Here are all the files that you would be needing to root your LG G8/G8s/G8x devices: Firehose file: This is the firmware file that is will give us the boot_a and boot_b BIN files. Download: prog_ufs_firehose_sm8150_lge.elf. [Credits: XDA Member Seasee606] QPST Tool: This tool will be used to extract the boot_a and boot_b BIN files from the
another risky way is to flash rooted GSI. but in case it boot loops, you are screwed without stock ROM. the user @gregeerg ended up with a semi bricked phone, luckily he was able to pull boot.img from adb, so another member @Jet! with same device could finally root his phone and provide super.img for unbrick. So this method is only working if
ntfsclone -o windows.img /dev/sda1. This will create a sparse file, which only occupies as much space as it contains data, even though on the outside it looks much larger. You can archive it but make sure to use tar --sparse. Special tools aren't needed to restore this image, just cp or dd it back to the partition.
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Thread [Q] How do I get the recovery.img and boot.img without root Quoted from Chainfire: To be able to make CF-Auto-Root for a device: - The device needs to have (and use) separate kernel and recovery partitions - The kernel and recovery format must be the boot.img standard (no zImage support) - I need the recovery.img file, so post it in this
Here’s how to get the boot.img file for Magisk on a Samsung device: Download the official firmware for your phone. Type your phone model number into a search box and download the firmware from > HERE. Download and install the 7zip tool on your PC for extracting the firmware.
How to Flash a Factory Image. The procedure to flash a factory image can differ from one device to another. In the case of a Pixel, the steps are simple: Download and set up the ADB and Fastboot tools. Download the factory image from the Android website. Unzip the download on your desktop. Connect your phone via USB and boot into Fastboot mode.
STEP 2: Restore Stock Boot Image. In this process, Magisk will replace the patched boot.img with the stock boot.img that it had taken a backup of just before you had rooted your device initially. In simple words, your device will be unrooted, for now. Likewise, if any modules were active, it will disable them as well.
Again, this process only requires one command: dd if = /dev/ sdX of =path/to/your-backup.img. To save space, you can have dd compress your backup. dd if = /dev/ sdX | gzip -c > path/to/your-backup.img.gz. This command shrinks your backup into an IMG.GZ file, one of the many compression formats Linux can handle.
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backup boot img without root