[Q] Softbricked, Please help - Nexus 7 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Well I used TWRP to install a boot.img for my Nexus 7. Turns out I downloaded the wrong file, and now I can't get my device past the Google Screen after I rebooted it.
So far I've downloaded another boot.img and tried using that to solve my problem, that didn't work; it would end up stuck on bootloader screen frozen or saying "booting modified img"
I've used almost every recommended solution on Nexus Toolkit and all of them did nothing to help, Including downloading stock images, Restoring stock kernel, etc.
I don't know if perhaps I could have the build number wrong for the toolkit, but I'm not able to see what build it currently is since I can't get pass the google logo. I've done almost everything and now I am completely clueless as to what I can do to fix this. Any help would be deeply appreciated.

Had a similar prob the other days and i solve it fro here
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2206303
Post number 8 helped me because wugs toolkit has an option to return stock on a bricked device...

Stop relying on toolkits and learn to use fastboot and adb. It helps tremendously when you are having problems. It also prevents you from just getting clicky and selecting every option in hope that something fixes it. Follow the directions in the sticky on flashing a factory ROM/return to stock. It has all the information you need to fix your problem.
Sent from my Nexus 7(2012) that has zero issues.

Related

[Q] Uh Oh...

Bought a new Nexus 7 because my wife and I have them and love them. We had bought our daughter a cheap 'funtab' from walmart just so she could play a few games she loves and hopefully leave ours alone, the funtab was a complete POS so it was returned to WM and just bought her a N7 instead.
When booted, the tablet it immediately notified me of the update from 4.1.2 to 4.2.1. Each time it tried to update it would fail partially through, not sure why. So I thought I'd download and use the toolkit to force the update. After unlocking, rooting, installing busybox and so on. I choose the option to flash stock image. The update process started OK there but part way through gave an error, something about needing to be 'X' but is instead 'x' before going back to the home screen. Now the tablet is stuck in fastboot mode, and cant boot to either recovery or android. I think I may be in trouble here.... Any suggestions?
#1 reason why people shouldn't use tool kits to root. You have no idea what went wrong or where the problem occurred.
I'm assuming that your tablet is unlocked so you need to download a custom recovery and install it via fastboot.
Then download the Stock 4.2.1 ROM from the Android development section and flash it in the recovery.
This should give you an idea of how to do it.
http://www.androidcentral.com/how-unlock-bootloader-and-root-your-nexus-7
Sent from my Nexus 7
I've done more research and I'm currently working on getting the android sdk going. I've downloaded it, jdk, the proper factory image (i think I f'd up by accidentally downloading the factory image for the hspa model). My question now is can the factory image be flashed from what appears to be fastboot mode, or do i need to flash custom recovery first (via the sdk)? I can confirm that the bootloaded is unlocked.
Ok so I was able to flash the stock image using the instructions found at http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1907796
This process went extremely well once I had all my ducks in a row. Thanks for the help.

can someone please help?

I'm trying to update my wife's N7 to 4.3. She used a toolkit to root and has TWRP recovery. Everything else is stock. So first I downloaded the 4.3 update and attempted to flash, but immediately after choosing "install" I received a message the the flash failed. I thought maybe I got a bad download, so I rebooted the device and forced an OTA. The device downloaded the OTA, but then rebooted to TWRP and didn't install. Then I thought maybe I need to have stock recovery... So I unrooted, and installed stock recovery. I then forced the OTA again, downloaded, and began to install in stock recovery, and approximately halfway through it stopped and gave an error message. Then the device rebooted on it's own. I'm not sure what to do at this point. I was able to update to 4.3 on my N4 without any issues. Does anyone have a solution for me? Please let me know if there is some detail I left out. Thanks!
You can use fastboot to erase your current partitions then manually flash the 4.3 stock images.
I've never used fastboot before. Plus another problem now... I tried to flash the stock image via toolkit, now the device is stuck on the bootloader.
chrisbo4 said:
I've never used fastboot before. Plus another problem now... I tried to flash the stock image via toolkit, now the device is stuck on the bootloader.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On the bootloader or the boot animation? Big difference.
There was a recent change in fastboot that makes flashing the 4.3 images a little dicey if you're not using the latest fastboot executable, which I imagine could cause problems with various toolkits that bundle the executable.
Rirere said:
On the bootloader or the boot animation? Big difference.
There was a recent change in fastboot that makes flashing the 4.3 images a little dicey if you're not using the latest fastboot executable, which I imagine could cause problems with various toolkits that bundle the executable.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On the bootloader. I can't get past the google splash screen, but it overlays the bootloader screen. I just want to get back to stock, then upgrade to 4.3. I've tried to install adb on my computer, but couldn't get the computer to recognize the device.
chrisbo4 said:
On the bootloader. I can't get past the google splash screen, but it overlays the bootloader screen. I just want to get back to stock, then upgrade to 4.3. I've tried to install adb on my computer, but couldn't get the computer to recognize the device.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Install this through device manager.
http://d-h.st/kDu
Username invalid said:
Install this through device manager.
http://d-h.st/kDu
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Okay, it's installed. I'm not sure what I should unzip though?
chrisbo4 said:
Okay, it's installed. I'm not sure what I should unzip though?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can either flash stock images with fastboot or install TWRP then flash stock zip file.
chrisbo4 said:
I'm trying to update my wife's N7 to 4.3. She used a toolkit to root and has TWRP recovery. Everything else is stock. So first I downloaded the 4.3 update and attempted to flash, but immediately after choosing "install" I received a message the the flash failed. I thought maybe I got a bad download, so I rebooted the device and forced an OTA. The device downloaded the OTA, but then rebooted to TWRP and didn't install. Then I thought maybe I need to have stock recovery... So I unrooted, and installed stock recovery. I then forced the OTA again, downloaded, and began to install in stock recovery, and approximately halfway through it stopped and gave an error message. Then the device rebooted on it's own. I'm not sure what to do at this point. I was able to update to 4.3 on my N4 without any issues. Does anyone have a solution for me? Please let me know if there is some detail I left out. Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
First of all I do not intend to offend you. I am not lecturing. I just want to give you my opinion in order to try to help you.
In general to install an update the safest way is to have or re-install stock recovery prior to the installation of the update. There is no need to unroot for the stock recovery installation.
In your household you have Nexus products. It means that you will probably continue to acquire Nexus equipment. In this case, in the long run, you will be better off installing, learning, and using adb and fastboot methods. Toolkits are mostly a quick fix which works ...............or not. I am thinking that toolkits are useless in the sense that they do not bring knowledge and experience (in my area trash collection are Monday and Thursday:laugh.
The XDA forum is full of resources. It does not leave a stone unturned. Its a matter of reading, asking, and learning.
In your case, facing your problem, I would install adb through a program called "android-sdk- windows". Then I will take advantage of the experience and the knowledge of our forum members to install the JB 4.3 factory image.
here are two references among several:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1907796
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1781250
But it is a long way for a beginner - which I was 2-3 years ago - to go this route. But what a reward!
gunner1937 said:
First of all I do not intend to offend you. I am not lecturing. I just want to give you my opinion in order to try to help you.
In general to install an update the safest way is to have or re-install stock recovery prior to the installation of the update. There is no need to unroot for the stock recovery installation.
In your household you have Nexus products. It means that you will probably continue to acquire Nexus equipment. In this case, in the long run, you will be better off installing, learning, and using adb and fastboot methods. Toolkits are mostly a quick fix which works ...............or not. I am thinking that toolkits are useless in the sense that they do not bring knowledge and experience (in my area trash collection are Monday and Thursday:laugh.
The XDA forum is full of resources. It does not leave a stone unturned. Its a matter of reading, asking, and learning.
In your case, facing your problem, I would install adb through a program called "android-sdk- windows". Then I will take advantage of the experience and the knowledge of our forum members to install the JB 4.3 factory image.
here are two references among several:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1907796
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1781250
But it is a long way for a beginner - which I was 2-3 years ago - to go this route. But what a reward!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you for the information, and I'm not offended at all. I spent most of last night reading, and attempting to get adb running on my computer. I experienced issues getting drivers installed, and the computer recognizing the device. Also, trying to find the directories... I'll keep searching to see if I can get this figured out. Thank you again!
Thanks to everyone for helping me through this problem. After a lot of searching, research, reading, and video tutorials, I flashed stock images to the N7 via fastboot. I always thought that adb and fastboot was way too advanced for me (and it probably still is), but at least I got the basics down. Thank you all again.

[Q] Nexus 4 Bootloop Troubles!!

There is nothing that I can find that pertains to problems with installing Kitkat factory image 4.4 on my nexus 4 so I will state my problem with the hope of some insight.
I have a Nexus 4 that I have decided to sell and as a precautionary measure had decided to flash a fresh copy of Android version 4.3 last week to ensure all files were deleted. I used Nexus root toolkit and all went smoothly.
As the phone has not yet sold, I decided that I would update the currently OS to the latest version 4.4 kitkat to make it more appealing to buyers so I went back to Nexus Root Toolkit and went through the standard procedure of selecting my device and OS, etc. The phone is unlocked. I had no backup and went ahead and told the software to write over version 4.3 with 4.4. I thought all was going well, but the install was too short and didn't work with a message telling my to try "Force Flash" mode. So I tried again using force flash mode and this time the install took longer and the phone rebooted multiple times, only this time the phone wouldn't fully boot. It only boot loops now.
-I can put the phone into fastboot mode.
-The computer can communicate with the phone via USB cable.
-All info such as product name, variant, HW version, etc. is showing in fastboot mode.
I am unable to use Nexus Root Toolkit to fix my phone with or without using Force Flash mode.
I can't mount the phone and the computer can not detect the ADB at all.
Can anyone please tell me what I can do to fix my phone? Are there any other alternatives to flashing a fully functioning version of 4.4 Kitkat?
I have been at this for hours and I can seem to get anywhere with it. Is the phone destroyed?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.
saber13 said:
There is nothing that I can find that pertains to problems with installing Kitkat factory image 4.4 on my nexus 4 so I will state my problem with the hope of some insight.
I have a Nexus 4 that I have decided to sell and as a precautionary measure had decided to flash a fresh copy of Android version 4.3 last week to ensure all files were deleted. I used Nexus root toolkit and all went smoothly.
As the phone has not yet sold, I decided that I would update the currently OS to the latest version 4.4 kitkat to make it more appealing to buyers so I went back to Nexus Root Toolkit and went through the standard procedure of selecting my device and OS, etc. The phone is unlocked. I had no backup and went ahead and told the software to write over version 4.3 with 4.4. I thought all was going well, but the install was too short and didn't work with a message telling my to try "Force Flash" mode. So I tried again using force flash mode and this time the install took longer and the phone rebooted multiple times, only this time the phone wouldn't fully boot. It only boot loops now.
-I can put the phone into fastboot mode.
-The computer can communicate with the phone via USB cable.
-All info such as product name, variant, HW version, etc. is showing in fastboot mode.
I am unable to use Nexus Root Toolkit to fix my phone with or without using Force Flash mode.
I can't mount the phone and the computer can not detect the ADB at all.
Can anyone please tell me what I can do to fix my phone? Are there any other alternatives to flashing a fully functioning version of 4.4 Kitkat?
I have been at this for hours and I can seem to get anywhere with it. Is the phone destroyed?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It would have saved you a lot of problems of you had of done it manually, without a toolkit
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=2010312
Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk
Same problem !
saber13 said:
There is nothing that I can find that pertains to problems with installing Kitkat factory image 4.4 on my nexus 4 so I will state my problem with the hope of some insight.
I have a Nexus 4 that I have decided to sell and as a precautionary measure had decided to flash a fresh copy of Android version 4.3 last week to ensure all files were deleted. I used Nexus root toolkit and all went smoothly.
As the phone has not yet sold, I decided that I would update the currently OS to the latest version 4.4 kitkat to make it more appealing to buyers so I went back to Nexus Root Toolkit and went through the standard procedure of selecting my device and OS, etc. The phone is unlocked. I had no backup and went ahead and told the software to write over version 4.3 with 4.4. I thought all was going well, but the install was too short and didn't work with a message telling my to try "Force Flash" mode. So I tried again using force flash mode and this time the install took longer and the phone rebooted multiple times, only this time the phone wouldn't fully boot. It only boot loops now.
-I can put the phone into fastboot mode.
-The computer can communicate with the phone via USB cable.
-All info such as product name, variant, HW version, etc. is showing in fastboot mode.
I am unable to use Nexus Root Toolkit to fix my phone with or without using Force Flash mode.
I can't mount the phone and the computer can not detect the ADB at all.
Can anyone please tell me what I can do to fix my phone? Are there any other alternatives to flashing a fully functioning version of 4.4 Kitkat?
I have been at this for hours and I can seem to get anywhere with it. Is the phone destroyed?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have the same problem ! I have tried everything as you mentioned above. Additionally using the ADB I installed everything using the flash-all.bat and everything went well, however my phone is still in bootloop. Have you find a solution ? Please share if you have ... Thank you so much for posting the issue !
---------- Post added at 01:19 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:02 PM ----------
priyab said:
I have the same problem ! I have tried everything as you mentioned above. Additionally using the ADB I installed everything using the flash-all.bat and everything went well, however my phone is still in bootloop. Have you find a solution ? Please share if you have ... Thank you so much for posting the issue !
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey the flash-all.bat worked !!!! .. I just waited for like 15 mins after the flash-all.bat was done and viola! its back
This is great find
Those who face this issue can go to safe mode and backup their data while on boot screen just keep pressing up and down volume button for some time phone will get into safe mode and can be backed up.

[Q] Phone has no recovery and other issues.

First want to say hi and that this site is full of knowledge so any help with my subject will be great.
Got a att s4 sgh-i337 phone. I rooted it before the lollipop ota update was out and everything went fine. Then the lollipop update came out and I followed one of the methods on keeping root and updating to 5.0.1 lollipop on the phone. Everything went fine with that. Still showed root status and never did the phone brick or have any issues in the updating.
At some point though, I did run triangle away because I would have the custom logo and opened padlock when the phone would boot up. I knew it wasn't a huge deal but the counter showed correct and never could just figure out how to get it to go away. Either way, I did run it and I think rebooting twice, the factory loading image came back to it. Now it shows my current status as 0 for the counter and the binary is Official.
I have not tried to load any roms or nothing like this to the phone, just followed the instructions to give it root access so I could run a few different apps and adaway for when I listen to Spotify.
One day, I was trying to install a new version of Words with Friends and it failed because I think wwf was open, but I did go back and install it. For some reason now, my phone never notifies my with a wwf notification when somebody plays me. Every now and then, it might pop up when I restart the phone but that is it. I don't think facebook notifies me everytime also but was more worried about words with friends.
Searching google, it says to go into recovery mode and flash the cache of the phone there. I have done the cache memory in the phone but that has not fixed my problem. When trying to go to recovery, it never works, it would always show, recovery booting and then load the phone up as normal.
I have download quick boot and rom manager since they all have an option to boot into recovery rather than pressing the buttons but it always does the same thing. Reading the web though, it seemed like I needed to install a different recovery than the factory I guess, so using rom manager, I tried twrp and that didn't work so I installed ClockworldMod 6.0.4.7. Rom manager shows that as the current recovery method.
When I try to boot into recovery, it still shows that recovery is booting and then goes straight to loading the phone as it should normally.
Now though, every time I restart my phone, it says recovery is trying to boot but never does.
How do I fix my phone to be able to boot into recovery and it not try to boot every time it powers on. I have tried searching google but I just just can find an answer to my direct problem. I know how to hold the buttons and go to recovery but does not work, and I also know how to get to it from the different app programs(rom manager and quick boot) but they do not work either. It would be nice to get the wwf notifications to work properly again also.
If you need any information from my phone, please ask. Thanks for any help on my matter,
Charlie
Odin stock and start over.
Apparently, you are not aware that the boot loader is locked, preventing the installation of a custom kernel. You can not use twrp, or rom manager. Rom manager itself may cause issues.
I agree you should flash back to stock and start over to get a clean install. Hopefully, this will solve the issues with notifications as well. You can use the "[GUIDE]Odin to Stock, Updating, Rooting, and Installing Safestrap" by guut13 in the general forum for files and instructions.
creepyncrawly said:
Apparently, you are not aware that the boot loader is locked, preventing the installation of a custom kernel. You can not use twrp, or rom manager. Rom manager itself may cause issues.
I agree you should flash back to stock and start over to get a clean install. Hopefully, this will solve the issues with notifications as well. You can use the "[GUIDE]Odin to Stock, Updating, Rooting, and Installing Safestrap" by guut13 in the general forum for files and instructions.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for the replies guys, I really don't know a whole lot about rooting other than following instructions about it. I was unaware you could not use the twrp or cwr as a recovery. My recovery did not work before so that is why I was trying to install those. I knew you could not install custom roms but I did not know that you could not use rom manager to install custom recoveries.
I appreciate the help so far and I will look into that thread you mentioned. I haven't read it but will this take me back to stock lollipop 5.0.1 and I just reinstall apps or will I have to re-root the phone.
Charlie
please delete, sorry
Charlie
You have to go back to 4.4.4, to the nb1 base, root with towelroot, and then use the keeproot method to get back to 5.0.1 rooted. The instructions are in the guide, and also a link to the keeproot thread is there.
By the way, for future reference, questions, help and troubleshooting issues should go in the Q&A forum, not the general forum.
not having any luck
Ok guys,
I am trying to follow the guide but not having much luck.
I downloaded the I337UCUFNB1_4.4_Stock_Odin_tar and put it in the AP Odin file. I'm not sure if I should be using it or the other file named I337UCUFNB1_4.4_Rootable_Stock_Odin_tar to begin with. The instructions said to use the first one so that is the one I was trying to use.
After putting the first file in the AP slot of Odin and hitting start, it begins to try to do it's thing and then says it fails!
What do I do now? Am I doing something wrong or what because I'm trying to follow instructions but not having much luck.
Please help. Sorry for posting in the wrong area also in the beginning.
Charlie
I'm screwed
Now when I turn my phone on, it says Firmware upgrade encountered an issue. Please select recovery mode in Kies and try again?
doing better now
Pretty sure I got it going finally. I changed cords and then changed ports on my computer and it finally did go back to stock without an error. I'm currently back on Lollipop and rooted so now is the fun of reinstalling contact info and anything else. So far I have not rebooted but it was not showing the recovery booting option when it did reboot. Hoping my notifications work properly now also!
Thanks!!!
Charlie

Nexus 6P will not boot when boot loader is locked!

After using the megapixel rom. I tried flash back to stock with root tool kit.
During the process it told me I had to manual boot in recovery to a factory restore. That would not work so I ended up soft bricking my phone. I was able to side load twrp and the latest build and flash it (thank god). No when I do oem lock boot loader, my nexus 6p won't boot. As soon as I oem unlock, it will boot. Any ideas what could be cause that?
If you did not restore the recovery it probably throws a flag and says the configuration is invalid. You need to restore completely (recovery, boot, system, vendor, etc) through fastboot so that it is truly stock.
Cheers,
B.D.
This is a perfect time to remind folks that "locking" the bootloader is something that should be done with great care. There are dozens, if not hundreds of "my phone is bricked" threads centered around locking their bootloader without understanding the requirements and risks. If you don't have a reason to do it, leave it unlocked. If I need to do it, I flash 100% back to stock using a full factory image before locking.
Sent from my Nexus 6 using XDA-Developers Legacy app
BostonDan said:
If you did not restore the recovery it probably throws a flag and says the configuration is invalid. You need to restore completely (recovery, boot, system, vendor, etc) through fastboot so that it is truly stock.
Cheers,
B.D.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So you wouldn't recommend using the Nexus toolkit to flash factory? Can you give me the string in order that I would use to flash factory via fastboot? Fast boot is also hit or miss with the commands for me.
Blackfish77 said:
So you wouldn't recommend using the Nexus toolkit to flash factory? Can you give me the string in order that I would use to flash factory via fastboot? Fast boot is also hit or miss with the commands for me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No offense intended, but this always irks me quite a bit.
Absolutely DO NOT use toolkits for anything at all, ever. They're not easier, they're not faster. It's just doing fastboot / adb with a UI that has buttons you can click instead of typing in fastboot.
This. This is the exact reason you shouldn't use toolkits. Especially if you don't know the manual way. It borks something up and now you need to wait possibly hours to get a working phone again when the solution would only take about 15 seconds to fix.
You need to fully familiarize yourself with this guide here;
https://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-6p/general/guides-how-to-guides-beginners-t3206928
ADB/Fastboot is absolutely not "hit or miss." If you have trouble with it then you need to make sure that your drivers are properly installed and you're entering commands correctly. Also make sure to ALWAYS keep your ADB & fastboot drivers up to date via the Android SDK. All of this is covered in the link above.
As far as your bootloader issue. You cannot return to a locked bootloader with anything other than 100% complete unadulterated stock factory images. No TWRP, no root, no Xposed, no Magisk, no build.prop edits etc., ...Nothing.
Use fastboot to flash your factory images you downloaded. You can use the flash all bat file or individually flash each separate. Again it's all covered in the link I posted above.
Also, what do you mean you couldn't wipe/reset from stock recovery? When you flash stock recovery and boot to it, you will see an Android on its back with an exclamation mark in a red triangle. You may or may not see text that reads "No Command". Either way, from that point hold down the power button and then press and release volume up. You will boot to stock recovery where you can wipe your data.
Not for nothing, but as mentioned above, people have hard bricked their 6P from locking bootloader's on combos besides stock. You got extremely lucky you didn't as well. Please take some time to read and fully understand what you're doing with your ~600$ device.
This is also, for the most part, pretty standard stuff as far as flashing / modding goes. At least since 2010 when I got into it. If you want to know the exact string of fastboot commands please read and use the guide I linked. It teaches you literally everything. There's nothing it doesn't cover and once you get used to it you will never use a toolkit again.
Hope I didn't come off rude, but basically since 2010 when I got into this across all my devices I try to help out in the Q+A sections. I've probably participated in hundreds and hundreds of "help, I used a toolkit and my phone is bricked and I have no idea how to fix it, I just wanted cool stuff on my phone" threads. They're absolutely 100% not worth the trouble and headaches from them. Especially if you have no idea what they're doing on the back end. Know Fastboot and ADB like the back of your hand and just prefer to use them? That's a different story, if something fails then you fix it yourself in 10 seconds. But for the love of God, please please please please please stop using toolkits if you don't know how to fix issues on your own. You will eventually hard brick. I've seen it happen dozens of times. Thread turns into a circlej*rk about whether toolkits are bad or not, OP hard bricks their phone and commits fraud, which is illegal by trying to RMA it. Just don't use them. It's simple enough without them. Why reinvent the wheel when it works just fine?
You should only lock bootloader when you are on stock factory image from nexus developers site. Either use flash_all script or flash everything manually. As others said keep away from toolkits.. You never know what can go wrong or what they re doing in background.
As I understand you restored TWRP and Megapixel rom and tried to lock the bootloader when you had that combination installed on your phone? That can not be done. You are either full stock (rom, kernel, recovery...) and locked bootloader or unlocked bootloader and any combo of kernel, rom, recovery that you want.
RoyJ said:
No offense intended, but this always irks me quite a bit.
Absolutely DO NOT use toolkits for anything at all, ever. They're not easier, they're not faster. It's just doing fastboot / adb with a UI that has buttons you can click instead of typing in fastboot.
This. This is the exact reason you shouldn't use toolkits. Especially if you don't know the manual way. It borks something up and now you need to wait possibly hours to get a working phone again when the solution would only take about 15 seconds to fix.
You need to fully familiarize yourself with this guide here;
https://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-6p/general/guides-how-to-guides-beginners-t3206928
ADB/Fastboot is absolutely not "hit or miss." If you have trouble with it then you need to make sure that your drivers are properly installed and you're entering commands correctly. Also make sure to ALWAYS keep your ADB & fastboot drivers up to date via the Android SDK. All of this is covered in the link above.
As far as your bootloader issue. You cannot return to a locked bootloader with anything other than 100% complete unadulterated stock factory images. No TWRP, no root, no Xposed, no Magisk, no build.prop edits etc., ...Nothing.
Use fastboot to flash your factory images you downloaded. You can use the flash all bat file or individually flash each separate. Again it's all covered in the link I posted above.
Also, what do you mean you couldn't wipe/reset from stock recovery? When you flash stock recovery and boot to it, you will see an Android on its back with an exclamation mark in a red triangle. You may or may not see text that reads "No Command". Either way, from that point hold down the power button and then press and release volume up. You will boot to stock recovery where you can wipe your data.
Not for nothing, but as mentioned above, people have hard bricked their 6P from locking bootloader's on combos besides stock. You got extremely lucky you didn't as well. Please take some time to read and fully understand what you're doing with your ~600$ device.
This is also, for the most part, pretty standard stuff as far as flashing / modding goes. At least since 2010 when I got into it. If you want to know the exact string of fastboot commands please read and use the guide I linked. It teaches you literally everything. There's nothing it doesn't cover and once you get used to it you will never use a toolkit again.
Hope I didn't come off rude, but basically since 2010 when I got into this across all my devices I try to help out in the Q+A sections. I've probably participated in hundreds and hundreds of "help, I used a toolkit and my phone is bricked and I have no idea how to fix it, I just wanted cool stuff on my phone" threads. They're absolutely 100% not worth the trouble and headaches from them. Especially if you have no idea what they're doing on the back end. Know Fastboot and ADB like the back of your hand and just prefer to use them? That's a different story, if something fails then you fix it yourself in 10 seconds. But for the love of God, please please please please please stop using toolkits if you don't know how to fix issues on your own. You will eventually hard brick. I've seen it happen dozens of times. Thread turns into a circlej*rk about whether toolkits are bad or not, OP hard bricks their phone and commits fraud, which is illegal by trying to RMA it. Just don't use them. It's simple enough without them. Why reinvent the wheel when it works just fine?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I ended up using fastboot to flash factory. I then re locked bootloader and everything booted without and issue. I was happy about that. I re rooted and everything is working great. :good:
I can say I learned a lot from this experience. Thanks to everyone for your advice. I am now comfortable using the fastboot method. Almost bricking my phone was scary but it taught me a lesson. Cheers everyone.

Categories

Resources