NetHunter 3.15.3 - S7 Edge (SM-N930F - Exynos - MM) - My set up, might be helpful. - Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge Guides, News, & Discussion

The intention of this post is to possibly help some one out since I struggled to get this working. Non of this software belongs to me, its only a guide of the steps that got me up and running on my phone. Hopefully its useful for some one else.
I am currently learning Cybersecurity, I love nethunter for my lazy study sessions on the couch whilst trying to exploit virtual-machines running on my home server. However the tried and true Oneplus one is getting a bit dated and I really wanted to figure out how to get this running on my S7 edge. I spent days trying other tutorials for getting NH to run, some builds would only run on 6 cores which made the phone so laggy it would barely boot, while others would run smooth however HID and wireless attacks wouldn't work...
So what I am running now which is 100% working:
My phone - S7 Edge SM-N930F
Rom - Renovate Note 2.0 Note 7 port (Download from this site, You'll have to confirm your phone is compatible)
Kernel - kernel-nethunter-hero2lte-marshmallow-3.15.4-20170629-1630 (Downloaded from build.nethunter.com)
Kalifs - nethunter-generic-arm64-kalifs-full-rolling-3.15.3-20161129-1413 (Downloaded from build.nethunter.com)
Flash the rom, set up as you normally would.
Reboot to twrp - flash kalifs package, then flash kernel.
Reboot device.
Now when you start the Nethunter app for the first time, you'll have to give it permissions, and install chroot from the sdcard in kali chroot manager. However the package name will be kalifs-armhf-full.tar.xz, rename it kalifs-full.tar.xz otherwise it will not find it . Let it finish set up, usually takes 5-10minutes. Also, make a copy of kalifs-full.tar.xz on your computer somewhere (just incase the next thing happens).
-Note- You can try to use the download/install chroot option however its not that reliable imo. I find its much easier to do it manually installing from the sdcard!
Open the Nethunter Terminal app, give it permissions and click kali. Did it crash? Sometimes the terminal app can be flaky and what you need to do is uninstall androidVNC, Nethunter terminal, and the Nethunter app.
Download the apks individually, you can find them on GitHub. Reinstall Nethunter terminal, androidVNC and the Nethunter app ->in that order<- Don't ask me why it works, it just does.
Re-Open NH app, give it permissions, put that copy of kalifs-full.tar.xz back on your internal sdcard and install it again. Everything should work properly from now on.
Check to make sure your repositories are correct - [email protected]:~#nano /etc/apt/sources.list
Is it the same as what kali lists on their site? (see below):
deb http://http.kali.org/kali kali-rolling main contrib non-free
# For source package access, uncomment the following line
# deb-src http://http.kali.org/kali kali-rolling main contrib non-free
Yeah? good.
Then I have always needed to update the signature keys otherwise update, upgrade, dist-upgrade never works.
So in terminal again input [email protected]:~#wget -q -O - https://archive.kali.org/archive-key.asc | apt-key add
Now you can update [email protected]:~#apt-get update && apt-get upgrade && apt-get dist-upgrade
This will take a while.
Some minor glitches I have noticed in terminal:
- The Samsung keyboard enter key will switch between the return key, find key and go key randomly. Its annoying, but just use the hackers keyboard instead, or use the return key at the top of the terminal shortcut keys.
- Sometimes the space bar is missing in terminal the first time you run it after a reboot. Just restart the terminal, or use hackers keyboard.
Phone performance:
- Runs smooth as butter! Radios maintain good connection. No random reboots or freezes. However the battery life is not the greatest. I'll average 16 hours with 3hrs sot. Not quite like the two days + 7hrs sot I'll get out of my galaxyproject rom set up.
- Camera can be slow in low light. And in text messages the back facing camera doesn't seem to work when you try to take a photo as an attachment.
- Power saving and Ultra power saving can severely mess with the screen resolution. Screen image appears to be at 60% of the actual size, however touch locations of apps remain in the same location. So if you turn on power saving. It gets fun trying to predict where you need to touch the screen to turn it off.
Every tool in the nethunter app works for me. In terminal all my usual tools work fine like metasploit, nmap, enum4linux, dirb, nikto, cewl, sqlmap, wpscan, the aircrack suite etc. I even got openvas installed and working.
I don't come around often, but like I said due to my struggles I just wanted to write something up that might help others. I meant to do this months ago so everything is to the best of my knowledge. If you have any questions, I'll try to answer them when I swing by again.

Related

[Ubuntu Image] 1st really working simple to install Ubuntu on your phone

This is easier than making a cup of coffee.
Pictures below as attachment couldnt figure how to put the pic here edit figured it out now im just lazy.
you dont have to do it the hard way
Everyone (edit: i thought so at the time)will want this "Fully" (note below) funtioning Ubuntu system
or you can make your own here: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=913622
I will be maintaning and updating as time permits
Phone has to be rooted: http://forum.xda-developers.com/wiki/index.php?title=HTC_Supersonic/Guides_&_Tutorials
NEW IMAGE 3.5 gigibyte
Lucid base image (only added: lxde and tightvncserver): Zip http://www.megaupload.com/?d=GLMYVCMN User: "dad" Passwd:ffffffff
Remove app2sd and settings- applications- manage applications- sdcard "move all apps to phone" or it will not work!
I suggest you install gnome-panel
I use it and i find no speed differance!
trying to get :upstart services" to work im looking into compiling a kernel with "CONFIG_TMPFS enabled, to initiate a workaround, because "upstart" services wont work in a chroot.
Stock Maverick : http://www.megaupload.com/?d=56AT71WD
Karmic Sucks programs stop opening after some short time, so i gave up.
Tested with: CM7 http://mirror.teamdouche.net/get/supersonic/update-cm-7.0.0-RC1-Supersonic-signed.zip
CM6: http://mirror.teamdouche.net/get/supersonic/update-cm-6.1.2-Supersonic-signed.zip
myn-WarmTwoPointTwo-11-05-2010-RLS-3
Unzip
Copy the "ubuntu" folder to your sd card
Go to market download "Terminal" and android VNC Viewer
Open terminal and type: (without the quotes), "su" then "cd /sdcard/ubuntu"
then "sh ./ubuntu.sh"
then "bootubuntu"
then "vncserver :0 -geometry 1024x800"
Thats it, go to android VNC Viewer and use dad for nickname, "ffffffff" for the password, "localhost", for address, 5900 for the port, Use 24bit veiwing settings, then go.
to shutdown you will have to power off phone and power back on.
Enter in your :"Initial Command",in the settings of Android Terminal:
su
cd /sdcard/ubuntu
sh ./ubuntu.sh
bootubuntu
So everytime you want to start ubuntu just open terminal
to start VNC SERVER automaticly you will have to add to the bottom of your /home/.bashrc file this:
cd /
rm -r -f /tmp
mkdir /tmp
vncserver :0 -geometry 1024x800
Thats it, your off ENJOY
Notes: Its as fully funtioning for myself, cant speak for everyone
This is in Beta stages I am an old Visual Basic dabbler as a hobby, and am not very fluent in the lenux operating system. However this "ubuntu on mobile device" has rekindled a lost desire to program.
I will update changes as i get the time
If anyone would like to contribute their lenux expertese to iron out the bugs, i and so many others would appreciate it
Issues to work on:
:no sound
NOTE: A big kernel level problem is the lack of sound. Most of the kernels we use as a base for our ports are designed for Google Android. Android doesn't use the standard Linux sound System ALSA. An ALSA wrapper for the EVO DSP kernel system must be written.
:Setting up users and groups (used kusers but seemed to slow system a bit, needs kde-common) But is very tolorable, I actually use dolphin. (cant get nautilus to create folders or files (destination read only? u got me)).
:hacked /root/.bashrc for easy login help (when using terminal runs .bashrc. dont know anotherway to start hamachi on login and also vncserver tries to restart)
:keyboard mapping (mapping arrow keys to the abc keyboard it has arrow keys, esc,etc...)
: No way to exit or turn off ubuntu. You have to turn off phone, to turn off ubuntu.
nce in a while the programs refuse to open, it has somthing to do with ?. you have to restart ubuntu again.
I suppose a fluent ubuntu/lenux person could help change usernames and such, using the terminal,set proper permissions and such
Im using CyanogenMod Rom its the only one that works with Hamachi
your rom will most likely work, however networking wont!
Tips:
ownload VNC for your computer and modify your ubuntu desktop on your computer screen (that way i dont need my glasses) (use "ifconfig" to find ip address)
:You can even use VNC to view the build while in qemu emulation, after installing lxde and tightvncserver in the emulation. (watch out for seg faults)
:In terminal, preferances-initial command, enter the "cd /sdcard/ubuntu ...etc ," that way its a one click to login .
:Get "abc keyboard" from market it has the esc, arrow keys etc... ( extra keys only good outside chroot, the "terminal", on your android desktop)
:If your not familiar with ubuntu, you use synaptic package manager to install programs
:When u share over himachi or start smbd, programs will stop opening.
.
Trust me everything i want it use it for seems to be pretty zippy, but just give a little xtra time for programs to load the first time. (Firefox may take 90 sec. to load the first time. After that its a snap)
I Would like to check into this
The no sound issue is getting to me, I may wait for that as that is an essential to my all in one device.
THANKS FOR THE HARD WORK. I LOVE UBUNTU
you really have to try it and tell everyone about it cant believe its not one of the hottest topics
I Would like to check into this
any way to delete this post....didn't mean to submit, came back to send like i didn't send it but ending up sending twice
apologies
Sounds pretty cool, I will defiantly have to give this a try. Question though, is this installing over top of the rom I am currently using. Example I am using the MIUI 1.22, if I install this is this like dual booting or will it just uninstall every time I reboot the phone??
Is it still uploading? I really want to try this!
corybucher said:
Sounds pretty cool, I will defiantly have to give this a try. Question though, is this installing over top of the rom I am currently using. Example I am using the MIUI 1.22, if I install this is this like dual booting or will it just uninstall every time I reboot the phone??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This will sit on your sdcard and ride side by side with your android system (you can use your phone at the same time)
IT DOES NOT EFFECT YOUR PHONE IN ANY WAY
wasnt shouting just wanted everyone to see
ioos said:
Is it still uploading? I really want to try this!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Download away!
This is awesome! I can't wait to get home and give it a try.
This is gonna be a great weekend. Between this and the flashable ROMs that are starting to roll out for my nook color, I might be sprouting antennae by Monday.
So wep cracking soon...? That's about the only thing I want/need Linux for.
Sent from the void...
wuclan48 said:
So wep cracking soon...? That's about the only thing I want/need Linux for.
Sent from the void...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How would one go about this "wep cracking thing"
please explain further
Almost* all WEP and some** WPA wireless passwords can be cracked. IMHO its easiest to do this on a Linux machine (please take note I love all OSs equally!)
*I forget how accurate this is but some WEP keys(like crazy long ones) can cause problems l in cracking, thus being protected (though not by design)
**most wpa specifications are not crackable yet and those that are often have a very stringent set of requirements (off the top of my head: most require someone to be legitimately connected to the access point and very simple passwords with low encryption.
On topic, though, this is sweet. Hope I can get something like this on my galaxy tab too!
EDIT: If you really need to know this (please only for testing... not to mooch people's internet) Google "wep cracking on backtrack"
The short simple answer is you sniff packets that the wireless access points send out and manipulate them to decrypt the key.
EDIT 2: I just realized you are also the guy who made this. Let me answer a few questions.
1) For audio you probably need to find a way to register the hardware with a Linux Audio Mixer. I'm guessing Ubuntu uses ALSA? I'd have to look that up
2) For users, kusers is part of the KDE desktop system. Ubuntu uses GNOME. People generally only use one or the other (unless they're trying to show off). That's probably why it either a) won't work or b) not work well and take up lots of extra space
3) It's Linux, not Lenux (but that's fine I can sense English isn't your first language... it's not mine either, but that's fine ^^)
the download has a "zipx" extension.
I did a little googling and it looks like that is winzips new default compression method, and the only way to open the archive is with winzip, bitzipper, pkzip, or a couple of others. none of the compression utilities I typically use (7zip on Windows, unarchiver on mac) seem to support it.
Edit: sorry if I sound unappreciative, I just think its funny to use a proprietary closed format for distribution of software that is all about open software and formats. I'm currently trying to find something that will open this on the mac without being a scummy trial, or ill just do it on a pc.
Sorry i just used the wizard and made a zip file with winzip 12.1
Quote"Almost* all WEP and some** WPA wireless passwords can be cracked. IMHO its easiest to do this on a Linux machine (please take note I love all OSs equally!)
*I forget how accurate this is but some WEP keys(like crazy long ones) can cause problems l in cracking, thus being protected (though not by design)"
Thanks for the info
laydros said:
the download has a "zipx" extension.
I did a little googling and it looks like that is winzips new default compression method, and the only way to open the archive is with winzip, bitzipper, pkzip, or a couple of others. none of the compression utilities I typically use (7zip on Windows, unarchiver on mac) seem to support it.
Edit: sorry if I sound unappreciative, I just think its funny to use a proprietary closed format for distribution of software that is all about open software and formats. I'm currently trying to find something that will open this on the mac without being a scummy trial, or ill just do it on a pc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
shame on me .
Your right im a noob and really know too much about it yet i just like having ubuntu on my phone.
Ill do better next time
People talking about cracking WEP and stuff, this probably doesn't have a driver to put the wireless card to put the card in monitor mode.
laydros said:
the download has a "zipx" extension.
I did a little googling and it looks like that is winzips new default compression method, and the only way to open the archive is with winzip, bitzipper, pkzip, or a couple of others. none of the compression utilities I typically use (7zip on Windows, unarchiver on mac) seem to support it.
Edit: sorry if I sound unappreciative, I just think its funny to use a proprietary closed format for distribution of software that is all about open software and formats. I'm currently trying to find something that will open this on the mac without being a scummy trial, or ill just do it on a pc.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Have the same problems, did you happen to find anything to open it with? I searched a little on google myself but all I find is software that needs to be purchased.
Homefix said:
Quote"Almost* all WEP and some** WPA wireless passwords can be cracked. IMHO its easiest to do this on a Linux machine (please take note I love all OSs equally!)
*I forget how accurate this is but some WEP keys(like crazy long ones) can cause problems l in cracking, thus being protected (though not by design)"
Thanks for the info
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
AFAIK, WEP can be easily cracked. WPA or WPA2 though, will require bruteforcing, there is no way around it.
corybucher said:
Have the same problems, did you happen to find anything to open it with? I searched a little on google myself but all I find is software that needs to be purchased.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I will repackage it, but it might take 3-4 hrs to upload, sorry.
ill get right on it

[ROM][INFORMATION] Craig CLP281 Android Netbook

INFORMATION
DEVICE
Craig CLP281 Android Netbook
Via Wondermedia 8650 based chipset / 800 mhz / wifi / 3 standard usb / ethernet!
PROS
Original firmware available
Original firmware unlocked
Unique form factor
Inexpensive
CONS
No obvious upgrade path
No sources posted
No officially supported flash player
Lower end hardware
HOWTO
unzip to sdcard
start device with sdcard plugged in
wait for everything to be wiped out
ROM
OVERVIEW
This is a modified version of the official firmware. The focus is on removal of bloatware and unneeded proprietary software.
INTEGRATED SOFTWARE
su
Superuser
Terminal Emulator
ConnectBot
Total Commander with ftp and lan plugins
Gapps
Zirco Browser
Yaxim Jabber Client
Jota Text Editor
DO IT YOURSELF
See the README to deduce how to modify the ROM yourself. The changes are documented thoroughly so that many people can use this release as a kitchen of sorts.
LINKS
R1
ROM: http://www.mediafire.com/?dsf11zm7jik9f63
SOURCE: http://www.mediafire.com/?8juzj5qb5jme1ud
ROM: http://dev-host.org/xcz68h384fe8/clp281_firmware2.2_HACK9_R1.zip
SOURCE: http://dev-host.org/ekni2eg4td3i/SOURCES_1.zip
R2
ROM: http://dev-host.org/gm3c1mrdeai3/clp281_firmware2.2_HACK10_R2.zip
ROM: http://www.mediafire.com/?4tpli2998g10to4
R3
ROM: http://dev-host.org/qyo428ewrgvl/clp281_firmware2.2_HACK11_R3.zip
SOURCE: http://dev-host.org/w8p6gotfisnb/SOURCES_2.zip
ROM: http://www.multiupload.com/V5MKGW7X5V
SOURCE: http://www.multiupload.com/KG7KJJKT8U
R4 (Latest)
ROM: http://dev-host.org/b1ufq9iixe9k/clp281_firmware2.2_HACK12_R4.zip
ROM: http://www.multiupload.com/IJWDECP8WF
chroot Repository
References:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=486247
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1172504
Please choose one of the following 2 methods!
USB Control Script (1st method):
DEBIAN_CONTROL - see bottom of post for script
MicroSD Control Script (2nd method):
DEBIAN_CONTROL_SD - see bottom of post for script
You will need this image unless you plan to put your own together.
Debian Squeeze Image:
http://www.multiupload.com/C9RDP4ODZX
The image can be flashed to your usb drive or sd/microsd card with dd on your fullsize computer. Please be aware that I have not tested running from a fullsize SD card.
dd if=~/nameofimage.img of=/dev/nameofdevice
Operation
1.Run the control script to start the chroot. You can run console commands here. The screen command is useful here also.
2.Run ./vnc to start the vnc server which itself starts xorg and the window manager. The script is not totally failure proof.
3.Login with your vnc client. I use Android vnc viewer. Password is testing.
http://code.google.com/p/android-vnc-viewer/
Window Managers
lxde
icewm
xfce
check /.vnc/ for the xstartup scripts. just rename the one for the window manager you want to xstartup and reboot your chroot.
BUG:
chroot will not cleanly unmount
SOLUTION:
keep chroot running in the background - it should only take up memory not cpu
Stock ROM Repository
Images contain stock system, stock boot, and CWM recovery.
vm670 recovery image is for the new screen version so it should work for all vm670.
LG vm670:
http://www.multiupload.com/LG1JCZ5CMD
Samsung i9023:
http://www.multiupload.com/KX1LIAASH3
Craig clp281:
http://www.multiupload.com/9XUQA7SEF1
Asus tf101:
http://www.multiupload.com/XMRO9AI4KC
Samsung p6210:
http://www.multiupload.com/L702W2MA7J
Can you add in support for the official android market, i would love to have this on here.
FAQ POST:
Does Flash work?
I am not holding out much hope for flash on ARMv6. It seems like a long complicating debugging process for what is in the end slow and buggy results.
The browser is slow?
Right now, it seems that javascript performance on the stock browser is much worse than I expected. For now, try turning off javascript and images if you use the stock browser.
Stock ROM?
The link for the device on Craig's website is:
http://www.craigelectronics.com/site/pdetails.php?id=314
You can download the completely stock ROM from here.
ADB?
I tried ADB with a male to male USB that I had laying around with no success with a GNU/Linux PC and a different Windows PC. All 3 USB ports were tested. But you can connect with adb connect ipofdevice over your LAN if you see what address your router is giving the device. Or of course you could set a static IP.
Minimize application?
You can return to the home screen at any time by pushing fn+home.
Sources for the binaries you have added?
Try the sources link on the first post. The zirco apk is unchanged and their website is here: http://code.google.com/p/zirco-browser/ . The Gapps are straight from my VM LG Optimus V.
Mount an ext2/3 formatted USB drive?
mount -t ext3 /dev/block/sda1 /mountpointofyourchoice
Enter key not working in some terminal applications?
Use Ctrl-m instead.
References:
https://github.com/jackpal/Android-Terminal-Emulator/issues/21
http://code.google.com/p/terminal-ide/issues/detail?id=6
Just wanted to thank you for taking this project on. This device could be much more and for the price you just can't go wrong. Good luck and I'm off to root.
Is it possible to boot or load a stripped version of windows xp from a thumb drive? and did you try all the usb ports with that cable?
wgallt:
The root situation on the ROM and my current devices in general is a little complicated. For this device in general, it comes ADB rooted out of the box. I have added another su to the rom that will allow console root. Unfortunately, because it is an older version of su, it does not seem to work with Superuser.apk. I am waiting on a response in the Q/A forum on errors I am getting compiling the current version of su. I have been able to compile Superuser.apk successfully but it is not much use without the current version of su. I am of course preferring to include source and source-compiled binaries wherever possible in the ROM.
celltimemb:
Market added.
See above for ADB info.
Regular Windows XP does not run natively on ARM CPUs. From Craig's website it appears that they have an identical model running Windows CE. You should look into any running a lightweight GNU/Linux chroot with QEMU or VMWare and then booting something like Windows 98. I would be amazed to see it, especially with the limited RAM we have available.
I am releasing a new ROM with integrated Google Apps and a open source browser named Zirco which seems to run very well. Compare the stock browser with stock settings to Zirco on forum.xda-developers.com to know what I mean. Be sure to read the README.
This ROM may end up becoming a different series entirely. One with the market and one without.
I have updated the first post with the links and README.
can u add live wallpaper support in a future rom?
If I get around to compiling AOSP that should come with live wallpaper.
I tried copying the live wallpaper apk and what I thought to be their dependencies from my Optimus V. Unfortunately, the switcher crashed and the logcat just said the wallpaper switcher would not start.
lot of apps run real slow and lag i tried some games like that bird game where you flick it to the target, i get like 1 frame every 2-3 seconds for the animation, soo slow, they claim 800 MHZ processor but damn this thing is soooo slow. even the fake chinese android phones the star A5000 runs and performs better than this.
2d games lag real bad so I dont see any 3d gaming at all on this machine. unless some elite hacker and coder can make a fully optimized rom for this thing.
Thanks for reporting your results. I have had mixed successes with games. The drag racing game works decent and another rice-can type racing game worked ok too. But many games instantly crash also. The live wallpaper would probably run slow anyway.
Web browsing
Remote administration
Network administration
Note taking
Light media playback
VOIP
Chat
These are all the uses I can think of it for the moment. It gives me an idea to include a note taking application at some point.
the new browser force closes on me, and does this thing have flash support, I have a gut feeling this is an x86 formfactor which is why it runs so slow.
Please read the README and in general read the previous posts carefully.
This is definitely not an x86. It if were, it would actually be faster.
One of these pages is the page for the CPU:
http://www.wondermedia.com.tw/en/products/platform/soc/wm8650/index.jsp
http://www.wondermedia.com.tw/en/products/platform/soc/wm8750/index.jsp
Lol on the craig website product page they show windows on it instead of android.
http://www.craigelectronics.com/site/pdetails.php?id=314
This thing can supposedly handle 3d gaming so i cant undertsand why most games including 2d games run so slow.
---------- Post added at 09:29 PM ---------- Previous post was at 08:57 PM ----------
Is it possible to put Windows CE 6 on this from the craig CLP280 model?
Merry Christmas!
After a productive night the R3 ROM is out.
The changelog and sofware list highlights:
removed zirco integration
init.rc changes to support zirco
holiday wallpaper
added OPTIONAL on localdisk with:
yaxim jabber client - open source
zirco browser - open source
jota text editor - open source
su - compiled from source
superuser - compiled from source
For security reasons, you should probably choose allow once instead of always for su.
As usual be sure to read the README.
Just got a Craig Netbook. I hate the Android stock install. I found this thread and it seems like the answer I'm looking for. If I understand you correctly, the description you give for the Rom"
"OVERVIEW
This is a modified version of the official firmware. The focus is on removal of bloatware and unneeded proprietary software."
is the first hack? (clp281_firmware2.2_HACK9_R1)
Also, if I do this and screw it up, can I reinstall the original Android from the Craig website?
Thanks.
Yes that is the first release. I would recommend trying the third as it is the latest version as of this post.
Yes you can reinstall the original firmware.
Thanks Jason.
Hey Jason. I just installed it. Had to download a new adobe flash player to watch a youtube video.
When it comes to this operating system I am a total newbie. So, in order to do a "do it yourself" install (since I still can't install some pre installed apps like "Dialer" and other things) are there simple instructions to do a "do it yourself" or do you have to be a techy to do it? I know Windows OS well but Android is so foreign to me. Just had this thing for a few days and I am ready to throw the netbook against the wall and then stomp on it. Your root was my last hope.
Well first off, were you able to actually play flash in the browser? That would be a nice new development. Alternatively, you could try the included Youtube player.
I would be glad to help in any way I can. For a do it yourself ROM, you would just take the factory firmware RAR file and edit it yourself. You would start by unRARing the file with something like WinRAR on Windows. But I would recommend trying GNU/Linux instead if you are at all interested in development. You can use the README file and this thread as a reference along the way.
Why are you interested in installing the dialer anyway? I noticed some phone components are installed but there seems to be no way to access them.
You're a doll Jason. Thanks for your willingness to help.
I didn't know about the Youtube player. Thanks for the tip. On the original install I was able to play flash in "Browser" (at Youtube at least) but not with "Browser" in this install. Although, maybe "Browser" opened "My Browser" in the original install and that's the one that had flash support. (I'm still learning). So since I didn't get around to installing your included browser maybe that's why it wouldn't play. Anyhow, I couldn't install the flash update via the link Youtube provided. The little download arrow on the top left hand of the screen just never went away. I had the unit on for about 3 hours and the arrow remained with no confirmation that the download was complete. I searched the system and the SD card for the download but couldn't find it. This is not the first time I had this problem with downloads so maybe it's something with my particular device. This is actually my third. Last two were defects.
About the Dialer... it was a typo. I meant to say I want to UNINSTALL it from the unit, but Android won't let me. It just seems useless to have this app since I have a netbook and not a phone. Plus, I think it may be eating up my battery usage as it could be the app responsible for the cell standby thing I have in Battery Usage which is using up 80% of my battery. Like I said, I am a newbie to this OS so, I'm looking at things like Dialer, Telophony etc. I may be wrong about this though. It may be some other application seeking Cell Radio signal as reported in Battery Usage.
I just did a side by side comparison of the unzipped install I got from Craigs website (by the way, thanks for that link) and your version to see if I could learn and do my own hack. I did notice a few differences.
Ok first I saw the Optional folder with some apps and Browser fix as you mentioned in the Read me
Then there was the app folder where you removed some apps from the original install and added others. Is it as simple as that? To just delete the apps you don't want from this folder of the original install? Unfortunately I don't see Dialer in that folder. I'd like to get rid of that too. I guess you can't get rid of every app.
Another difference was that I saw "su" in "bin". and I noticed SuperUser.apk in your app folder. Does that app make you the administrator of the device giving you access to system files to delete them if you want to? (I looked it up on WIKI) Cause maybe I can include that in my hack.
Also I see another difference in this folder:
\FirmwareInstall\packages\fs_patch\root_patch\system\lib
In your readme you said these are shared libraries but I don't have a clue what that means. Do I need these files?
Thanks again for taking the time with this. I would love to do my own hack. It would give me great satisfaction after the countless hours of stress trying to do stuff they won't let me do.
All the best,
Angie

[Q] Improving Android with Package Manager & more.

Hey!
I own a Samsung S3 i9300 for about an year and used it with the vendors operating system. As i have some spare time at the moment, i want to invest some of it in improving my phone.
In the last three days i tried "slimbean" (www.slimroms.net/‎) and CyanogenMod (http://www.cyanogenmod.org/).
I have gained some experience with GNU/Linux especially Arch (i really appreciate the philosophy of Arch) and Openwrt over the years, but Android is mostly unknown to me.
With this in mind, i do not feel very comfortable on my phone, as it (from my point of view) tries to hide whats going on. What i saw so far (stock, slimbean & cm) they show me shiny GUI's but i have no way to understand whats really going on.
For instance configuration: Until now, i only saw graphical frontends for configuring my phone. Is there something like a /config dir (as in openwrt) where i get an overview?
Second example: Until now, i have not seen an easy to understand command line tool for package managing.
What i want:
Find people who miss similar stuff on their phones as i do. May you have already made some discoveries/have recommendations for me and i for myself can post my "discoveries".
The first steps:
1) to have no propietary stuff on my phone
2) one can use a phone without a google-account
3) to have a serious package manager (as on a desktop linux system), which i can use on a console (pacman, opkg).
4) having an home dir where all the personal data is saved in the same place
My ideal:
-A secure operating system for a phone
-An easy-to-understand user management
-to have a versatile package manager and repository
-rolling release
What i did so far:
3) As an alternative to the google play store i found Fdroid (https://f-droid.org/). Fdroid comes my ideal closer, but i still have no way to use it with command line and some important tools command line tools are missing. Next, came to BotBrew (botbrew.com/) but atm it doesnt work on my device...
And i seriously need sshfs on my phone. Is there a package manager which is able to compile packages?
For the rolling release thing i found on xda-developers two related, but unanswered posts:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1807061
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2281413

Attaining root on Crystalview (Wondermedia) NB4-3/5788

Believe it or not, this netbook comes already rooted, but how to access it is hidden. The original adventure is posted below if you're interested,but I'll put the tl;dr up top.
You'll need to side load the app USB Debug by tatibana. This will shortcut to the hidden developer options. Slide the developer options on. You may or may not need to reboot, I was too focused on USB Debug to notice the SuperUser Options... The default is Always Deny. Set to Always Allow, then you can replace with your choice su manager (I installed Chainfire's SuperSU).
That's it. The rest below is my original posts up to this point, including getting a Linux working prior to figuring out root. Enjoy the read.
Edit 2: You can pick up new posts from this point by going directly to post #11.
Original Post:
---
Okay, this one is a bit puzzling and I haven't found any good info in searches. This is an Android netbook with Jellybean. Pointer control is a single point touch pad which makes zooming out on several apps impossible; I wish to attain root so I can install desktop Linux in parallel and use some desktop apps in place of some Android apps. I know I could use something like qemu but I'd rather install root and use arm binaries than take a performance hit using non-root methods.
This netbook comes with an installed su binary and busybox 1.19.4 but trying to invoke su results in
su: uid 10084 not allowed to su
Settings is also a bit crippled; no Developer Options section means no option to invoke USB Debugging. Anyone have any good ideas?
---
Sent from my C5155 using XDA Free mobile app
addendum
There also is no physical volume or photo buttons, and no obvious way to get into fastboot mode. My guess is that the original OS image was made in root mode, then the CV dev created a default user with almost no permissions, then backed it out effectively locking it out of root forever. I have also discovered that the busybox doesn't have access to the network as this user 10084, negating half its usability. No Play Store either (using Amazon instead), though I can (and have) install to my phone and copy to this if necessary.
This has a cool little form factor and I think has so much potential for a cheap device if I could just bust this major barrier. Does anyone know any sh or setuid tricks that might fake this thing into a root mode, or at least manage to give me enough permissions to edit /system files?
system seems to be owned by user 1003 and group 120, if that helps.
---
Mmmmmm, tasty foot...
So apparently this is normal behavior for the stock android su (see guys, I'm learning >P ); only the user shell (and root) can use su. This thing using a shared uid for apps might or might not have an effect, don't know yet. The normal way around it is to adb shell and su in, then overwrite with a custom su binary such as ChainsDD. I don't know if I have that option since there's no USB Debugging option, and I'm too tired to find out tonight. I will update this adventure later.
USB failed, but not anything to do with adb, didn't even get that far. The netbook failed to even register to the desktop (Linux)... lsusb didn't show anything. I don't know if it's a cable thing (tried direct A-A patch and the MiniUSB charge port- charge port predictably didn't support data and neither standard port showed any reaction) or a hardware limitation.
I also took a crack at adb over wifi but as usual it was the catch 22 of needing root to invoke adbd into tcpip to attain root.
Still open to suggestions... please?
---
Sent from my C5155 using XDA Free mobile app
Developer Options?
This is driving me up a new wall. Based on what I have been reading all day, Developer Options are a core function and cannot be removed, only hidden. This thing has not been giving me much confidence in that statement, however. I have been through the settings over and over again with a fine tooth comb and the whole thing eludes me.
This is Android 4.1.1. The 4.2+ trick (7 clicks on Build Number) doesn't work, and it's not in the App settings either, nor is there any sections renamed "Advanced" or the like. It may not be an end-all but I feel it would at least be a step in the right direction. I might be able to use an exploit such as Poot or Framearoot, which are currently ineffective.
I also haven't had any luck with getting into a recovery boot mode, not sure it's possible with this keyboard (I suspect it's soft driven; inactive until the kernel and modules are loaded). This seems to be just one shut down after another. I need more ideas, pointers, whatever. Don't forget, it can also help the next sap stuck with this model...
I decided to not lose sight of my original reasoning and move forward anyway with an app that claims to install Linux without root. I installed Gnuroot Wheezy which taught me some more f'd up things about this netbook but it at least in concept is working. What more things I have learned...
One of the issues with running Linux without root is the inability to use the external SD-card, at least native, because you can't mount an external partition/file that hasn't already been set up in the mount scripts outside of userspace. Gnuroot uses a chroot off the secure asec in /data. With about 3G user space available on this netbook, you'd think that wouldn't be a problem... but it is, because of another setup issue with this netbook...
See, while the external SD card does mount to /sdcard,/mnt/sdcard, that is NOT where Android app setup calls SDcard... there is a so called internal SDcard that is really a fake vfat via fuse mount off /data mounted to /mnt/local. This means it does no good to move my plethora of other apps to the "SD Card," actually, it makes the problem worse on this device. I imagine it was done so you could swap SD cards without affecting your apps, good move for flexibility but poor for expandability.
For those who would try it, that's also a big hint for getting it working. This device does not have access to the Play market*, so you will have to move helper apps from another Android device over. Don't bother with 3rd party repositories, you will not get everything you need. The biggest issue is the WheezyX obb file. It on install ONLY from the Play store will be located in /sdcard/Android/obb/champion.gnuroot.wheezyx/main.2.champion.gnuroot.wheezyx.obb , on this netbook the file must be moved to /mnt/local/Android/obb/champion.gnuroot.wheezyx or it will not be recognized, and because of the play store issue, can't be downloaded and gnuroot will exit with error.
Anyway, so now WheezyX is actually running and I am attempting to install an Openbox/LXDE desktop... the problem I am hitting now is the space limitation... It said it needed about 330 MB space and I had 360MB available on start... I'm now about 1/4 through and the netbook has come to a dead crawl due to... yep, very little space left (about 55 MB free on /data)... WTF! I feel like I am just not meant to win at like anything...
---
*Edit: Once rooted, the play store can be installed to the system partition and does work pretty good.
---
Sent from my C5155 using XDA Free mobile app
Some success with Linux
Well, it took quite a bit of monkeying and persistence but I do have desktop Linux running via the above described method. I found Synaptic was useful for finding packages but as the GNURoot author warned, for the love of all that's holy, use apt-get to actually install the packages. It seems trying to install a desktop environment via Synaptic totally overthrew the system. Also try installing only a few packages at a time and clean up after each one, especially where space is a premium.
What's left now is experimenting with vnc viewers a/o X11 environments. I'm presently using PocketCloud but it doesn't seem to like this keyboard (right shift = 6, no down arrow, Ctrl is sticky- forget combo keys; at least the included soft-keyboard does work, just a productivity killer) and getting a right mouse click is almost impossible, so I want to see if I can do better.
The environment is OpenBox with lxpanel and the background is set with qiv. I am confident now that providing space wasn't such an issue I could run pretty much any basic Linux program I want. I have not tested audio and I already know just being vncserver that motion video is a bad idea; this was mostly proof of concept until I can open up some space. I may now see how far I can take this (e.g. link large trees to the SD card, such as bin directories; since it's already running fake-root, I'm not too worried about user permissions. I may also experiment with fuse).
Edit:
This does not mean I don't still want to get a true root. If nothing else, even if I can't take Linux off the internal storage, root will allow me to force Android apps on to the external SD; either solves the current space issue and thus is still desirable. I'm just not as stuck in the mud now. Ideas still very much appreciated.
Done and done.
Just a quick update to say the project isn't dead, just dormant. I have successfully turned on USB debugging thanks to a shortcut app called "USB Debug" by Tatibana. Thank you
---
Sent from my C5155 using XDA Free mobile app
Framaroot, Universal Androot, and Poot have all failed.
:banghead:
Have yet to see if physical USB will now work... I don't exactly live alone.
---
Sent from my C5155 using XDA Free mobile app
SUCCESS!!!!!
IDFBT! I must have not been paying enough attention before or something, or maybe it was one of the half dozen greyed out options before... not sure, but after I was again unable to connect via direct USB, I decided to double check the developer options to make sure noting was reset by the last reboot.... and there in bright white last in the top section... Superuser Options (set to Always Deny)! I set it to Ask and tested, but it promptly rebooted as soon as I tried to su, and again on that boot, so I had to set to Always Allow. Amazon doesn't have SuperSU and last I knew ChainsDD Superuser is still adrift in the doldrums, so I'll have to sideload (as usual), but, I just wanted to share. This netbook does come rooted, you just need to turn on the hidden developer options, reboot, and go back and allow SuperUser.
Will report more as I progress. Banzai!!!
Adventures in Linux land
Well, I had mentioned before how space was an issue. Thanks in part to Link2SD, I managed to curb that problem.
Problem still though was my base graphical Linux install was taking 1G of my /data space. Since I made 2G available on the Link2SD ext4 (/data/sdext2) partition, I found I had about 1.3G available after moving most apps over, I decided I'd try a manual data move. I was slow with this since I didn't know how Link2SD or the system was going to handle it. That turned out to be a good thing.
When using Link2SD, one thing that should be obvious is to never move essential apps off the internal storage. These would be things like Link2SD itself, a Terminal emulator, and your superuser manager (e.g. SuperSU); basically, things you absolutely cannot lose access to even temporarily.
Okay, so, to test the behavior, I went into the emulator..
su
cd /data/sdext2
mkdir Linux
That's all. I then did a normal power off and restart. When rebooting, an "Android is Updating..." box came up and went away in a few seconds. The launcher came up and I waited for everything to load normally. Then I started getting a rash of "App is not installed" messages... uh oh. The only reason this turned out to not be a big deal is Link2SD and SuperSU were still on internal storage, and Link2SD is designed to deal with this problem. I simply launched Link2SD, clicked the tab bar on the upper left, and selected "Relink all application files," after which it requested a reboot, and I complied.
With a semi-disaster averted, I went back into /data/sdext2 to see if the Linux directory was still there. Hallelujah it was. Next was finding the GNURoot wheezyx root. This turned out to be fairly easy:
/data/data/champion.gnuroot/app_install/roots/wheezyx . I decided for potential future expansion to move the whole roots directory. Being cautious as I try, I do a copy.
su
cd /data/data/champion.gnuroot/app_install
cp -a roots /data/sdext2/Linux/
(... go make a sammich ...)
rm -R roots
(... go make and eat dinner ...)
ln -s /data/sdext2/Linux/roots roots
This appeared to work at first, until I tried to install something (abiword). I discovered that the permissions were not copied to the lib directories (android security quirk?). This would probably not be an issue if this were a true root install but being a fake root app install, it effectively prevented the installation of libraries. This was fixed simply by doing a chown and chmod on the lib directories.
Contined from above:
cd roots/wheezyx
chown 10102.10102 lib
chmod 771 lib
chown 10102.10102 usr/lib
chmod 771 usr/lib
*note: the app id number may be different on your copy. This will be fairly obvious with a simple ls -lh .
After that, the install completed and this thing is running pretty good. I am now considering this a complete success. While technically solved, I'll keep this thread open for questions or updates (for as long as the mods don't mind).
---
Sent from my C5155 using XDA Free mobile app
Screencap op
Assuming the uploads work this time, attached are some screencaps. Enjoy.

[APP][4.1+] Tuxoid v0.1.1 - A full Linux desktop environment on your Android

Code:
*** Disclaimer
As usual, I am not responsible for thermonuclear war or other apocalyptic futures.
TL;DR: If you break your device with this project, it's not my fault (although I will of course be willing to help you in your troubles!!).
Introduction
Have you ever wanted to use your Android device as a fully-fledged desktop Linux box? Now you can, with Tuxoid!
A year or two ago, I discovered the Linux-on-Android project. (http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1585009) I was fascinated by the possibility of running Linux on top of Android and using a desktop environment. However, I was slightly disappointed by the lack of some features, as well as a lack of development over the time of the project's existence. Thus I embarked upon an epic quest (well maybe not quite that dramatic) to build my own version from the ground up, basing it upon the ideas explored by Linux-on-Android.
After some on and off hacking on my OnePlus One, I now have some very early working code.
Below is a video demonstration of the current state of Tuxoid, demonstrating a few of its features.
Here is a list of some of these features:
- The big one: fast and high quality display system
- Native keyboard and mouse support (automatically disables Android's built-in system)
- Audio support. Audio from the desktop environment is piped into Android's audio system, so you can use your device's speakers, headphones or bluetooth etc
UPDATE: First builds!
I've built the first publicly available versions of the project. Before you get excited, I should warn you that they are in an unstable state. You can grab the APKs in the Downloads section of this project, as well as on the Releases page of the project on GitHub. These builds are not for n00bs! If you're still determined to give them a try, here are the instructions:
Requirements
An Android device running 4.1 or newer (it will be availabe for older versions in the future, but for know only Lollipop is supported) Older versions now supported!
Root with SuperSU for managing permissions. I will not explain this here, as there are already hundreds of guides available. If you don't know how to root your device, this project (at least in these early stages) is not for you.
A reasonable amount of internal storage (at least 1-2 GB free)
A stable internet connection. Make sure you're using WiFi for best results.
A mouse and keyboard to control the desktop environment. You should be able to use wired ones (via an OTG adapter) or wireless via bluetooth. As long as Android recognizes it, you should be good to go.
This is not a requirement, but you won't be able to do much without it (for now): knowledge of the Linux command line and preferably how to use the pacman package manager for Arch Linux, as that is the distro upon which Tuxoid is based (more distros will be available down the line!)
Setup and installation
Once your device is rooted, open up the SuperSU app and go to the Settings tab. Find an option labelled "Mount namespace separation" and ensure it is UNchecked. (Make sure to reboot before continuing if you had to do this)
Download and install the APK for Tuxoid. Again, if you don't know how to do this, you shouldn't be attempting to install an early build Tuxoid...
Open the Tuxoid app and tap the gear in the actionbar to go to the settings menu. There are a few options you can tweak here, but the main one you should be interested in right now is 'Disk image size'. Select a size that suits the amount of space you have free on your internal storage. I would recommend 4GB (the default) to allow room for installation of your own packages later. If you have less space free on your internal storage than you select here, the setup process will fail.
Go back to the main screen of the app and ensure you have a stable internet connection. Now connect your keyboard and mouse (you must connect them before booting Tuxoid up every time). Then, press 'Start' to begin the setup process. This will probably take a while, so just leave your device down for a while and check up on it every once and a while.
Eventually, if all went well, you should see a screen with a grey background and an xterm window. Feel free to run some commands. To start, I'd recommend installing the Chromium browser (open source version Google Chrome). To do this, run 'sudo pacman -S chromium' (without quotes). The password is the same as your username. Once installed, run 'chromium' to start the browser. For those who are interested, the window manager installed by default is Openbox. If you want to install some more packages, the list of available ones in Arch Linux for ARM devices is available here: http://archlinuxarm.org/packages If you weren't able to get up and running (i.e. no screen with a cursor and no xterm), you can try some of the steps described in Troubleshooting & Tips.
When you're finished playing around, follow the steps below to ensure clean shutdown of Tuxoid. If you want to boot up again, you can just open up the app at any time and tap on the start button. Tuxoid will use your existing system image.
Shutdown procedure
When you're done, simply press the back key on your device to close the GUI and press the stop button to shutdown Tuxoid. After a few seconds, the log will show "SHUTDOWN!", meaning the shutdown procedure was completed successfully.
Troubleshooting & Tips
If Tuxoid failed to boot during the initial setup, you can retry by first removing files in the 'droidtop' folder on your internal storage (usually 'system.img' and 'arch.tar.gz') and then pressing 'Start' again in the app.
If your mouse and keyboard aren't working in Tuxoid, ensure that they were connected to your device BEFORE you pressed the start button and make sure they were detected by Android. If they weren't detected by Android itself the they definitely won't work with Tuxoid.
If you something goes wrong at any stage while using Tuxoid, please press the 'Send log' button in the app to send me a copy of the log shown on the main screen.
If the app crashes, a dialog will pop up asking you to send a report. Please do this as it makes it much easier for me to fix bugs!
If you have any feedback and suggestions, feel free to post them here in the forums! You can also submit issues on the GitHub project (although this is really more orientated towards developers)
If you are a developer and want to get involved in the project, you can post here in the forums and/or submit pull requests on GitHub.
Source code
I've published all of the source code for the app to GitHub (http://github.com/jackos2500/tuxoid) Feel free to fork and make changes, and, even better, submit pull requests to move the project forward!
Finally, I would like to say thanks to the guys over at Linux-on-Android for their great work, without which the idea for this project would never have existed!
XDA:DevDB Information
Tuxoid, App for all devices (see above for details)
Contributors
jackos2500
Version Information
Status: Testing
Created 2015-06-13
Last Updated 2015-06-14
Reserved
Changelog
v0.1.1
Adds compatibility for Android versions as far back as 4.1 (API level 16).
Bug fixes:
screen resolution could be detected incorrectly
'setenforce' could fail to execute due to its lack of existence on older platform versions
v0.1
Initial public release.
Reserved
Its really interesting to hear about linux on android
shahzu3 said:
Its really interesting to hear about linux on android
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup! I think I'll put out a build later with some instructions so that people can try it for themselves.
Mm
shahzu3 said:
Mm
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I've pushed out the first public build. Give it a try and tell me what you think!
Hi. Your project sounds great ??
Is really necessary to have so internal space or could it be possible one day to have the whole stuff on the external sd.??
That is just amazing, thanks for your work, a tablet running this would be really nice... I'm going to try it out.
Hello! This looks very promising but I can't find any download link. Is it missing?
Edit: My phone just didn't load the page fully, the download section is on the top.
DirkStorck said:
Hi. Your project sounds great
Is really necessary to have so internal space or could it be possible one day to have the whole stuff on the external sd.?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good point! I'll see if I can do something about that sometime soon. Unfortunately if the chroot environment is not stored in a disk image the filesystem it is stored on must support Unix permissions, so no FAT32 formatted sdcards without disk images. FAT32 also limits file size to 4GB, so that would be the max size for a disk image there. I'll probably add a way of optionally adding an extra partition to your SD to get around this at some stage.
WideBRs said:
That is just amazing, thanks for your work, a tablet running this would be really nice... I'm going to try it out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Cool, tell me what you think when you give it a go!
jackos2500 said:
Good point! I'll see if I can do something about that sometime soon. Unfortunately if the chroot environment is not stored in a disk image the filesystem it is stored on must support Unix permissions, so no FAT32 formatted sdcards without disk images. FAT32 also limits file size to 4GB, so that would be the max size for a disk image there. I'll probably add a way of optionally adding an extra partition to your SD to get around this at some stage.
Cool, tell me what you think when you give it a go!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have been using Linux Deploy on my tablet and it worked quite well. They have the environment as an image on the internal or external sd card. I think 4GB is a enough for a Linux system. For those who want more would have to format the external as ext4.
DirkStorck said:
I have been using Linux Deploy on my tablet and it worked quite well. They have the environment as an image on the internal or external sd card. I think 4GB is a enough for a Linux system. For those who want more would have to format the external as ext4.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've pushed a new release with support for devices running Android 4.1 and above. I think I'm going to start working on improving the user-friendliness of the project tomorrow. This will probably include improving the UI and setup process, as well as better error handling. Once that code is in place I won't have to refactor any new features I add to the new UI, so it makes sense to do it first. It will take a while, and whenever it's done, I'll probably start working on some of those new features.
Hi,
Could you tell me if:
a) my phones built-in keyboard will work?
b) if there's an option to use the touch screen to control the mouse?
Thanks
moodroid said:
Hi,
Could you tell me if:
a) my phones built-in keyboard will work?
b) if there's an option to use the touch screen to control the mouse?
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Right now, no. Both of these are definitely a high priority though.
jackos2500 said:
Right now, no. Both of these are definitely a high priority though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Excellent, thanks. I'll keep an eye on this...
Can i decompile and compile apk with this Linux for Android? I havent pc
this is really amazing, as it is very useful for tablets, at least for my tab s 10.5 inch, keep it up!
Currently using Xserver Xsdl, with the pain of slow refresh rate and input interrupt.
Thank you for this effort!
Hello,
So far, I had these issues before it worked, otherwise its awesome, the only way to render x server on android smoothly and no input latency without using direct (kernel) framebuffer:
1)Latest arch armv7hf use xorg-server and xf86-input-evdev compiled for/by version 1.18.x , had to recompile 1.17 from source since your module (the source code isnt released in your github :/, guess you forgot) is compiled for ABI module 20, currently 23.
2) High cpu usage, probably implement refresh rate limitation on the app side for displaying the shared memory framebuffer, though having the source code for the module would really help, guess its a modified dummy.so (?) to copy framebuffer to shm? Anyways ill try to workaround the issue using a compositor.
Thats all! working perfectly... If anyone need the compiled 1.17 versions of xorg-server and evdev, just use ABS or pm me.
Thanks!
EDIT: I think it would be better to turn this into X server framebuffer viewer app, and combine it with Linux deploy (+ 'custom scripts' option is already implemented in Linux Deploy, useful for evdev and xorg config) for more linux flavours
apparently, it seems that you have copied droidtop project without mentioning it (license: MIT) : https://code.google.com/p/droidtop/
which has been archived now with no public access

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