Hi everyone i am having some serious difficulties decompiling a firmware for my GS701B tablet with an actions atm7013 cpu
the firmware comes with the extension .FW i have searched this forum and many others for any ideas on pulling this ***** apart as i would like to start to create a custom rom for this type of tablet for my own use and then release it to everyone for their use
the kernel is also a ***** to try and decompile and i think this is something to do with the file/folder structure for example nanda is called acta and nandb is called actb and so on..
cna anyone help me or even point me to somewhere i can get the help or info i need...
thanks in advance
W4RD
can anyone help???
i have found out that my tablets cpu is MIPS based.. is there some sort of mips kitchen i could use??
Related
Hello all,
I am quite new so please pardon my ignorance.
I am new to Android and trying to develop some applications with some success.
What I want to know is, if I want to extend/change a system application, for example, Phone.apk file) how can I do so without downloading the whole ROM source from GIT repositories. Also I will like to know is there a way to debug the same without building the whole source every time?
All the questions I searched were related to Java or general Android application development. I could not find anything related to extending/changing system applications. Maybe I didn't searched well enough. If yes, please point me to the right thread.
Any help will be hugely appreciated.
Regards,
Yogesh.
Hi,
I'm new here and have been looking at some tutorials on rom kitchens and rom ediing for my HTC Wildfire. I was jst wondering how to port, say, the android 2.3 rom or something from the android SDK and use it on my phone. I'd also like to know how easy/hard it is.
Thanks,
sato
satopunch89 said:
Hi,
I'm new here and have been looking at some tutorials on rom kitchens and rom ediing for my HTC Wildfire. I was jst wondering how to port, say, the android 2.3 rom or something from the android SDK and use it on my phone. I'd also like to know how easy/hard it is.
Thanks,
sato
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Do you know anything about programming? Do you know anything about Linux? Do you have any driver building experience?
I f you answer no to anyone of these, I would say it's extremely hard.
Thanks. I don't really know much about any of those things (Except a tiny bit about linux) oh well...
satopunch89 said:
Thanks. I don't really know much about any of those things (Except a tiny bit about linux) oh well...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
hey why give up so easily? if you really wanted to learn there are so many threads to get you started. first get a linux distro, ubuntu recommended for most people.
there's dsixia's kitchen around somewhere. play with that a little. read the script's he uses in that kitchen. you'll learn a bit.
then onto building. cyanogen's wiki shows how to build from source and set up your machine to sync with it etc etc. get those sorted and try learn the above mentioned
Cool!
Are there any links to these (Or are we not allowed to post them?)
Does it have to be a linux distro? Can I use OSX?
Hacking is cool, but the problem is that it is very hard, and demands a lot of experience.
how do i delete android sdk from my vista computer
noeneel said:
Does it have to be a linux distro? Can I use OSX?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://source.android.com/source/initializing.html
This is where i started... hope it helps
Sorry about bringing back this old thread, but I'm also interested in this. I have programming experience with C, C++, C# and Java. I've also developed apps for Android. I've been using Ubuntu as my main operating system for a while now, so I'm good with Linux too. The only thing I lack is the driver programming experience. I'd still like some info/tutorials about porting ROMs, if anyone knows any good ones.
hey i been wondering the same thing. i been trying to play with m10 tools and been skining apk files with apkmanager for the last bit but have been wanting to port the ics sense 3.5 well at the very least re size it but cant find any guides, full guides to do this. anything pointing in the right direction would be great just dont say search xda been there done that. google works better.... but still doesnt give much info on porting besides some basic files to change but leaves out how to re size
wait4me2burn said:
hey i been wondering the same thing. i been trying to play with m10 tools and been skining apk files with apkmanager for the last bit but have been wanting to port the ics sense 3.5 well at the very least re size it but cant find any guides, full guides to do this. anything pointing in the right direction would be great just dont say search xda been there done that. google works better.... but still doesnt give much info on porting besides some basic files to change but leaves out how to re size
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can't mess with 3.5 yet as they new files can't be decoded properly. For resizing you have to edit all the demention xmls on all the apks and m10 files. Lots of trial and error. Make sure you good with logcat
maybe this can help a little
http://www.freeyourandroid.com/guide/porting-android
heres your answer
cooltom1323 said:
how do i delete android sdk from my vista computer
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
by deleting the map where all the files are or, if you hae installed it using a setup,
use the uninstaller program.
So I have an old account on here, but I never used it for what it is intended to be. And quite honestly, I didn't like the account name. But what I'm really asking for here is help. I want to be a developer, but I dont know where to start. I want to learn how to make and/or port roms, how to theme other roms, and even make my own apps. If anybody would care to help a noob out, I would appreciate it greatly. Thank you in advance for your time, and any help that I recieve.
I would suggest learning java language which the source code is wrote in if you want to be a developer. But if you want the easy root look for the guides on cooking roms using kitchens then you can create roms with little programming knowledge.
anarchyuk said:
I would suggest learning java language which the source code is wrote in if you want to be a developer. But if you want the easy root look for the guides on cooking roms using kitchens then you can create roms with little programming knowledge.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the tip on java language. And I know about the kitchens and such, its just that I don't have a mac or a linux based computer, and from what i read, you have to have one of those for a kitchen to work.
ubuntu is always free for download from their website (you can run it from a flash drive or dual boot it alongside windows)
ubuntu will install within the windows file system also and let you dual boot. might be a bit of a learning curve but its by far the best os to use when just getting started and even for more advanced usage..
once you are done with ubuntu as long as you installed it using the wubi installer you can remove it from add remove program etc...
First step on the journy to becoming a developer would be the most important one:
Learning to use search functions.
Your question has already been covered multiple times in this subforum.
anarchyuk said:
ubuntu will install within the windows file system also and let you dual boot. might be a bit of a learning curve but its by far the best os to use when just getting started and even for more advanced usage..
once you are done with ubuntu as long as you installed it using the wubi installer you can remove it from add remove program etc...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did not know that, so thank you guys for all your help.
First post in the Dev section but this seemed to be the place to talk about kernel compilation and module development.
I have twice now, and am working on my third kernel compilation for the purposes of custom module building for the TF700 and the TF201.
The question I have has to do with the compilation process. Every time I have gone through this with the downloadable Asus Kernel zip I run in to several issues. Either missing references in code or portions that won't compile at all. Is this normal for kernel compilations? I would have thought that it would be fully compilable out of the box ( so to speak). Is it ASUS or just android/Linux in general that works out this way?
Is there a better way to do it? Should I use some generic source with the same version numbers? The current source is just not working at all. I am using an Ubuntu distro. Have the cross compile tools etc... but it just fails. I have already resolved two missing definition references and it just keeps on failing in new places
Hopefully this question doesn't offend developers. I have moved from WinPhone to here and want to better my understanding of how this should all work but need to start with some basics before I can make a meaningful contribution.
Thanks.
P.S... I looked and didn't find a "Compiling android kernels for dummies" book
hx4700 Killer said:
I looked and didn't find a "Compiling android kernels for dummies" book
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
"Dummies" doesn't write a book on kernel dev. Too wrapped up in telling people how to download iTunes.....
Use your "Google". And when you find it, Google XDA University.
There, you will find steps for setting a build environment and kernel and cross arm.
Understand, all kernels are different, but a good place to start. Plus, you learn how to use Google. An added bonus.
Oh... and... as an extra bonus, I will move this to Q & A, as this post has no development work attached. :silly:
MD
My question wasn't HOW to cross compile. I have done it.
My question is WHY are there so many errors that need correcting when compiling the ASUS downloadable kernels and if this is typical of the source from any device or just ASUS?
hx4700 Killer said:
The question I have has to do with the compilation process. Every time I have gone through this with the downloadable Asus Kernel zip I run in to several issues. Either missing references in code or portions that won't compile at all.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I had to fix exactly one pair of quotes vs. angle brackets somewhere in the RIL - get the patch pack from my kernel and apply the ril include fix. Then it should compile. If not, you are doing something wrong.
Can you post any links or names of everything ill need to get started on cross compiling a kernel for my tf700t I download the source and get my config.gz and am running a ubuntu distribution but if you could post a link to a tutorial that has detailed instructions that will work for the infinity that would be greatly appreciated thankyou
alexcass4 said:
Can you post any links or names of everything ill need to get started on cross compiling a kernel for my tf700t I download the source and get my config.gz and am running a ubuntu distribution but if you could post a link to a tutorial that has detailed instructions that will work for the infinity that would be greatly appreciated thankyou
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Step 1: Get a suitable ARM toolchain. I can't help you here with Ubuntu because I'm using Gentoo and their crossdev tool (http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/base/embedded/handbook/?part=1).
Step 2: Cross-compiling the kernel works just as for native kernels (make menuconfig, make), but you have to pass parameters to each make, e.g. make ARCH="arm" CROSS_COMPILE="arm-gentoo-linux-gnueabi-" (or whatever your toolchain is called)
Step 3: For the TF700-specific blob stuff I have written a detailed tutorial here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=36925180&postcount=4
A bit of infos before starting this thread. I'm using a Samsung Galaxy S4 Canadian, I have a high end computer(maybe that helps for coding,stuff like that) and I have "medium" knowledge on rooting/flashing,etc. I am a great designer, well for myself, I think i'm good. So I can edit or create icons and themes for new rom!
I say medium, because the only thing I really know about this kind of stuff,is rooting,flashing,installing roms and pretty much that honestly.
I already downloading the Android SDK to test those custom roms i'd like to create. I thought of doing like a couple of guys on here, using the CM Source? and just adding stuff,etc.
--
What i'm looking to do, is creating a rom based of CM for the Galaxy S4 and just in general a little side project for myself and adding some infos in my head; Some may laugh because of the lack of knowledge, but hey! we all started somewhere
I'm asking the community of dev's or just users, do you have some threads or some stuff to download to "Start" this project ?
Some things I should read before, I won't test rom's on my phone as it's a daily phone, i'll use the emulator instead(AVD or SDK) and i'm already searching on how to run it.
If you have any useful youtube videos i'll gladly accept them
I found a tutorial on how to build a rom but for the Nexus 4, I guess it's the same process but different sources ?
I'll search for the sources of Cm for the Galaxy s4 but if anyone reads this thread and knows where to get it, please link me!
Thanks to the community, this may also be useful for other users. Thanks!
Okay, I will help
1st off, let me teach you some basics.
1.) You cannot test roms on the android sdk, the android sdk has nothing to do with roms, its for building apps and java programming. It will not help you with anything if an issue goes wrong in a rom, well only the adb (android debugging bridge) for taking locats.
2.) You cannot compile a rom on windows, only linux, preferably ubuntu. So you need to just download cm11 for your device and extract the rom zip.
I will tell you more later, but its like 1pm here Goodnight