Help With Setting Up the New Magisk App - General Questions and Answers

Hello:
I need help with setting up the magisk manager which is now the magisk app.
I downloaded the magisk manager app some weeks back, but I never set it up. But when I checked it out some hours ago, I discovered that it had been updated to magisk 22.0. The magisk manager is said to be dead, and we now have a new magisk app.
So, my question now is: how do I set it up for use. Please give me a comprehensive tutorial on the installation and set up.
I am made to understand that the app now comes with a custom recovery and there is no need to install one any longer.
When I am on the installation screen, I find preserve ADB 2.0 for DM veritycheckbox: and preserve force encryption: checkbox. Then I find method: I don't understand these checkboxes. Which do I check and which do I uncheck.
I find the next button on the right side of the screen, and when I tap on it, I find option on the top of the screen, then I then find select and pach a file radio button: the box here is unchecked. I don't know what to do here.
Then there is the let's go button, which is disabled.
Then after the installation, how do I now use it to root my phone.
So, I am a layman here, and I need help with all these. Please help me out.
I have a Samsung galaxy grand prime J2 phone.
I am also a blind android user, as I use the screen reader talkback to access the phone.
Thanks for your assistance.

Related

Help with Samsung s5 root!

Hello everyone!
I would like to ask you something and i REALLY HOPE someone will be able to help me out.
I have a samsung s5 sm-g900f with Android 6.0.1 and i'm trying to root it.
Actually it was supposed to be rooted when i got it -it's my bf's phone. And...aaam i don't know if it's called "rooted" when it just have custom recovery and rom? I just call it that way-. Yesterday i installed root checker and Super SU and the Super SU keeps saying that "There is no SU binary installed and SuperSU cannot install it" and that if i have Android 5 i should re root manually and stuff.
I have tried like everything i have found on the net since yesterday, flashing with Odin, changing recovery from twrp to cwm, and all the time the steps are made by letter, all seems fine, i see the red pirate android after the recovery reboot and all that, have tried to install the UPDATE-zip and the BETA-zip and all i could find. I tried to install Kingroot but i couldn't figure out how. My recovery nor Odin can see the file to install it and then i try to do it manually, like all apps, it says could not be installed. :crying:
I got really tired and i cave in to ask for help here. I hope the post is in the right place and if it's not please move it where it should be!
Thank you in advance!
CloeNi said:
Hello everyone!
I would like to ask you something and i REALLY HOPE someone will be able to help me out.
I have a samsung s5 sm-g900f with Android 6.0.1 and i'm trying to root it.
Actually it was supposed to be rooted when i got it -it's my bf's phone. And...aaam i don't know if it's called "rooted" when it just have custom recovery and rom? I just call it that way-. Yesterday i installed root checker and Super SU and the Super SU keeps saying that "There is no SU binary installed and SuperSU cannot install it" and that if i have Android 5 i should re root manually and stuff.
I have tried like everything i have found on the net since yesterday, flashing with Odin, changing recovery from twrp to cwm, and all the time the steps are made by letter, all seems fine, i see the red pirate android after the recovery reboot and all that, have tried to install the UPDATE-zip and the BETA-zip and all i could find. I tried to install Kingroot but i couldn't figure out how. My recovery nor Odin can see the file to install it and then i try to do it manually, like all apps, it says could not be installed. :crying:
I got really tired and i cave in to ask for help here. I hope the post is in the right place and if it's not please move it where it should be! Thank you in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Since you can flash custom recovery then your bootloader is already unlocked so....
Do a search for "flashing SuperSU.zip Galaxy S5" or you might need to search for "flashing SuperSU.zip in systemless mode galaxy s5". Flashing one of those should give you root and su binaries, after flashing, boot the device and open the SuperSU app and update the su binaries then reboot the device. Then after rebooting, you need to go to system settings>developer options>root access and set it to "apps and adb", then install a file manager that has a root explorer such as ES File Explorer, then open it, tap the menu button, go to the "TOOLS" tab, find "Root Explorer" and turn it on, then when you see the next menu, tap "Mount R/W", then set all listed partitions to "rw".
If you can access your SELinux profile, make sure it's set to "permissive" mode.
If you can get all of that set then you'll have access to modify and control pretty much anything you want about the device.
I DO NOT PROVIDE HELP IN PERSONAL MESSAGE, I DO NOT TAKE REQUESTS IN PERSONAL MESSAGE, YOU WILL BE IGNORED. KEEP IT IN THE THREADS WHERE EVERYONE CAN SHARE
thank you!!!
i wont be able to try it for a few days but i'll try it as soon as i can and give you feedback on this!
So i'm trying to follow your instructions right now. I guess it's ok if i install recovery upon recovery and SU upon SU without first removing the "faulty" one?
Cause i have done the first steps a lot these days
edit: i flashed again aaaaaand nothing new happened. The SU binary is nowhere to be found :/
some say it could be a problem of the cable or the computer?
Should i try from a different pc and cable? I do not really understand it but i'll give it a try later
edit 2: i retried from another pc and another usb cable, the same happens. Does not install the SU through the recovery
I installed the SuperSU (actually enebled it again and updated it) from playstore and opened it and it says the sme thing again. Can't find su binaries and stuff.
What should i do? Is format a solution or can avoid it?

MEO StarAddict 6 root or firmware

Hello, if anyone could help me with this, I've tried to find firmware for this phone I've read in another thread it's from ZTE but no luck in their website, I want to root or update the firmware if anyone could help, currently the phone is freaking out not working properly. It's from Altice MEO and the name is StarAddict 6.
hello you can easily root your starradict 6 by the app named "KingRoot".
its safe and easy ,the app have his proper's root permissions manager's(exactly like super su) ,and works fine.You can also unroot your device by the KingRoot app too;(if you want to unroot definitively ,factory reset your device is hughly recommended)
For the firmware ,its more hard ,its need to use the DFU mode.
But for now i cant help you for where found the firmware.
one good solution is to make a dump of your firmware,its look like a backup in recovery,for mmake this im sure you can easily find how to make this on xda or google.
im looking for the firmware too ,if i found how and where to download it ,i post here for the starraddict community users.
friendly
I found the firmware boys
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qIgNdLwDc5p6WxrohIwIjpvheBCe6nKR/view
neves2k said:
I found the firmware boys
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qIgNdLwDc5p6WxrohIwIjpvheBCe6nKR/view
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Found the password. I looked up the file name on google and it lead me to firmware247 which had the password there. (It's https://firmware247.com).
How to unbrick:
Get any SDCard on your PC and paste the l730.v1 folder inside the root of the sdcard.
Put it back on the phone.
While pressing both Vol +, Vol - press Power Button.
This will put you into the "recovery mode" (if you can call it that...) which will read the files and install them
If you've reached this far hopefully your phone is working again
ROOT with Magisk:
Download and install Dr. Fone root tool (make sure it's the root tool and not the management/backup tool)
Go into phone developer settings and enable OEM Unlocker and USB debugging
Root the phone with Dr. Fone root tool (it will ask to install supersu, accept it)
When you open supersu, DO NOT UPDATE THE BINARIES, or you will go into bootloop (happened to me at least)
Install magisk manager apk
Open magisk so you get the prompt to allow on it supersu
Restart magisk and super su app (for some reason some options don't appear on magisk if you don't do this)
Download and install (patch) magisk to directly.
Reboot as prompted by the tool.
Open supersu and go into options.
Select delete supersu and remove "root" (you will need to allow supersu root permissions on magisk)
That's it, you now have your phone rooted with magisk.
Unfortunately I wasn't able to find a way to fix safety net, please let me know if you do. (CTS Profile is flagged)
Edit: Organized the post and added small guide.

Magisk Manager update issue!

I got my phone (SM-G950F a.k.a Samsung Galaxy S8) rooted about a year ago or so...and since, i update MM whenever needed but this time when i tried to update it, it says this:
Unsupported Magisk Version
This versio of Magisk Manager does not support Magisk version lower than v18.0
You can either manually upgrade Magisk, or downgrade the app to an older version.
I cannot go into the app cause that message will pop up and after i press ok it closes by itself!
Any ideea on how to fix this? If i have to re-root the phone please do explain..even then i didn't knew for sure how i did it, but i did it..
Thanks in advance!
Ahh... Me too. I'm sure this somewhere in the extensive Magisk coverage here. Is it too lazy to ask for a pointer to how to
--- downgrade the manager? That's probably easy if I know where to get the apk. Which version should I go for?
--- install the new magisk over the existing version, preferably without wiping the phone?
Sure, I'll search. But it is quite a while since I did anything with magisk, or anything that involved flashing, and I feel a bit lost.
Thad E Ginathom said:
Sure, I'll search. ... ... ...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
OK, so there's a wiki and stuff. Whilst being babied would be nice, people have better things to do, and I guess I'll just start in reading that wiki and... stuff.
SOLUTION
Deathnes said:
I got my phone (SM-G950F a.k.a Samsung Galaxy S8) rooted about a year ago or so...and since, i update MM whenever needed but this time when i tried to update it, it says this:
Unsupported Magisk Version
This versio of Magisk Manager does not support Magisk version lower than v18.0
You can either manually upgrade Magisk, or downgrade the app to an older version.
I cannot go into the app cause that message will pop up and after i press ok it closes by itself!
Any ideea on how to fix this? If i have to re-root the phone please do explain..even then i didn't knew for sure how i did it, but i did it..
Thanks in advance!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Delete the Magisk Manager app as you would do with any other, download the proper version in .apk (check the official thread) and install it.
In the thread, under Sources, you have the link to the GitHub repo. Scrolling down you will find the README.MD file and the link to the Downloads page where all past releases are available.
From https://www.xda-developers.com/how-to-install-magisk/ you can read:
The Magisk framework is now installed on your device. To manage it, you’ll need the aptly named Magisk Manager. This is what will allow you to install modules. Download the latest Magisk Manager APK here and make sure you have “Unknown sources” enabled in the Settings. Install the app and open it up.
The Manager app allows you to adjust root settings and also install modules, which are installable mods. The app doubles as a repository for a bunch of great modules that can easily extend the functionality of your device. Using the Manager app is an important part of getting the most out of this root method.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is, the app Magisk Manager is independent from the Magisk framework you have installed. Deleting the app does not affect Magisk.
vomae said:
... ... ... the Downloads page where all past releases are available.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'd reached there, although not done it yet. As you say, my phone is still working, Magisk is still working, it is just the manager app that needs dealing with. None the less, I appreciate your time and effort. You paint a clear picture for others who come this way.
Thanks.
Open the updated app & ignore the error, then checkout the option showing update magisk(not manager), go for it, dont select any preservations & click on direct install(which is recommended by app itself).
Flashing of the update will begin, then after reboot your problem is solved.
Magisk Manager has many improvements and features over the last year...

Tutorials Wanted On Using The New Magisk App 22.0

Hello:
I've never used Magisk before, so I am trying it out for the first time.
I've downloaded and installed the new app, 22.0, but I am not sure if everything is perfectly done.
After installation, I am put on the home page, and there I find magisk install button, installed. Setting, n/a a/b no ramdisk yes S/R noapp install button 22.0 22000 18 installed.
Then I tap on the safety net and this is what I seel SuccessBasicIntegrityctsProfileEvalTypeBASIC When I scroll to the right, I see try again button.
When I tap on the install button on the right of the home page, I see Options: method then preserve ADB 2.0 for DM verity check box not checked, and and then preserve forced encryption checkbox checked.
When I explore the next button, I find option, I find method, download pache file. and then on the right, I find lets go button, unavailable.
Please kindly help me to understand all these.
What am I not doing properly, and how can I properly get the app to work.
I am actually blind, and I use a screen reader to access the phone.
Finally, how will I use the app to root my phone. I use a Samsung Galaxy Grand prime J2 phone.
Hope my issue is very well understood.`

[GUIDE] How to get SafetyNet working with MicroG

This is a tutorial on how to set up your phone so that you can consistently pass SafetyNet. Note that all this is from my own experience, and if what works on one device blows up another, that's not my problem and I'm not responsible for that. I will attempt to keep this tutorial as clean and simple as possible, but if you have any further questions that are more specific you are welcome to ask.
In order to be as simple as possible to understand, this guide assumes the following:
- You have a PC. Windows, Mac, the almighty Linux, it makes no difference.
- You have the android platform tools on your PC
- Your device has an unlocked bootloader.
- Your device does not have support for signature spoofing.
- Your device does not have Google's official play services on it.
- You have a working brain.
If one or more of the above is incorrect, you'll have to make more use of the last item on the list.
If the last item on the list is incorrect, you're beyond hope.
Now, the guide:
Step 1: Get some magisk on your phone
Setting up magisk is incredibly simple, and I won't be going into detail here. I would recommend installing the regular magisk app and patching your boot image, as that is what I've done.
Note that you do not need the magisk manager app for this guide at all.
I've attached the magisk app I used to this post. You'll need to install the app and make use of the "install" section of the home page.
Once magisk is installed and set up, you'll need to enable zygisk in the magisk settings. Then reboot.
Step 2: Installing MicroG
I am not going to list through all the possible way you can install microG. Instead, have a link to microG's wiki:
index - MicroG
r/MicroG: Subreddit about microG, a free-as-in-freedom re-implementation of Google’s proprietary Android user space apps and libraries. This …
www.reddit.com
Now here comes the important bit:
From everything I have seen, it appears clear that google stores information about each device that registers with it, and that this in turn will affect SafetyNet.
Therefore, the best way to prevent this leading to SafetyNet failing is to prevent connection with google completely - till the phone is ready.
Before you install microG, make sure your phone has both wifi and data turned off. Leave these off till the setup is complete. Note that only the phone needs to be disconnected, nothing else matters.
In essence, this means that google sees nothing till your device is setup correctly, and then SafetyNet has nothing to complain about.
Now that you've read every word of the above paragraph, go ahead and install microG on your phone.
Make sure you've got all the different components: Core, GSF Framework, FakeStore, and DroidGuard helper. If your installation method does not handle all of this for you, then it sucks, and you shouldn't have used it. Regardless, you can find apks for all of these at https://microg.org/
Step 3: Don't touch
As I've already made clear above, do not change any microG settings at this point. Don't enable device registration (if it's disabled), don't enable safetynet, and just generally leave microG settings alone for now. Oh yeah, and don't turn on wifi or data.
Step 4: Tricking SafetyNet
Everything up till now has just been preparation for actually tricking SafetyNet. So now that we've got all that out the way, let's get down to details:
First, downloads:
Download the latest zip: https://themagisk.com/magiskhide-props-config/
Download the latest zygisk zip: https://themagisk.com/universal-safetynet-fix/
Move these over to your phone and install them both as magisk modules.
Once these modules are installed and you've rebooted, connect your phone to your pc.
Open a terminal/command prompt in your platform tools folder, and type "adb shell props". You may need to grant the superuser permission from your phone.
Then choose option 1.
You'll then need to choose a device from the list available.
The key here is that we need to spoof our device fingerprint, so google thinks the device is certified, even if it actually isn't.
If your device is approved by google, then simply select your device model.
If not, things get a bit more unclear. Not every fingerprint will work for every device - If your device is vastly different from the one you are trying to spoof things may not always work correctly. The best advice I can give here is to choose a device that matches yours as closely as possible. As an example: if your device is made by Xiaomi but is not approved by google, I would select a fingerprint belonging to a Xiaomi device.
Keep in mind that if you try a fingerprint that does not work, you cannot simply switch it to something else and try again, as the SafetyNet history for the device has to be clean.
Once you've spoofed your device fingerprint and rebooted, you're almost ready to test out SafetyNet and google sign in. But first:
Step 5: Do you need signature spoofing?
To ensure things work as smoothly as possible, it's important to make sure you have signature spoofing working before you test SafetyNet. If you've got your own solution to that great. If not:
The first thing I have to point out is that a lot of sigspoof methods on google nowadays are outdated and semi-functional at best, working for a handful of devices. As this guide is intended to be a universal solution regardless of your device, the only answer is lsposed and fakegapps.
Download the latest zygisk zip: https://themagisk.com/lsposed/
Transfer it to your phone and install it as a magisk module.
I've attached the full lsposed manager apk to this post, as the parasitic one sucks. Install it and the fakegapps apk which I've also attached to this post.
You'll now need to enable fakegapps, and turn it on for anything that might need access to spoofing. This includes the system framework, all the microG stuff, and any app that needs to be fooled by microg. Then reboot.
Step 6: Ready to test
Everything should now be set up correctly.
Check the microG settings to make sure signatures are correctly being spoofed.
Enable device registration (if disabled).
Enable SafetyNet attestation.
At this point your phone should still be completely disconnected from the internet.
If you're happy everything is set up correctly, turn on your wifi or data, and test SafetyNet attestation.
Step 7: Done.
Hopefully you now have working SafetyNet and google sign in. If this does work for you, it means that safetynet is now stable on your device, and you are free to install whatever you want on it.
If it didn't work, keep in mind that this hasn't been tested on every device in existence. All I know is that this consistently works for me.
If your phone doesn't turn on, you probably need to charge it.
If your phone has exploded, you probably have a Samsung.
Thanks everyone for reading my guide, I hope you enjoyed! (Maybe it even worked)
RESERVED FOR STUFF
Your guide is well made but I have some things I would change.
1) Since everything has to be done offline and adb is used in linux installation at least I would recommend adding an tip with adb push ~/Downloads/safetynet-tools.zip /storage/emulated/0/Downloads.
Furthermore cause of it I recommend attaching a single zip with
tools so they can be moved easily to the device.
2) there is missing Information: you said in the guide that safety net trips extremely easily. During the entire process the device cant be connected to the internet but what if you want to install another app. For example what if you want to install another app later lets say Netflix for example. I know for a fact it requires safetynet. It would be configured automatically will it? This would conclude to permanetley lock safety net till its reinstalled.
hypethetime said:
Your guide is well made but I have some things I would change.
1) Since everything has to be done offline and adb is used in linux installation at least I would recommend adding an tip with adb push ~/Downloads/safetynet-tools.zip /storage/emulated/0/Downloads.
Furthermore cause of it I recommend attaching a single zip with
tools so they can be moved easily to the device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi, I think you may have misunderstood slightly. Only the phone has to be offline, you can still connect it to a PC and download the files on the PC. The only important thing is that the device doesn't communicate with google till you are ready for it to.
hypethetime said:
2) there is missing Information: you said in the guide that safety net trips extremely easily. During the entire process the device cant be connected to the internet but what if you want to install another app. For example what if you want to install another app later lets say Netflix for example. I know for a fact it requires safetynet. It would be configured automatically will it? This would conclude to permanetley lock safety net till its reinstalled.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Once the process is complete, you can install whatever else you want and safetynet will not stop working. The main thing is that the process of setting up the device so that it can be approved is very easy to mess up, so that part has to be done carefully.
I'll edit the guide to make these points more clear.
Sense_101 said:
Hi, I think you may have misunderstood slightly. Only the phone has to be offline, you can still connect it to a PC and download the files on the PC. The only important thing is that the device doesn't communicate with google till you are ready for it to.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I knew you always were able to use pc and you miss understood me. I at least often had the problem with transferring files for some reseason and for this adb push is extremey helpful.
Regarding instaling more apps thank you for the answer and how quickly it came.
Sense_101 said:
This is a tutorial on how to set up your phone so that you can consistently pass SafetyNet. Note that all this is from my own experience, and if what works on one device blows up another, that's not my problem and I'm not responsible for that. I will attempt to keep this tutorial as clean and simple as possible, but if you have any further questions that are more specific you are welcome to ask.
In order to be as simple as possible to understand, this guide assumes the following:
- You have a PC. Windows, Mac, the almighty Linux, it makes no difference.
- You have the android platform tools on your PC
- Your device has an unlocked bootloader.
- Your device does not have support for signature spoofing.
- Your device does not have Google's official play services on it.
- You have a working brain.
If one or more of the above is incorrect, you'll have to make more use of the last item on the list.
If the last item on the list is incorrect, you're beyond hope.
Now, the guide:
Step 1: Get some magisk on your phone
Setting up magisk is incredibly simple, and I won't be going into detail here. I would recommend installing the regular magisk app and patching your boot image, as that is what I've done.
Note that you do not need the magisk manager app for this guide at all.
I've attached the magisk app I used to this post. You'll need to install the app and make use of the "install" section of the home page.
Once magisk is installed and set up, you'll need to enable zygisk in the magisk settings. Then reboot.
Step 2: Installing MicroG
I am not going to list through all the possible way you can install microG. Instead, have a link to microG's wiki:
index - MicroG
r/MicroG: Subreddit about microG, a free-as-in-freedom re-implementation of Google’s proprietary Android user space apps and libraries. This …
www.reddit.com
Now here comes the important bit:
From everything I have seen, it appears clear that google stores information about each device that registers with it, and that this in turn will affect SafetyNet.
Therefore, the best way to prevent this leading to SafetyNet failing is to prevent connection with google completely - till the phone is ready.
Before you install microG, make sure your phone has both wifi and data turned off. Leave these off till the setup is complete. Note that only the phone needs to be disconnected, nothing else matters.
In essence, this means that google sees nothing till your device is setup correctly, and then SafetyNet has nothing to complain about.
Now that you've read every word of the above paragraph, go ahead and install microG on your phone.
Make sure you've got all the different components: Core, GSF Framework, FakeStore, and DroidGuard helper. If your installation method does not handle all of this for you, then it sucks, and you shouldn't have used it. Regardless, you can find apks for all of these at https://microg.org/
Step 3: Don't touch
As I've already made clear above, do not change any microG settings at this point. Don't enable device registration (if it's disabled), don't enable safetynet, and just generally leave microG settings alone for now. Oh yeah, and don't turn on wifi or data.
Step 4: Tricking SafetyNet
Everything up till now has just been preparation for actually tricking SafetyNet. So now that we've got all that out the way, let's get down to details:
First, downloads:
Download the latest zip: https://themagisk.com/magiskhide-props-config/
Download the latest zygisk zip: https://themagisk.com/universal-safetynet-fix/
Move these over to your phone and install them both as magisk modules.
Once these modules are installed and you've rebooted, connect your phone to your pc.
Open a terminal/command prompt in your platform tools folder, and type "adb shell props". You may need to grant the superuser permission from your phone.
Then choose option 1.
You'll then need to choose a device from the list available.
The key here is that we need to spoof our device fingerprint, so google thinks the device is certified, even if it actually isn't.
If your device is approved by google, then simply select your device model.
If not, things get a bit more unclear. Not every fingerprint will work for every device - If your device is vastly different from the one you are trying to spoof things may not always work correctly. The best advice I can give here is to choose a device that matches yours as closely as possible. As an example: if your device is made by Xiaomi but is not approved by google, I would select a fingerprint belonging to a Xiaomi device.
Keep in mind that if you try a fingerprint that does not work, you cannot simply switch it to something else and try again, as the SafetyNet history for the device has to be clean.
Once you've spoofed your device fingerprint and rebooted, you're almost ready to test out SafetyNet and google sign in. But first:
Step 5: Do you need signature spoofing?
To ensure things work as smoothly as possible, it's important to make sure you have signature spoofing working before you test SafetyNet. If you've got your own solution to that great. If not:
The first thing I have to point out is that a lot of sigspoof methods on google nowadays are outdated and semi-functional at best, working for a handful of devices. As this guide is intended to be a universal solution regardless of your device, the only answer is lsposed and fakegapps.
Download the latest zygisk zip: https://themagisk.com/lsposed/
Transfer it to your phone and install it as a magisk module.
I've attached the full lsposed manager apk to this post, as the parasitic one sucks. Install it and the fakegapps apk which I've also attached to this post.
You'll now need to enable fakegapps, and turn it on for anything that might need access to spoofing. This includes the system framework, all the microG stuff, and any app that needs to be fooled by microg. Then reboot.
Step 6: Ready to test
Everything should now be set up correctly.
Check the microG settings to make sure signatures are correctly being spoofed.
Enable device registration (if disabled).
Enable SafetyNet attestation.
At this point your phone should still be completely disconnected from the internet.
If you're happy everything is set up correctly, turn on your wifi or data, and test SafetyNet attestation.
Step 7: Done.
Hopefully you now have working SafetyNet and google sign in. If this does work for you, it means that safetynet is now stable on your device, and you are free to install whatever you want on it.
If it didn't work, keep in mind that this hasn't been tested on every device in existence. All I know is that this consistently works for me.
If your phone doesn't turn on, you probably need to charge it.
If your phone has exploded, you probably have a Samsung.
Thanks everyone for reading my guide, I hope you enjoyed! (Maybe it even worked)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have a Samsung galaxy note 10 plus running LineageOS 19.1. I'ts unlocked, and rooted with Magisk. Is there something about Samsung phones that are more likely to "explode" trying to install MicroG?
WheelingPigeon said:
I have a Samsung galaxy note 10 plus running LineageOS 19.1. I'ts unlocked, and rooted with Magisk. Is there something about Samsung phones that are more likely to "explode" trying to install MicroG?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah, that's a joke
WheelingPigeon said:
I have a Samsung galaxy note 10 plus running LineageOS 19.1. I'ts unlocked, and rooted with Magisk. Is there something about Samsung phones that are more likely to "explode" trying to install MicroG?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Samsung phones have a history of "blowing" up. First they were actually dangerous in very few cases but now they can expand and pop of the back of your phone. As long as you switch the battery then your safe to use it.
AOSP Rom (signature spoofing unsupported, without MicroG installer)
After Root install patch for spoofing via NanoDroid Patcher
Open Magisk settings -> Enable Zygisk + Enforce DenyList, install module MagiskHide Props Config -> reboot
Open Termux or ADB, type su to set root permission then type props (option 1)
Install MicroG via APK or offical F-Droid app, grant Signature spoofing permission
If you want using play store, install patched version (F-Droid add repo NanoDroid)
Open MicroG Settings -> Self-Check -> make sure all box checked
Turn on Google device registration, Google SafetyNet, if CTS fail then install Universal SafetyNet Fix
Install magisk module App Systemizer, Busybox for Android NDK to change MicroG to system app

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