Attempting to partition sd card with ext4 -a process I completed multiple times successfully on a Nexus One, the process appeared to complete but now the phone will not mount the sd card. I've tried a wipe/reset, to no avail. I can still access and partition the sd card through adb, but the phone cannot mount it to format/partition, restore from recovery, partition sd-card from within ClockWork Recovery, nothing. I've re-partitioned the sd card through adb, which indicated a successful completion, but the phone still refuses to mount the sd card. If this weren't a Nexus S with it's cursed internal sd-card I would simply swap out the sd card with another or format it externally like all the google topics I pull up on the subject suggest.
Is this fixable or has the fused sd-card scenario become a liability?
Common Error messages:
Can't mount /sdcard
Can't mount /sdcard/.android_secure
Phone: Nexus S (US, T-Mobile, manufactured Dec. '10)
Recovery Img: ClockworkMod Recovery 3.0.2.4
Rom: CM 7.0.3 (now wiped, cannot put back on since sd card won't mount)
fstab:
/dev/block/mtdblock4 /cache yaffs2 rw
/dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/userdata /data ext4 rw
/dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/system /system ext4 rw
/dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/media /sdcard vfat rw
Can mount everything except the last one, /sdcard.
I've tried all the recommended procedures garnered from the first 10 or so pages in google, xda, cyanogem forum, etc:
Restore from nandroid: Not possible, can't mount the SD,
Wipe/Reset: can't wipe /media as sd card won't mount,
partition sd card from within Clockwork: indicates success but does nothing,
format from within clockwork: unable to mount,
repartition using adb: works, parted can see them, I can move files to from, but the phone will not mount,
clearing fstab: no effect,
Fastboot works, but I don't have the proper images. ADB works, as do the installed utilities. Have not tried ODIN as again, I don't have the proper images. Should I attempt to compile my own images from source?
Update: SOLVED, Microsoft Windows. To whom it may concern: I was able to mount the /dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/media from two different laptops running OSX and Fedora/Ubuntu then successfully been able to partition them with fat32 as the ClockworkMod (and maybe Cyanogen?) expect with 0 progress. Then I pulled out an old Windows machine, installed the JDK/ADK's +tools and performed the same procedure and that time it worked. I'm uncertain as to what particular quality a 'genuine' Windows formatting provides, but either this phone or the particular software combination I'm running require it. I was able to mount & re-partition the /sdcard in Clockwork, then manually remove rebuild them and upgrade to ext4 using tune2fs as usual. In the interim for work and such, I had to find a surrogate (for the SIM) and could only find and old k750i (which still had a full charge and worked flawlessly all day, btw). Wow phones used to be small.
I think I was missing something about the way ClockworkMod handles fstab, because everytime I would modify it specifically to the specs I passed to parted while creating the partitions with mkpartfs, it would either ignore or overwrite them. So be careful messing with the sd-card, the S's aren't like the One's in the sense that if you screw it (the sd-card) up or it goes bad you can't just take it out and format it in another machine/phone, you have to appeal to ClockworkMod. ODIN $ucks by the way, I found fastboot to be much more effective.
If you format the sd partition ext4, then you should change the fstab too.
from
Code:
/dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/media /sdcard vfat rw
to from
Code:
/dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/media /sdcard ext4 rw
or from
Code:
/dev/block/platform/s3c-sdhci.0/by-name/media /sdcard auto rw
The 2nd last entry there is the file system type.
Likely, this would have solved your problem.
Of course, I don't know, whether the recovery has the vfat type in fstab. You might have to change it there too. On my linux box auto works very well in fstab.
Of course, if you partition your sd partition ext4, you won't be able to use it as usb memory from windows. (At least I am pretty sure you can't, haven't tried)
Well of course I couldn't let it die, I went back and started tinkering again now that I have a way back. I can't change the fstab it seems, whatever I change it to gets over written everytime either Clockwork or the Rom starts. It's weird, I know I'm missing something and I don't know much about CWMod. (had Amon_Ra on the N1, which had the nifty fsupgrade script)
The 2nd last entry there is the file system type.
Likely, this would have solved your problem.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm quite familiar with unix style fs and fstab, it's the stubbornness I'm not used to. I'm also spoiled by vi and nano. CW has some nice scripts built in as well though.
I previously ran LolliGPE but was long overdue for an update. I downloaded the latest version and copied the image to my phone and flashed the ROM. I decided to go try a dirty install first to see if I could keep everything I had, since I had already been running a previous version and after reviewing the changelog did not see anything recommending to wipe clean. After installing successfully, Android asked me to enter my password to decrypt my data (I don't recall ever encrypting my data?), and so I did. It then told me that my password was right, but the data was corrupt, and presented me a button to reset my phone. The button redirected me to recovery and automatically attempted to wipe /data and then re-mount it, but the wipe failed. I rebooted again with the same issue, same failed attempt to wipe. I went to install the zip again, and this time do a full wipe, but it was unable to mount my phone's storage nor my SD card. I am not able to mount either at all now.
What's the best course of action? I'd like to retain as much as I can and avoid wiping all of the internal storage clean. Is there a simpler fix to this or am I doomed?
HBOOT: 3.19.0.0000
RADIO: 1.09.20.0926
OS: 3.28.605.4
EDIT: For anyone else having a problem like this that at least wants to get their data back, here's what you should do (I assume you know how to work with Linux!):
Make sure you have the latest version of TWRP and ADB.
Boot the phone into recovery mode and connect the phone to your computer via USB
Run "ls -al /dev/block/platform/msm_sdcc.1/by-name" and check the output. Make a note of the partition marked "userdata" - for me, it was /dev/block/mmcblk0p48.
Either: simply use adb pull to copy this file to your computer (this will require about 26 gigs of space), or attempt to mount the file. To use adb pull, execute "adb pull /dev/block/<ID> ./data" (ID being what you marked down). Your data partition will be copied to /data. To mount, use "mount -t ext4 /dev/block/<ID> /userdata". Whatever's left of your data will be on your phone's new /userdata folder.
Use ADB to pull what files you want from /userdata. If you pulled the partition, skip this step.
If you copied the files you wanted over, you're done. If you pulled the entire partition, you're going to want to try and mount it. On Windows, there are various tools to mount Linux partitions, a quick Google will find some good ones. However, if the data is corrupt, it will not work. I recommend attempting to repair the partition on linux, with the command "e2fsck -f -y /path/to/data", replacing the path to your data file as necessary. Once done, run "mount -t ext4 /path/to/data /mnt/data", replacing the paths as necessary.
Once mounted, you can access your data wherever it was mounted. If e2fsck appeared to fix many errors, chances are most of your data will be in the lost+found folder, and you'll need to sort through this yourself. If you're lucky, then your data will be intact and readily usable. Internal SD card data is located at ./media/0.
To fix the partitions and get Android back up and running, you need to install the latest firmware, format your data in TWRP, factory reset, and then flash a ROM again. Here's what I did to do that, without an SD card. If you have an SD card, simply copy your ROM zip to the SD card and skip the final steps:
Make sure you have the latest version of TWRP and ADB, and download the latest copy of the firmware (check the development forum here).
Boot the phone (doesn't matter to what) and run adb reboot bootloader. When your phone reboots, double-check by running fastboot reboot-bootloader.
Put your phone in RUU mode with fastboot oem rebootRUU. The phone will restart and the HTC logo will come up.
Wait a couple seconds, then run fastboot flash zip firmware.zip, where firmware.zip is the firmware you want to flash.
The first time you do this, it will fail saying something like "FAILED (remote: 90 hboot pre-update! please flush image again immediately)". Ignore this, run the last command again: fastboot flash zip firmware.zip
The progress bar will appear and begin filling. Wait until fastboot is finished flashig it (the progress bar may not fill completely), wait an extra 5 seconds or so, and then do fastboot reboot.
The phone will reboot. Android will still be messed up, but you can verify the partitions are in working order by checking adb shell cat /proc/emmc.
Once you know the partitions are working, get back into TWRP/recovery: adb reboot recovery
Format /data and wipe /cache, /data, dalvik/art cache, etc (factory reset). You will lose the contents of your internal storage and everything else.
If you don't have the ROM zip on an sd card, make sure the zip is in the same directory as adb and run adb push rom.zip /sdcard/rom.zip, where rom.zip is the ROM. You can also copy it to the external sd by swapping /sdcard/rom.zip with /external_storage/rom.zip.
Once copied, reboot into recovery and flash the zip. Back to normal!
Update:
It's a firmware problem. Apparently there was a new firmware update that the ROM uses that I don't have. mmcblk0p42 was changed to "vzw_logger" (which I don't have), making mmcblk0p49 userdata instead of previously mmcblk0p48. The data partition it expects to be /data is /cache. Got this information by comparing 'cat /proc/emmc' with information of the latest version I found here.
Is there a way to fix this that allows me to preserve the contents of my internal storage (/sdcard)? Can I just flash an older version of the ROM to backup my data?
Klayderpus said:
Update:
It's a firmware problem. Apparently there was a new firmware update that the ROM uses that I don't have. mmcblk0p42 was changed to "vzw_logger" (which I don't have), making mmcblk0p49 userdata instead of previously mmcblk0p48. The data partition it expects to be /data is /cache. Got this information by comparing 'cat /proc/emmc' with information of the latest version I found here.
Is there a way to fix this that allows me to preserve the contents of my internal storage (/sdcard)? Can I just flash an older version of the ROM to backup my data?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I posted a warning about this change in the general section early on. For you to have the partition changes means you are on the newer firmware which doesn't match what you posted above for os. You very likely at this point have nothing left to salvage. Are you on the latest twrp?
dottat said:
I posted a warning about this change in the general section early on. For you to have the partition changes means you are on the newer firmware which doesn't match what you posted above for os. You very likely at this point have nothing left to salvage. Are you on the latest twrp?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am on the latest TWRP, yes. Since this post, I've actually been making good progress in getting the data partition back, or so I think. I've been using dd to copy /dev/block/mntblk0p48 to an image file, but got stuck when I reached the FAT32 limit, so I re-formatted my SD card, except now it's read-only.
Klayderpus said:
I am on the latest TWRP, yes. Since this post, I've actually been making good progress in getting the data partition back, or so I think. I've been using dd to copy /dev/block/mntblk0p48 to an image file, but got stuck when I reached the FAT32 limit, so I re-formatted my SD card, except now it's read-only.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you Dd the entire data partition it's gonna be almost 25 gigs. If you can't mount data in twrp and find anything usable when browsing via adb in twrp there's probably not anything usable in there.
dottat said:
If you Dd the entire data partition it's gonna be almost 25 gigs. If you can't mount data in twrp and find anything usable when browsing via adb in twrp there's probably not anything usable in there.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did a DD before while in ADB and it only got to about 1.3 gigs, but after running the image through e2fsck I actually found some images and downloads. I think there's usable stuff in there and I'd like to at least try to get it. There's family pictures and stuff on there that have some value to me. My SD card is 32 gigs so I could probably do it if anything for the hell of it.
Do you happen to know how I can get the SD card mounted? mount -o rw,remount /dev/block/mmcblk1p1 [some dir] is what I've been trying, but I've been getting either Read only filesystem or Invalid argument.
I might be a little crazy
Klayderpus said:
I did a DD before while in ADB and it only got to about 1.3 gigs, but after running the image through e2fsck I actually found some images and downloads. I think there's usable stuff in there and I'd like to at least try to get it. There's family pictures and stuff on there that have some value to me. My SD card is 32 gigs so I could probably do it if anything for the hell of it.
Do you happen to know how I can get the SD card mounted? mount -o rw,remount /dev/block/mmcblk1p1 [some dir] is what I've been trying, but I've been getting either Read only filesystem or Invalid argument.
I might be a little crazy
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Its already mounted.. Just boot into TWRP while connected to your PC. Open cmd prompt in your adb directory.
adb shell
cd sdcard
ls
See if your internal SD card contents are listed.
dottat said:
Its already mounted.. Just boot into TWRP while connected to your PC. Open cmd prompt in your adb directory.
adb shell
cd sdcard
ls
See if your internal SD card contents are listed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
TWRP lists the internal SD card as being size 0 under Mount -> Select Storage and /sdcard is empty. I re-formatted my external SD card to make a full size image but that's what wasn't mounting.
Klayderpus said:
TWRP lists the internal SD card as being size 0 under Mount -> Select Storage and /sdcard is empty. I re-formatted my external SD card to make a full size image but that's what wasn't mounting.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you try the repair option for /data listed under wipe in TWRP?
dottat said:
Did you try the repair option for /data listed under wipe in TWRP?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Doesn't work. There's a couple of messages about not being able to mount /data and then:
Code:
Repairing Data using e2fsck...
E:Unable to repair '/data'.
E:Error repairing file system.
Klayderpus said:
Doesn't work. There's a couple of messages about not being able to mount /data and then:
Code:
Repairing Data using e2fsck...
E:Unable to repair '/data'.
E:Error repairing file system.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
try this
adb shell
mount -t ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk0p49 /userdata
df
show me the output of df...
and if to be sure of which firmware you are on.. reboot recovery... and do the following....
adb shell
mount -t ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk0p48 /userdata
df
and show me that DF
I got all of my data back successfully. I'm updating the OP with the steps I did to get it back.
What's the next step? Change firmware? I have a local copy of what I needed from the phone, so anything's game now.
edit: /dev/block/mmcblk0p48 for me is userdata, 49 does not exist. Both mounts fail.
Code:
df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs 933044 24 933020 0% /dev
tmpfs 933044 20 933024 0% /tmp
/dev/block/mmcblk0p47 1030828 16464 1014364 2% /cache
/dev/block/mmcblk1p1 30647232 12 29090436 0% /external_sd
/dev/block/mmcblk1p1 30647232 12 29090436 0% /and-sec
Klayderpus said:
I got all of my data back successfully. I'm updating the OP with the steps I did to get it back.
What's the next step? Change firmware? I have a local copy of what I needed from the phone, so anything's game now.
edit: /dev/block/mmcblk0p48 for me is userdata, 49 does not exist. Both mounts fail.
Code:
df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
tmpfs 933044 24 933020 0% /dev
tmpfs 933044 20 933024 0% /tmp
/dev/block/mmcblk0p47 1030828 16464 1014364 2% /cache
/dev/block/mmcblk1p1 30647232 12 29090436 0% /external_sd
/dev/block/mmcblk1p1 30647232 12 29090436 0% /and-sec
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I would say update firmware. Since you confirmed blk48 as user data I know you don't have lollipop firmware.
I posted a firmware zip that contains the newest twrp which is compatible with lollipop in tigerstowns firmware thread. You can use that to update.
Then wipe and reinstall whatever Rom you want to use.
I fixed it this morning by updating firmware and will update the OP with the rest of the steps for the Googlers. Thanks again.
Klayderpus said:
EDIT: For anyone else having a problem like this that at least wants to get their data back, here's what you should do (I assume you know how to work with Linux!):
Make sure you have the latest version of TWRP and ADB.
Boot the phone into recovery mode and connect the phone to your computer via USB
Run "ls -al /dev/block/platform/msm_sdcc.1/by-name" and check the output. Make a note of the partition marked "userdata" - for me, it was /dev/block/mmcblk0p48.
Either: simply use adb pull to copy this file to your computer (this will require about 26 gigs of space), or attempt to mount the file. To use adb pull, execute "adb pull /dev/block/<ID> ./data" (ID being what you marked down). Your data partition will be copied to /data. To mount, use "mount -t ext4 /dev/block/<ID> /userdata". Whatever's left of your data will be on your phone's new /userdata folder.
Use ADB to pull what files you want from /userdata. If you pulled the partition, skip this step.
If you copied the files you wanted over, you're done. If you pulled the entire partition, you're going to want to try and mount it. On Windows, there are various tools to mount Linux partitions, a quick Google will find some good ones. However, if the data is corrupt, it will not work. I recommend attempting to repair the partition on linux, with the command "e2fsck -f -y /path/to/data", replacing the path to your data file as necessary. Once done, run "mount -t ext4 /path/to/data /mnt/data", replacing the paths as necessary.
Once mounted, you can access your data wherever it was mounted. If e2fsck appeared to fix many errors, chances are most of your data will be in the lost+found folder, and you'll need to sort through this yourself. If you're lucky, then your data will be intact and readily usable. Internal SD card data is located at ./media/0.
[/LIST]
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have a laptop running Ubuntu: where do I run the "ls -al /dev/block..." command? As in what folder do I need to be in? The phone only appears in an mtp capacity...
EDIT: I figured that out but now I am stuck at "adb pull /dev/block/<ID> ./data". My ID was mmcblk0p28 but the command returns "Bash: mmcblk0p28: no such file or directory exists"
EDIT 2: Got that command to work but the file is too large to write (My disk is FAT32 ). So I then tried the mount command but again got "no such file or directory exists".
Same Issue "Decryption Unsuccessful"
I was trying to apply the OTA update for 5.1 on my M8 converted to GPE 5.01, but had to update to the stock recovery, and found myself in the same situation with the "Decryption Unsuccessful" message.
Following Klayderpus' steps to recover, but I'm running into a few issues:
1) Windows not Ubuntu so some (many) of the commands do not apply.
2) The device is not responding to adb, although it was prior to the "upgrade". Fastboot is working.
3) TWRP was not on the device, in fact I never could get to the recovery after trying to install the stock recovery when I converted to GPE 5.01 many months ago
I have a fresh nandroid backup, so I am just trying to get the device running. Being without the phone is causing me great pain....
I upgraded the firmware to 4.16 and did the factory reset from the stock 4.16 recovery. The phone boots back to the "Decryption Unsuccessful" message.
I am not sure, but I think the next step for me to try is to install the GPE ROM from graffixnyc from the microSD card (need to find/buy that little SD adaptor)
Any help would be greatly appreciated!!
========================
Update;
Recovery does not see the SD card , so I won't be able to install from there.
I'll try flashing TWRP recover to see if that will show the contents of the external card
========================
Update 2:
TWRP does see the external card, but the install failed as it is unable to mount /data and /storage.
I'm out of ideas....HELP!!
========================
Update 3
I noticed the "factory reset" in HBOOT and thought I'd try that instead of the "Wipe" in TWRP, but only made things worse.
Now the phone comes up to the "Decryption Unsuccessful" where I can then take the reset to get it into TWRP recover
TWRP comes up directly into a screen where it's "Running OpenRecovery Script" and then reboots.
I'm going to quit now, as I am only making matters worse.....
========================
Update 4
I got TWRP to quit whatever it was doing.
Now, In TWRP > Wipe > Advanced Wipe, I cannot wipe or repair the Data partition. I see a message "Could not mount /data unable to find crypto footer". Trying to wipe the Davlik Cache fails, "Unable to mount /data, " Unable to mount storage".
========================
version-bootloader: 3.19.0.0000
version-baseband: 1.25.214500021.06G
version-main: 4.16.401.10
modelid: 0P6B12000
cidnum: 11111111
========================
I've bricked the phone and it looks permanent.
I found another thread where everyone was solving this issue running this command "mke2fs -T ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk0p8" in TWRP. I failed to notice that it was not an M8 device thread. The phone won't boot at all, and windows sees it as a usb drive.
Haste makes waste
Do you still have fastboot?
Check out the RUU collection here and grab what apllies to your device:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/ver...zw-m8-master-ruu-firmware-collection-t2946473
Make sure you use the HTC fastboot.exe from post 3
highplains914drifter said:
I was trying to apply the OTA update for 5.1 on my M8 converted to GPE 5.01, but had to update to the stock recovery, and found myself in the same situation with the "Decryption Unsuccessful" message.
Following Klayderpus' steps to recover, but I'm running into a few issues:
1) Windows not Ubuntu so some (many) of the commands do not apply.
2) The device is not responding to adb, although it was prior to the "upgrade". Fastboot is working.
3) TWRP was not on the device, in fact I never could get to the recovery after trying to install the stock recovery when I converted to GPE 5.01 many months ago
I have a fresh nandroid backup, so I am just trying to get the device running. Being without the phone is causing me great pain....
I upgraded the firmware to 4.16 and did the factory reset from the stock 4.16 recovery. The phone boots back to the "Decryption Unsuccessful" message.
I am not sure, but I think the next step for me to try is to install the GPE ROM from graffixnyc from the microSD card (need to find/buy that little SD adaptor)
Any help would be greatly appreciated!!
========================
Update;
Recovery does not see the SD card , so I won't be able to install from there.
I'll try flashing TWRP recover to see if that will show the contents of the external card
========================
Update 2:
TWRP does see the external card, but the install failed as it is unable to mount /data and /storage.
I'm out of ideas....HELP!!
========================
Update 3
I noticed the "factory reset" in HBOOT and thought I'd try that instead of the "Wipe" in TWRP, but only made things worse.
Now the phone comes up to the "Decryption Unsuccessful" where I can then take the reset to get it into TWRP recover
TWRP comes up directly into a screen where it's "Running OpenRecovery Script" and then reboots.
I'm going to quit now, as I am only making matters worse.....
========================
Update 4
I got TWRP to quit whatever it was doing.
Now, In TWRP > Wipe > Advanced Wipe, I cannot wipe or repair the Data partition. I see a message "Could not mount /data unable to find crypto footer". Trying to wipe the Davlik Cache fails, "Unable to mount /data, " Unable to mount storage".
========================
version-bootloader: 3.19.0.0000
version-baseband: 1.25.214500021.06G
version-main: 4.16.401.10
modelid: 0P6B12000
cidnum: 11111111
========================
I've bricked the phone and it looks permanent.
I found another thread where everyone was solving this issue running this command "mke2fs -T ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk0p8" in TWRP. I failed to notice that it was not an M8 device thread. The phone won't boot at all, and windows sees it as a usb drive.
Haste makes waste
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you have fastboot do the following commands
Fastboot oem task 28
Fastboot oem task 29
Then try to flash your rom or ruu.
dottat said:
If you have fastboot do the following commands
Fastboot oem task 28
Fastboot oem task 29
Then try to flash your rom or ruu.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No Fastboot, nothing. Device was charged, but now acts as if the battery is dead. the Power button does nothing even after a long press.
Bad day...
Klayderpus said:
I previously ran LolliGPE but was long overdue for an update. I downloaded the latest version and copied the image to my phone and flashed the ROM. I decided to go try a dirty install first to see if I could keep everything I had, since I had already been running a previous version and after reviewing the changelog did not see anything recommending to wipe clean. After installing successfully, Android asked me to enter my password to decrypt my data (I don't recall ever encrypting my data?), and so I did. It then told me that my password was right, but the data was corrupt, and presented me a button to reset my phone. The button redirected me to recovery and automatically attempted to wipe /data and then re-mount it, but the wipe failed. I rebooted again with the same issue, same failed attempt to wipe. I went to install the zip again, and this time do a full wipe, but it was unable to mount my phone's storage nor my SD card. I am not able to mount either at all now.
What's the best course of action? I'd like to retain as much as I can and avoid wiping all of the internal storage clean. Is there a simpler fix to this or am I doomed?
HBOOT: 3.19.0.0000
RADIO: 1.09.20.0926
OS: 3.28.605.4
EDIT: For anyone else having a problem like this that at least wants to get their data back, here's what you should do (I assume you know how to work with Linux!):
Make sure you have the latest version of TWRP and ADB.
Boot the phone into recovery mode and connect the phone to your computer via USB
Run "ls -al /dev/block/platform/msm_sdcc.1/by-name" and check the output. Make a note of the partition marked "userdata" - for me, it was /dev/block/mmcblk0p48.
Either: simply use adb pull to copy this file to your computer (this will require about 26 gigs of space), or attempt to mount the file. To use adb pull, execute "adb pull /dev/block/<ID> ./data" (ID being what you marked down). Your data partition will be copied to /data. To mount, use "mount -t ext4 /dev/block/<ID> /userdata". Whatever's left of your data will be on your phone's new /userdata folder.
Use ADB to pull what files you want from /userdata. If you pulled the partition, skip this step.
If you copied the files you wanted over, you're done. If you pulled the entire partition, you're going to want to try and mount it. On Windows, there are various tools to mount Linux partitions, a quick Google will find some good ones. However, if the data is corrupt, it will not work. I recommend attempting to repair the partition on linux, with the command "e2fsck -f -y /path/to/data", replacing the path to your data file as necessary. Once done, run "mount -t ext4 /path/to/data /mnt/data", replacing the paths as necessary.
Once mounted, you can access your data wherever it was mounted. If e2fsck appeared to fix many errors, chances are most of your data will be in the lost+found folder, and you'll need to sort through this yourself. If you're lucky, then your data will be intact and readily usable. Internal SD card data is located at ./media/0.
To fix the partitions and get Android back up and running, you need to install the latest firmware, format your data in TWRP, factory reset, and then flash a ROM again. Here's what I did to do that, without an SD card. If you have an SD card, simply copy your ROM zip to the SD card and skip the final steps:
Make sure you have the latest version of TWRP and ADB, and download the latest copy of the firmware (check the development forum here).
Boot the phone (doesn't matter to what) and run adb reboot bootloader. When your phone reboots, double-check by running fastboot reboot-bootloader.
Put your phone in RUU mode with fastboot oem rebootRUU. The phone will restart and the HTC logo will come up.
Wait a couple seconds, then run fastboot flash zip firmware.zip, where firmware.zip is the firmware you want to flash.
The first time you do this, it will fail saying something like "FAILED (remote: 90 hboot pre-update! please flush image again immediately)". Ignore this, run the last command again: fastboot flash zip firmware.zip
The progress bar will appear and begin filling. Wait until fastboot is finished flashig it (the progress bar may not fill completely), wait an extra 5 seconds or so, and then do fastboot reboot.
The phone will reboot. Android will still be messed up, but you can verify the partitions are in working order by checking adb shell cat /proc/emmc.
Once you know the partitions are working, get back into TWRP/recovery: adb reboot recovery
Format /data and wipe /cache, /data, dalvik/art cache, etc (factory reset). You will lose the contents of your internal storage and everything else.
If you don't have the ROM zip on an sd card, make sure the zip is in the same directory as adb and run adb push rom.zip /sdcard/rom.zip, where rom.zip is the ROM. You can also copy it to the external sd by swapping /sdcard/rom.zip with /external_storage/rom.zip.
Once copied, reboot into recovery and flash the zip. Back to normal!
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Hey
I have a HTC one m7 verizon & same problem storage decryption failed. See my case here in below post. And please tell me if anything possible. Please......
http://forum.xda-developers.com/verizon-htc-one/help/storage-encryped-htc-one-m7-vzw-s-t3279869
Hello!
Recently I recevied "Encryption Unseccesful" message on my phone. I tried to restore backup, but twrp says: "failed to mount /data". So, internal storage is dead. Found this. But cant find "repartition" menu in the cwm.
Questions is:
1. Do I need older versions of cwm to repartition sdcard? (If you have one, please share )
2. Is there any ways of recovering phone?
Thanks in advance!
no, just go to TWRP, Wipe, Format internal sdcard
sandpox said:
no, just go to TWRP, Wipe, Format internal sdcard
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tried this, but I think internal storage is corrupted. Is there a way to use sdcard as internal storage?
you can use sd card for apps and other stuff, but as I knoe cannot be used for system files
I made 2 partitions on sd:
4gb fat32
4gb ext4
But I cant bind /data to this ext4 partition. Can you help, please?
What i did:
With TWRP's terminal:
Code:
mount -t ext4 /dev/block/mmcblk1p2 /data
- Invalid argument (dunno why)
Code:
ln -s /dev/block/mmcblk1p2 /data
- but on phone boot i receive same "encryption unsuccesful" screen.
Edited /etc/fstab - same result.
Files and mount after reboot turn back to its previous condition.
Also installed stock ROM - same message screen.
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I got advice that i must do this things with init.d scripts. How can I do this? Already tried "xda's app2sd scripts" but they works if phone completely boots in OS.
remosam said:
you can use sd card for apps and other stuff, but as I knoe cannot be used for system files
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Why not? I want only mount /data on sd without booting in OS. Other partitions like /system surprisingly work right, because i can flash ROM (stock, CM), but always receive - "cant mount /data"
blind_aquila said:
Why not? I want only mount /data on sd without booting in OS. Other partitions like /system surprisingly work right, because i can flash ROM (stock, CM), but always receive - "cant mount /data"
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asked sostk or noname
@blind_aquila
try to flash stock rom with odin