to somewhere else
maybe its not helpfull, but when you start wireless wifi on the Q via a wired adb host , you can install the app 'remote adb shell' (blue cast icon, pstore) on the quest and connect to localhost. so you have an on device adb shell for pm commands. it has to be this remote app because of lack on adb shell command without magiskmodule (termux crashes to the tv channel). i dont know how the activitys are called in android so maybe you got luck. also are the developer options part of the settings.apk? i think they pulled it out like that so why not making a new settings.apk where the devops are available? on this way there is sure an option to have a lock on the wifi adb too so it doesnt shutdown anytime you reactivate. edit: seems that with the new multitasking feature, its possible to hold up a wifi connection even the hmd was locked, just run the remote shell, connect and dont close it. you can connect via pc too without need to use adb tcpip again. before i setup adb tcpip via ' setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555 ' again on the remote shell app. i now let it locked, and look how long it can holdup the wifidebug without reactivating via cable.
raeumler said:
maybe its not helpfull, but when you start wireless wifi on the Q via a wired adb host , you can install the app 'remote adb shell' (blue cast icon, pstore) on the quest and connect to localhost. so you have an on device adb shell for pm commands. it has to be this remote app because of lack on adb shell command without magiskmodule (termux crashes to the tv channel). i dont know how the activitys are called in android so maybe you got luck. also are the developer options part of the settings.apk? i think they pulled it out like that so why not making a new settings.apk where the devops are available? on this way there is sure an option to have a lock on the wifi adb too so it doesnt shutdown anytime you reactivate. edit: seems that with the new multitasking feature, its possible to hold up a wifi connection even the hmd was locked, just run the remote shell, connect and dont close it. you can connect via pc too without need to use adb tcpip again. before i setup adb tcpip via ' setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555 ' again on the remote shell app. i now let it locked, and look how long it can holdup the wifidebug without reactivating via cable.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
.
if someone knows a working terminal for the quest (the original crashes the keyboard after a while). to replace the remote adb shell app, we could use an adb binary that holds up the wifi with adb shell to localhost (shell commands), while another terminal (local, pc or smartphone) can connect through the adb binary over wifi to localhost/quest-ip (for adb commands). but setting up an adb server (not the service) via adb binary and on-device terminal (even via adb shell) is not possible without root (but the remote adb shell app starts one or does it somelike different without root and on-device). when we know how we could put that logic together in a script or apk then). but anyways:
so its setted up now on my quest for holding up debug over wifi (sideload connection) and have an ondevice shell. it runs minimum 23 hours without needing to activate it via cable (adb device to check connection)
1. download/sideload remote adb shell app
2. connect quest2 to a host via usb
3. open cmd on host: adb tcpip 5555
4. disconnect usb
5. start remote adb shell on the quest and type quest-ip:5555 OR localhost:5555 and click connect
6. type in remote adb shell: setprop service.adb.tcp.port 5555
7. minimze the remote adb shell app and let it run
(8). to disable wifidebug: setprop service.adb.tcp.port -1
now there is no need for reactivating until reboot. if you want to run a command go to -> apps -> unknown sources -> open remote app (as there is no recent button).
you can connect to any adb host via wifi (local, pc, smartphone) even after lock or a matter of time (min 23 hours)
the remote adb shell app:
Remote ADB Shell – Apps bei Google Play
Eine Verbindung mit ADB auf einem anderen Android-Gerät läuft über das Netzwerk
play.google.com
with terminal shortcut app you can make settings-scripts then and run them via iconlist for textureresolution and gpu level or whatever ....
ps: maybe im in the wrong subforum now. should i make a thread?
pps: the app 'autostart and stay' adds an autostart option to the quest, which allows to run a launcher before original launcher comes up. (buggy)
ppps: the app SSH Server can set up a SFTP connection for wireless filetransfers
edit: could be that it just work to the first whyeverdisconnect then the quests tracking is beside and you have to reboot
double
Honestly Annoying said:
All good, I actually figured out how to launch the settings page from this command:
adb shell am start -a android.intent.action.VIEW -d com.oculus.tv -e uri com.android.settings/.DevelopmentSettings com.oculus.vrshell/.MainActivity
Everything works in this page, except for launching the Developer settings option. This crashes the app as you mentioned, even though I can see the OEM Unlock option in the settings search bar.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This still works today! I have a Quest 2 running V35, and recently un-linked my Facebook and Oculus accounts. After finally getting my Quest 2 back up (still needed to use the old Oculus apk from an Android device and Quest 1 device selection), the timezone was off, so I used the above adb shell command to access settings, and changed the timezone fine.
I also changed the Device Name, although I'm unsure what ramifications that might cause later.
Edit: Don't change your Oculus account password after doing the FB account bypass. You'll break the log-in session, and have to factory-reset and start over.
you can have more settings when you use SetEdit (Settings Database Editor) from pstore. some props are editable, some need root.

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