I'm sure that there is a simple fix for this but whenever I boot my phone into fastboot either in ADB or manually, my phone freezes.
I've checked all the variables before asking such as making sure that all the drivers are installed.
When I go to device manager, it tells me that the latest drivers are already installed...
I assigned the correct path to the ADB and fastboot location but still nothing...
This is basically what happens:
Open adb location and open command window here.
Type adb to see if it's working (it does)
-adb devices (device IS listed)
-adb reboot bootloader (phone boots into fastboot and shows; "=> fastboot mode.../" or something like that
-fastboot (to see if it's working and it DOES)
Then from there, I can't do anything as my phone seems to freeze.
No fastboot <command> will work.
Any advice is highly welcomed
Related
I come from the world of Windows Mobile and have just recetly delved into hacking my G1. While I've had no problems installing jesusfreke's images or themes...I'm struggling with how to get fastboot to work.
Perhaps someone can give me some guidance. Anyone willing to give me some simple step by step instructions. I've searched for this and i think I have everything i need, but I'm unable to get to a point where I can type in commands. when i try to run adb, it open very briefly and closes.
What am i doing wrong?
Thanks,
Jason
Go to start -> run -> type in CMD
Navigate to the folder where adb is located.
Then type in adb devices to see if it finds ur device.
If not then make sure you have it plugged in and USB debugging is turned on in the phones settings under Development.
Also download the usb drivers/or the whole SDK if you havent yet.
nosaj13 said:
when i try to run adb, it open very briefly and closes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you try to execute a text mode executable in windows, it will close the terminal window as soon as the program finishes. If you run adb without any arguments, it will print the arguments out terminate. I could say the solution is to open run as and type cmd, but the true answer is to install Linux
nosaj13 said:
I come from the world of Windows Mobile and have just recetly delved into hacking my G1. While I've had no problems installing jesusfreke's images or themes...I'm struggling with how to get fastboot to work.
Perhaps someone can give me some guidance. Anyone willing to give me some simple step by step instructions. I've searched for this and i think I have everything i need, but I'm unable to get to a point where I can type in commands. when i try to run adb, it open very briefly and closes.
What am i doing wrong?
Thanks,
Jason
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1. Download this
2. Extract the contents of the fastboot directory to the root of your C drive.
3. Go Start -> Run -> type 'cmd' (no quotes) and hit enter
4. Type 'c:' (no quotes) and hit enter
5. With your phone plugged in, you should be able to type 'adb devices' and it should return your phones serial number, which is usually in HTXXXXXXXX format. If it does not, make sure debugging is enabled on your phone and you have the adb drivers installed.
6. type 'adb shell reboot bootloader' and hit enter. The screen on your phone will go blank for a second and then you should be in the SPL with the skating androids. Make sure you see "FASTBOOT" at the bottom of the screen.
7. type 'fastboot devices' and hit enter. If you see your phone's serial number again, you have successfully established a fastboot connection with the phone and can run commands such as:
fastboot erase <partition> (erases the given partition)
fastboot flash <partition> <file.img> (overwrites and flashes given partition with given file. This is how one would restore from a nandroid backup)
fastboot reboot (reboots the device into user mode)
Hope that helps. Have fun
when i type adp devices i get an error that says "adp is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program, or batch file"
what am i doing wrong?
nosaj13 said:
when i type adp devices i get an error that says "adp is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program, or batch file"
what am i doing wrong?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First, the command is adb devices not adp. Second, make sure you copied the contents of the fastboot directory to the C drive. Third, make sure you that when you type 'c:' into the command line, the command prompt actually changes to "C:\>"
Datruesurfer said:
1. Download this
2. Extract the contents of the fastboot directory to the root of your C drive.
3. Go Start -> Run -> type 'cmd' (no quotes) and hit enter
4. Type 'c:' (no quotes) and hit enter
5. With your phone plugged in, you should be able to type 'adb devices' and it should return your phones serial number, which is usually in HTXXXXXXXX format. If it does not, make sure debugging is enabled on your phone and you have the adb drivers installed.
6. type 'adb shell reboot bootloader' and hit enter. The screen on your phone will go blank for a second and then you should be in the SPL with the skating androids. Make sure you see "FASTBOOT" at the bottom of the screen.
7. type 'fastboot devices' and hit enter. If you see your phone's serial number again, you have successfully established a fastboot connection with the phone and can run commands such as:
fastboot erase <partition> (erases the given partition)
fastboot flash <partition> <file.img> (overwrites and flashes given partition with given file. This is how one would restore from a nandroid backup)
fastboot reboot (reboots the device into user mode)
Hope that helps. Have fun
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i did all the above steps with no problem at all till i got to number 7. when i typed in fastboot devices it just goes to the next prompt without my phone showing up.
If i plug in my g1 in normal mode i see it at the top under adb and in the usb section as a mass storage device.
In bootloader mode with fastboot on the screen it doesnt show up anywhere in the device manager.
Also when i follow the above quoted steps and type in the "adb shell reboot bootloader" and hit enter i hear the ding you hear when you unplug a usb device, and all instances of the phone then leave the device manager.
i have also uninstalled and reinstalled all drivers for the phone and all drivers that have to do with the usb ports on my win xp machine.
Anyone have any ideas i could try?
I think you need this program. I put it on my desktop, then just ran cmd, directed to it, and type in fastboot.
I7oobie said:
I think you need this program. I put it on my desktop, then just ran cmd, directed to it, and type in fastboot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thats not it. i have that in the sys 32 folder and also on desktop
Fastboot mode not recognized
I'm having the same problem. I've installed all the correct drivers and in normal mode, I see the Android Composite Device (or something similar) in Device Manager.
As soon as I go into SPL mode (the 3 skateboarding androids screen), the device does not show up.
Anyone have any ideas? Thanks!
Datruesurfer said:
First, the command is adb devices not adp. Second, make sure you copied the contents of the fastboot directory to the C drive. Third, make sure you that when you type 'c:' into the command line, the command prompt actually changes to "C:\>"
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
When I'm in the Command Prompt and I type C:, the directory still reads C:\Documents and Setting\Reids. It won't change to only C:
Hi,
You have to do this to get back to c:
cd\
press enter
That should do it.
bestwebs said:
Hi,
You have to do this to get back to c:
cd\
press enter
That should do it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ok, thanks a lot. Got it working now.
I need help trying to flash my cupcake images that I have stored in my fastboot folder. I attached the pictures below. I will accept any help I can get.
EDIT: Doh, I thought I was in another topic.
My bad.
Are adb & adb's dll files located inside the same folder as fastboot??? They are suppose too be.
Is your usb cord directly plugged into your system or thru a hub??
Your phone, i bet is under usb mass....to check, expand your device manager window.
Expand your USB-Mass storage list.
With your phone in fastboot mode, click on the camera key and the back key. With enough time inbetween for your system to recognize that there might be a device hooked up.
Notice any change in the list??
Anyone wanting good instructions
http://androidcommunity.com/forums/f28/nandroid-v2-0-full-nand-backup-and-restore-tool-9336/
Read post 2 and go!
this seems like the most easiest thing to do but i still cant get it to work
i have downloaded everything needed and see ADB Interface on my device manager with a yellow mark on it when i try to update the dirver it fails and i got the drivers and point them to it but seems not to work
my phone is on the fastboot screen with the android skateboards guys
i dont know whats going on if someone know what am also doing wrong can tell me please...
This is what i get
Hi everyone,
I have looked everywhere on google and have been at this for over 5 hours now. I have tried rooting my phone from 3 different PCs (XP SP3, SP2 and 7). With all of them i have managed to get the drivers for adb installed (after many problems) and got all the way to the fastboot part of the rooting.
Once i get there, i have the same problem on all 3 PCs. ADB can no longer find my phone! Following the instructions, i checked for the device before i powered it off and found it by doing abd devices in cmd prompt. The moment the device is powered off and then back on, bam! No more device!
I am at my wits end at this point and just don't know what else I could possibly do! I would be immensely grateful for ANY advice.
I did check that my device allowed USB debug so that's not it either.
Also, my phone is a Rogers phone and I have just put through the upgrade they sent this morning.
adb cant find your phone in fastboot mode but fastboot can
Try writing fastboot devices instead of adb devices
All the comands in fastboot mode start with fastboot...e.g fastboot flash xxx xxx.img
I ran into this problem as well on my attempt, I forgot to re-enable (or enable) depending on where I was at "usb debugging" which is in:
settings> applications > development > check the usb debugging box.
After that, when you do abd devices in your shell, it should surely list after that. Good luck!
edit-- woops scratch that.. sorry I just read back that you made sure of that.
Thank you for that!
Now, i see it in fastboot, but when i try typing fastboot boot recovery.img i get a "cannot load recovery.img"
Sorry, apparently i need a lot more hand holding than i though!
(this is where I am getting the instructions from HowardForums. I'd post the link but I can't do that yet on this forum...
Basically, these are the instructions i am following:
If the phone you have is an HTC Magic (no hardware keyboard), the method is pretty much the same. I modified Haykuro's zip with files that were meant for the Magic. You can grab it here:
*link*
Again, open another command prompt as steps 2, and 6-8 are entered in the command prompt.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Haykuro-ish
0. Place update.zip on SD card.
1. power off the phone and boot into fastboot (hold back and power)
2. fastboot boot recovery.img
3 [optional]. make a backup with nandroid
3. apply update. (LET IT FINISH, DO NOT TOUCH ANYTHING UNTIL YOUR PHONE IS COMPLETELY IDLE. DO NOT TOUCH AFTER FIRST REBOOT (WHEN CHIP APPEARS) UNLESS YOU LIKE A BRICK. )
4. reboot out of recovery mode.
5. power off phone, hold back button and power to boot into fastboot again
6. fastboot flash boot boot.img
7. fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
8. fastboot reboot
enjoy!
These are pretty much the Haykuro instructions for the Dream, which I modified to apply to the Magic. The boot and recovery images were made by Amon_RA. Happy Rooting!
Just like with the Dream, the first part flashes a good SPL, the second flashes a rooted boot and recovery. The easiest way to test if the device is rooted is to open another command prompt in the tools dir and type
Code:
adb root
If it returns that adb is already running in root, then you're all set.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Am i doing something wrong?
Thanks so much!
You need to navigate to the folder where you saved your recovery.img
For example if you put it on d:/Android dev. you will need to do (inside cmd)
d: (switches to drive d
cd d:/Android dev. (changes the folder to android dev.)
and then issue the fastboot command
without the brackets of course...
eyegor said:
You need to navigate to the folder where you saved your recovery.img
For example if you put it on d:/Android dev. you will need to do (inside cmd)
d: (switches to drive d
cd d:/Android dev. (changes the folder to android dev.)
and then issue the fastboot command
without the brackets of course...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Again, thank you so much! It seems I am still having issues as now I'm being told that "remote not allow".... is this a rogers thing?
Again i do apologize for all the hand-holding necessary here
yes, i am getting this <remote:not allow> message too. I was able to fix my other magic (purchased in october) via fastboot boot recovery.img but not this new one i have (purchased in Dec).
Anyone have any ideas how to bypass this block of 'remote, not allowed"?
So I have looked at post about installing adk.. I've manually set it up, I've used a repository to setup, I've did the 'idiot proof SoupKit'..... no matter what I try the same thing happens.
I can run 'adb devices' and get a list of the android devices connected via USB. I see them just fine. My udev setup works, the adb commands works.. I have done this by manually installing from Google the latest adk, installing binaries. I can always get adb to see the devices.
When I run 'fastboot devices', it just returns without listing devices at all. Any other fastboot commands simply say < waiting on device > and nothing happens.
Why would adb work and fastboot not?
I have tried this HTC Incredible 1, HTC Incredible 2, and ASUS TF300T tablet...
Any help/advice would be appreciated.
John
A little knowledge goes a long way
Sorry to answer my own question in the forum, but I did not find an answer which I understood... Now I understand what I should have been doing. For the next folk like me:
adb - can communicate with your android device while it is running and has USB debug mode enabled. For ICS this USB debug option was under the developer settings. You can tell adb is communicating properly by running the command 'adb devices' and seeing your device show up in the output list.
fastboot - can communicate with your android device when it has been booted into 'fastboot' mode, not while booted normally form a system image. Running the command 'fastboot devices' when your USB is connected to a device booted into 'fastboot mode' will show a device if it is communicating properly.
From my browsing of many other messages, I did not see clearly articulated the need to BOOT into fastboot mode on the device. Maybe I'm just simple minded.
On my TF300T tablet, I got into fastboot mode by powering it off, and then starting it while holding down the down volume button and the power button at the same time. This brought me to a screen which I could use the volume down button to toggle between three modes, 1) erase data partition 2) fastboot mode (found it!) or 3) normal boot. I used the down volume key to move the selection to fastboot and then the up volume key to select fastboot. It then launched into 'fastboot' mode, awaiting fastboot commands.
Once my device was booted to 'fastboot mode', the latest fastboot executable from google worked. The downloaed exectuable from SoupKit and the downloaded version I found for Windows did not. From my experience, download the latest ADK from Google and use the platform-tools version of fastboot.
I certainly hope this detail helps the next poor soul who googles and read things they don't fulling understand.
P.S. This all start when my ASUS device would not update with the OTA update and after several days of really useless interaction with their support, I decided to take matters into my own hands. You have to love Android which lets you learn and grow without the specific task master of a bad support division.
jump through what ever hoops you need to to at least get (adb devices) command to recognize cell then do (adb reboot bootloader) then your cell should have the small writing in upper left corner then if i tried any fastboot command it would say waiting on device. from here exit the adb cmd window and goto control panel >view devices and printers under unspecified there will be an entry with an exclamation mark >tell it instal driver >let me specify>have disk > then locate your sdk adb extra folder and install the google inf file> then it will have 3 options select bootloader >yes ...now no need to reboot or anything just open an cmd window like you do for adb and use fastboot commands voila.........this all might be a step or two off but its vaguely how you do it i cant remember every step since i already did it but i spent 12 hrs to get fastboot to work so i thought id share.. for some reason going through device manager and installing drivers the way i read everywhere else didnt work for me.....p.s. even bootloader unlocked and fastboot working i still couldnt get twrp to install for some reason so i followed this post at this point http://forum.xda-developers.com/tmobile-lg-v10/general/step-step-guide-rooting-lg-v10-using-t3382631 and now im rooted ..this also expects you to have at least the sdk adb extra folder with google driver installed
So my screen broke on my Note 10+, leaving only the top 15% with display and the bottom 60% with touch. I am trying to activate ADB on it so that I can backup my internal storage.
I booted into TWRP so that I could backup the rest of my system, which I did successfully, but because of the bad touch screen I am unable to hit the ADB side load button. I'd like to reboot into the system because I have ADB enabled there, however I also cannot click the reboot to system button, only reboot to download and shutdown. Since I can't see most of the screen, it is also not possible to access the terminal and work from there.
Anybody know how I can escape TWRP or otherwise activate ADB? Thanks for the help.
Once USB Debugging successfully got enabled on Android device, ADB is supported as soon as device successfully booted up.
To turn device into ADB Sideload mode you run commands
Code:
adb devices
adb reboot sideload
jwoegerbauer said:
Once USB Debugging successfully got enabled on Android device, ADB is supported as soon as device successfully booted up.
To turn device into ADB Sideload mode you run commands
Code:
adb devices
adb reboot sideload
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Like I said, I'm unable to boot into the system right now because I am stuck in TWRP. ADB is not enabled in TWRP upon boot, you have to press the ADB side load button, which I am unable to do.
AllanRSS said:
Like I said, I'm unable to boot into the system right now because I am stuck in TWRP. ADB is not enabled in TWRP upon boot, you have to press the ADB side load button, which I am unable to do.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To boot into NORMAL mode ( i.e. ADB mode ) you enter on Windows command prompt these commands, one-by-one
Code:
adb devices
adb reboot
jwoegerbauer said:
To boot into NORMAL mode ( i.e. ADB mode ) you enter on Windows command prompt these commands, one-by-one
Code:
adb devices
adb reboot
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can not use ADB. It is for this very reason I am asking how to enable ADB. But thank you for these valuable ADB commands, I'll be sure to reboot my system once I enable ADB