du in terminal - G1 Android Development

So this may sound like a dumb question but I am a newb to linux. I was in terminal and to gain superuser access I would type su at the $, well i made a mistake and typed in "du" at the $ well all kinds of script ran. Reading this i noticed it went through alot of files and some of the lines said du: can't open './root' : Permission denied.
Anyone have any idea what this command is or what would happen if i ran it when i had superuser access?

This may help you =]
http://www.linfo.org/du.html
In short, it is for reporting purposes displaying your disk consumption, and wont hurt your phone.

Related

Solved - Change root password

I used the directions from Jesus Freke to install the Mod RC30 on my G1.
Then I read and used the instructions provided by Stericson to change my password....
Only one problem! Now it won't let me access root with su or with my password. I wanted to use something generic first and if it was successful I would change it to a good password. So, I used my user name "shaneaus"
Now I get permission denied with both su and shaneaus!
Am I totally screwed? Is there some way to reset the password back to su. That wouldn't make sense, I know, from a security sense. Just hoping.
Thanks
I'm hoping that there is an easier solution.
But, if I flash the update... Will that reset the root password?
I don't know what happened but this can be remedied. First off, it is possible that when you change the superuser command you failed to chmod it to 4755...at any rate, you can solve this by plugging your phone into your computer and starting up an adb shell, this should give you root if you have the modded rc30. Next remount /system to read and write privileges
mount -o remount,rw /dev/block/mtdblock3 /system
now type:
cd /system/bin
ls
Do you see su or your username listed?
If so type:
chmod 4755 (type su or your username here, without parantheses)
now open terminal emulator on your phone and try your superuser command again.
If you did not see su or your username in the output of ls type the following to get a setuid shell:
cat sh > (username or su whichever you want)
chmod 4755 (username or su whichever you want)
now open terminal emulator on your phone and try your superuser command again.
That should get you going.
Ha!
I'm just beginning to learn how to do this stuff. I have no idea how to "start up an adb shell" or even what an adb shell is!
So, I guess I'll start researching on line!
Ok, so I've read up on the adb shell and think I have a grip on how to use it... Except I can't figure out how to get the darn thing started. Do I have to open up the emulator? I thought I would be accessing the device - not the emulator. But, most sites talk about using the adb with the emulator. Also, I have seen where I should be able to run adb devices.exe and have it show my device to confirm it is connected. Only one problem, I can't find the adb devices.exe in the sdk kit.
Oh, and thanks again to Jesus Freke for the 64bit USB drivers. worked like a charm!
Awesome! Y'all are fantastic! I learned a lot tonight! I did the following:
Add $SDK_ROOT\tools to my path
Then had a hell of a time because everything I was reading (except for one location I finally found said to run "adb shell.exe"
I finally found a site that said to run "adb.exe shell"
And, whalla! I was in.
Your above advise was spot on, Stericson! Thank you!
Glad to hear you got it sorted.
shaneaus said:
Oh, and thanks again to Jesus Freke for the 64bit USB drivers. worked like a charm!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
*looks around* huh? me?
I assume you're refering to this driver?
You should be thanking aziwoqpd for that, not me

Idea for a very usefull app. Dev's needed

Hello all.
By flashing my device many times, I am always fed up to plug it and remove all the application I don't want, or open the zip file, remove the apk and resign the ROM.
What I have in mind is making a little app that show us all the applications in system/app ( easy) and them when clicking on them just like a adb shell rm system/app/myUnwantedApp.apk.
The browser is easy to program, but the command line is not easy. I tried with eStrongs and Astro, but they cannot remove the apk..
Cam someone help me or teach me how to enter a adb command line in my phone?
Thank a lot.
profete162 said:
Hello all.
By flashing my device many times, I am always fed up to plug it and remove all the application I don't want, or open the zip file, remove the apk and resign the ROM.
What I have in mind is making a little app that show us all the applications in system/app ( easy) and them when clicking on them just like a adb shell rm system/app/myUnwantedApp.apk.
The browser is easy to program, but the command line is not easy. I tried with eStrongs and Astro, but they cannot remove the apk..
Cam someone help me or teach me how to enter a adb command line in my phone?
Thank a lot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can use a terminal emulator application like Better Term etc to run shell commands. There is nothing special about adb.
The command adb shell rm is simply running the shell first and then the "rm" command. Now, depending upon the ROM that you are using, the command adb shell will give you a root shell (or not). In any case, when you use a terminal emulator, simply use the "su" command to gain super user privileges (you have to have "su" and SuperUser.apk installed).
Since you are talking about a custom ROM, I think that root access is implied.
In any case, look at programs like Android Scripting Environment. It allows you to code scripts in an interpreted language like shell script, python etc... In your case simply write a shell script with the desired "rm ...." commands and execute them after gaining superuser permissions and make sure that your /system partition is mounted in rw mode.

"ADB Shell" gives me "#" instead of "$" when rooting MyTouch Slide, why??

"ADB Shell" gives me "#" instead of "$" when rooting MyTouch Slide, why??
trying to root my MyTouch 3G Slide. Ive tried various methods from different sites to do it but they all seem to come down to running something called "ADB Shell". On the screenshots, it seems to always give you a $ prompt. When I do it, I get a # prompt. Also, anything I type after that is just repeated back to me along with another # prompt. I find where other people get the same problem but cant find any solutions with it. What am I doing wrong?
kellyjaye said:
trying to root my MyTouch 3G Slide. Ive tried various methods from different sites to do it but they all seem to come down to running something called "ADB Shell". On the screenshots, it seems to always give you a $ prompt. When I do it, I get a # prompt. Also, anything I type after that is just repeated back to me along with another # prompt. I find where other people get the same problem but cant find any solutions with it. What am I doing wrong?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
In Linux and Unix systems (Android Included) a # (Pound Symbol) signifies Root level access or su (Superuser) so since you're rooting your device this means you have done it, $ appears for any other user of the system
i have the same problem too. I'm using window xp and it giving me the # symbol instead of $. any suggestion to fix it? i have checked all the drivers, slideroot files are in androidsdk file
like Captainkrtek said, if you're getting a # for your adb shell, you ARE rooted.
root shell should look something like this:
Code:
$ adb shell
#

[Q] Any suggestions on how to regain root after the OTA ICS update using Linux?

Any suggestions on how to regain root after the OTA ICS update using Linux? I've read through various posts scattered about the innerwebs regarding how using Windows but I'm a stubborn Linux user. I've downloaded the A2_ICS_Root Zip and explored the contents but not sure how to properly utilize them. I've rooted the phone in the past manually using Android SDK, Linux Terminal, push/adb shell commands and Motofail but of course lost root with the ICS update. If I don't get an answer I may attempt to follow some of the scripting used for Droid/Razors post ICS, of course tailored a bit. Although my Superuser app is still showing it's pretty much useless, like others with the same issue I've read about, it's still written into the system but no longer rooted. I've tested phone access in terminal but get the R/W error message ... no permission, etc. So ... I thought maybe folks here may have an answer for us semi skilled Linux users.
You should be able to just run the root.bat if you have the folder with all contents extracted to desktop.
Sent from my MB865 using xda premium
Aimless Rambler said:
Any suggestions on how to regain root after the OTA ICS update using Linux? I've read through various posts scattered about the innerwebs regarding how using Windows but I'm a stubborn Linux user. I've downloaded the A2_ICS_Root Zip and explored the contents but not sure how to properly utilize them. I've rooted the phone in the past manually using Android SDK, Linux Terminal, push/adb shell commands and Motofail but of course lost root with the ICS update. If I don't get an answer I may attempt to follow some of the scripting used for Droid/Razors post ICS, of course tailored a bit. Although my Superuser app is still showing it's pretty much useless, like others with the same issue I've read about, it's still written into the system but no longer rooted. I've tested phone access in terminal but get the R/W error message ... no permission, etc. So ... I thought maybe folks here may have an answer for us semi skilled Linux users.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Use the process and scripts I created for the leak/OTA. All you need to do is step 6 in the following link, and use the shell not the bat as others noted... if you are running linux, I am sure you already knew that.
Link:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1779968
6) Boot into ICS, and root using the zip below, you will connect the phone to your computer and use the root.bat (unzip this folder to your desktop) for windows and root.sh for linux/mac.
The script and root files:
http://www.androidfilehost.com/main/Motorola_ATRIX_2_Developers/jimbridgman/A2_ICS_root.zip
Re-Rooted!
jimbridgman said:
Use the process and scripts I created for the leak/OTA. All you need to do is step 6 in the following link, and use the shell not the bat as others noted... if you are running linux, I am sure you already knew that.
Link:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1779968
6) Boot into ICS, and root using the zip below, you will connect the phone to your computer and use the root.bat (unzip this folder to your desktop) for windows and root.sh for linux/mac.
The script and root files:
http://www.androidfilehost.com/main/Motorola_ATRIX_2_Developers/jimbridgman/A2_ICS_root.zip
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks Jim! I actually figured it out on my own, of course using the same zip file you provided which I had found in another thread.
I extracted the file into it's own folder, put the phone into debug mode and made sure MTP (media device) was checked, hooked to USB then ran a few checks in Terminal to make sure the device was recognized. Then I dragged "a2_ics_root.sh" into the open Terminal window and let it do its thing. I already had Superuser installed in earlier root (prior to ICS) so maybe that's why I got the "cannot stat 'su': No such file or directory cannot stat 'Superuser.apk': No such file or directory" error but then it said "You are rooted!". So to check to make sure I was actually rooted I ran the adb shell command and got this "[email protected]:/ $" then entered su, and got this "[email protected]:/ #"
Success!!
Hmm
Aimless Rambler said:
Thanks Jim! I actually figured it out on my own, of course using the same zip file you provided which I had found in another thread.
I extracted the file into it's own folder, put the phone into debug mode and made sure MTP (media device) was checked, hooked to USB then ran a few checks in Terminal to make sure the device was recognized. Then I dragged "a2_ics_root.sh" into the open Terminal window and let it do its thing. I already had Superuser installed in earlier root (prior to ICS) so maybe that's why I got the "cannot stat 'su': No such file or directory cannot stat 'Superuser.apk': No such file or directory" error but then it said "You are rooted!". So to check to make sure I was actually rooted I ran the adb shell command and got this "[email protected]:/ $" then entered su, and got this "[email protected]:/ #"
Success!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I don't have root after all? Once unplugged from computer I ran a terminal emulator app on the phone and tried to access root but it says I don't have permission, as well as a few other apps I tried to install. Strangeness. As it looks above in quote is it just a temporary root? One thing I did notice after the OTA ICS update is that the superuser app remained. I tried a factory data reset thinking it would take it off but it didn't. Is my original rooting (GB Motofail) SU somehow stuck in perpetuity within some system file somewhere which is fouling up this root? So how would I go about a clean install of Superuser? I updated Superuser on Play Store but no difference. Hmm
update on strange problem
Aimless Rambler said:
Well I don't have root after all? Once unplugged from computer I ran a terminal emulator app on the phone and tried to access root but it says I don't have permission, as well as a few other apps I tried to install. Strangeness. As it looks above in quote is it just a temporary root? One thing I did notice after the OTA ICS update is that the superuser app remained. I tried a factory data reset thinking it would take it off but it didn't. Is my original rooting (GB Motofail) SU somehow stuck in perpetuity within some system file somewhere which is fouling up this root? So how would I go about a clean install of Superuser? I updated Superuser on Play Store but no difference. Hmm
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First of all I apologize for all this confusion with replies to my own questions but I don't know any other way to relay the information. I'm troubleshooting as I go and hope it helps define what the issue may be and maybe a fix haha! Okay!! So I get root access easy as pie in terminal, no issues whatsoever, so I did a little searching and this is what I've found. The problem seems to be su is listed twice within my system folder (see below).
PROBLEM
[email protected]:/system/app # ls
Superuser.apk <<< is listed in the right location
# cd ..
[email protected]:/system #
[email protected]:/system/bin #
su <<< is listed here
[email protected]:/system/xbin #
su <<< is also listed here?
That can't be right? Shouldn't it only be in the /bin folder? Having downloaded the A2 ICS Root zip file I explored the Windows root.bat file in a text editor and saw that SU is suppose to install to /bin. So how the heck did it get in 2 different locations? ha!!! I'm guessing this would cause some issue but before I go deleting the extra file I thought I should inquire first. Haha!
Doh!!!! I know it's got to be something I did!
Aimless Rambler said:
First of all I apologize for all this confusion with replies to my own questions but I don't know any other way to relay the information. I'm troubleshooting as I go and hope it helps define what the issue may be and maybe a fix haha! Okay!! So I get root access easy as pie in terminal, no issues whatsoever, so I did a little searching and this is what I've found. The problem seems to be su is listed twice within my system folder (see below).
PROBLEM
[email protected]:/system/app # ls
Superuser.apk <<< is listed in the right location
# cd ..
[email protected]:/system #
[email protected]:/system/bin #
su <<< is listed here
[email protected]:/system/xbin #
su <<< is also listed here?
That can't be right? Shouldn't it only be in the /bin folder? Having downloaded the A2 ICS Root zip file I explored the Windows root.bat file in a text editor and saw that SU is suppose to install to /bin. So how the heck did it get in 2 different locations? ha!!! I'm guessing this would cause some issue but before I go deleting the extra file I thought I should inquire first. Haha!
Doh!!!! I know it's got to be something I did!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is completely correct. The su in /system/xbin is a link to /system/bin/su. And that is correct, and how it should be.
Please explain your issue in more detail as I am not fully understanding what is not working.
Rooted again??
jimbridgman said:
That is completely correct. The su in /system/xbin is a link to /system/bin/su. And that is correct, and how it should be.
Please explain your issue in more detail as I am not fully understanding what is not working.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The issue was my phone was not actually rooted after running a2_ics_root.sh in Terminal (computer). I got the "cannot stat 'su': No such file or directory cannot stat 'Superuser.apk': No such file or directory" error message in terminal and also checked root by running a terminal emulator app within the phone and received the no permission message after entering su at the prompt. Once I reconnected the phone to the computer and ran the sh file again I gained temporary root. That's when I noticed su was in two different locations as I mentioned above and you subsequently replied was normal. Of course before I saw your response I had already removed (rm command) the extra su ha! After removing the su file from /xbin it alone did not fix the problem. I still could not access root. So I reran the a2_ics_root.sh in terminal (computer) and got root with no error messages and verified it with my phone's terminal app (also got the Superuser root access permission check, which I hadn't got before). No idea why this worked if su was suppose to be in two locations. As I was in the phones terminal emulator app I checked the /xbin folder and did not see it reappear yet it all seems rooted now! Ha! Gosh my brain hurts.
* daemon not running. starting it now on port 5037 *
* daemon started successfully *
remount succeeded
492 KB/s (22372 bytes in 0.044s)
3434 KB/s (397229 bytes in 0.112s)
You are rooted!
Aimless Rambler said:
The issue was my phone was not actually rooted after running a2_ics_root.sh in Terminal (computer). I got the "cannot stat 'su': No such file or directory cannot stat 'Superuser.apk': No such file or directory" error message in terminal and also checked root by running a terminal emulator app within the phone and received the no permission message after entering su at the prompt. Once I reconnected the phone to the computer and ran the sh file again I gained temporary root. That's when I noticed su was in two different locations as I mentioned above and you subsequently replied was normal. Of course before I saw your response I had already removed (rm command) the extra su ha! After removing the su file from /xbin I reran the a2_ics_root.sh in terminal (computer) and got root with no error messages and verified it with my phone's terminal app (also got the Superuser root access permission check, which I hadn't got before). No idea why this worked if su was suppose to be in two locations. As I was in the phones terminal emulator app I checked the /xbin folder and did not see it reappear yet it all seems rooted now! Ha! Gosh my brain hurts.
* daemon not running. starting it now on port 5037 *
* daemon started successfully *
remount succeeded
492 KB/s (22372 bytes in 0.044s)
3434 KB/s (397229 bytes in 0.112s)
You are rooted!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you by chance try and use some sort of root keeper before trying to do the OTA, then had these problems after the OTA was completed?
We have seen this before, and the reason you got the stat errors is because the wrong versions of the files were in /system/bin and /system/xbin. Yeah we have found that trying to use any OTA root keepers are BAD on this phone. Motorola is so anal about updates. That is why we mention to do an fxz before doing any OTA, then using the root scripts afterwards.
If you still have any more issues you might think about using the new ICS fxz in the development section and using/redoing the script from there.
P.S. I saw that you said you dragged the script into the terminal, that is a bad way to run it, BTW.... Try and open a terminal and cd into the dir that you unzipped the script in, and then into the ics_root dir and type ./root.sh and see if that works a little better next time, that might be why you only got temp root, because it was not able to find the proper su and superuser.apk to copy over with adb, I use relative paths in the script just for ease.
jimbridgman said:
Did you by chance try and use some sort of root keeper before trying to do the OTA, then had these problems after the OTA was completed?
We have seen this before, and the reason you got the stat errors is because the wrong versions of the files were in /system/bin and /system/xbin. Yeah we have found that trying to use any OTA root keepers are BAD on this phone. Motorola is so anal about updates. That is why we mention to do an fxz before doing any OTA, then using the root scripts afterwards.
If you still have any more issues you might think about using the new ICS fxz in the development section and using/redoing the script from there.
P.S. I saw that you said you dragged the script into the terminal, that is a bad way to run it, BTW.... Try and open a terminal and cd into the dir that you unzipped the script in, and then into the ics_root dir and type ./root.sh and see if that works a little better next time, that might be why you only got temp root, because it was not able to find the proper su and superuser.apk to copy over with adb, I use relative paths in the script just for ease.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks! I'm sure I did something to cause the troubles but can't recall exactly what it was I did wrong! My brain is getting old. Ha! But to answer your question ... other than my original root (using Motofail) I've hesitated to do anything until after the ICS update. I recently bought the phone 2nd hand to replace my Samsung Captivate so I could experiment with a Lapdock (in my line of work portability and multi-role is a plus). The phone was stock when I got it. Also, I had moved the root.sh file and superuser.apk into my Android/Platform_Tools folder which is in my system path (android rules,etc), so there was some forethought prior to dragging the script into terminal. Next time I'll 'cd it like ya recommend!
Could it be there was an issue with how I did the original GB motofail root?
In any case all seems to be good now.
Thanks again!

[Vulnerability] Bluestacks root access via adb

On GitHub: https://github.com/KDVB/BlueStacks-ADB-root-access​​Disclaimer​For informational purposes only. The author does not call for further actions. Created to warn users who use this product
Background​ADB (Android Debug Brigde) - is a versatile command-line tool that lets you communicate with a device. The adb command facilitates a variety of device actions, such as installing and debugging apps. adb provides access to a Unix shell that you can use to run a variety of commands on a device.
Research Walkthrough​For default, in Bluestacks, ADB port is open, but we can't to use shell command (output "error: closed")
Searching for information in the emulator files found the following file ".adbcmd" in Root.vnhd image. Path to file "dataFS\downloads". In this file we can see adb commands that we can run without connection to shell
For example, "getprop" command, that gives us information about android propetries
As we can see, interaction with android shell is working. So, I think "if I can interact with unix shell, maybe tryed to use pipe operators" and pwn i can interact with file system, but with shell-user privilage.
As a result i continue my search to find su command to get root access. SU file is in "/boot/android/android/system/xbin/bstk/su". I tryed pipe operator to get root access, but get error and shell didn't open(
After that i tryed list terminator ";" and it works. I get root shell
Result​Bluestacks have this vulnerability and people involved in its development know about it and are engaged in its elimination.
The real test is to see if you can actually do anything. Sure, you've ID'd as root, but will it actually let you change anything?
V0latyle said:
The real test is to see if you can actually do anything. Sure, you've ID'd as root, but will it actually let you change anything?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for your reply. Actually you can change in current session, but when emulator reboot, all changes remove. If we speak about system folders. In sdcard folders changes save. Sorry, I didn't mention it in the post.
When i searched information on the virtual disk, i found some scripts that build a system. That takes information from .conf files, but that works only for local work. For example, when you using OpenVPN Connect that port still open and you can interact with it.

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