Where is the su of rooted S7 edge binary stored? - Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge Questions and Answers

Hi!
I want to hide su binary from my phone temporarily to trick apps into thinking that my phone is not rooted. I thought I could just rename su binary from TWRP but I could not find that. It's not inside /system/xbin/ or /system/bin/.

It's more complicated than that.
You may simply need to check your Play Integrity responses. See this thread.
For more details on how the Magisk patch works, see this post. Don't start arbitrarily messing with things, though.
Start with the basics, though. Which apps are failing? Make sure you are using the Play Integrity fix. Add those apps to DenyList just to be safe. If they are Samsung specific apps, be aware that Knox Guard is tripped by flashing modified/custom firmware, and cannot be reversed, even if the device is returned to stock.

Thanks!
V0latyle said:
It's more complicated than that.
You may simply need to check your Play Integrity responses. See this thread.
For more details on how the Magisk patch works, see this post. Don't start arbitrarily messing with things, though.
Start with the basics, though. Which apps are failing? Make sure you are using the Play Integrity fix. Add those apps to DenyList just to be safe. If they are Samsung specific apps, be aware that Knox Guard is tripped by flashing modified/custom firmware, and cannot be reversed, even if the device is returned to stock.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I rooted my phone with TWRP 3.1.0.0 and SuperSU 2.7 instead of Magisk. How much of it still applies and how much does not? I actually rooted it like 5 years ago already, now I just have app that does not like rooted phone.

sysctl said:
Thanks!
I rooted my phone with TWRP 3.1.0.0 and SuperSU 2.7 instead of Magisk. How much of it still applies and how much does not? I actually rooted it like 5 years ago already, now I just have app that does not like rooted phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'd recommend switching to Magisk. Chainfire hasn't been in the scene for years.

V0latyle said:
I'd recommend switching to Magisk. Chainfire hasn't been in the scene for years.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Tnx. Will attempt this. How should I do that? Should I click "full unroot" from SuperSU? Will I also loose my data and apps or will it just unroot? Or should I do it from TWRP instead?

sysctl said:
Tnx. Will attempt this. How should I do that? Should I click "full unroot" from SuperSU? Will I also loose my data and apps or will it just unroot? Or should I do it from TWRP instead?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unrooting won't wipe data. It doesn't matter how you do it.

V0latyle said:
Unrooting won't wipe data. It doesn't matter how you do it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Tnx.
Also SuperSU asked if I want to disable Knox when it first started. Do you happen to know how to revert that? Would like to revert my phone to pre-SuperSU state in that regard as well. Just in case. Also will I be more vulnerable to viruses/malware when it stays disabled? Or should this knox question be separate topic already? Didn't want to spam this forum too much but it's also not connected to original question that much.

sysctl said:
Tnx.
Also SuperSU asked if I want to disable Knox when it first started. Do you happen to know how to revert that? Would like to revert my phone to pre-SuperSU state in that regard as well. Just in case. Also will I be more vulnerable to viruses/malware when it stays disabled? Or should this knox question be separate topic already? Didn't want to spam this forum too much but it's also not connected to original question that much.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I honestly don't know that much about Knox but having it disabled doesn't make your device any more vulnerable than being rooted. Be mindful of what you install, and don't grant root access to apps you don't trust.

Related

[Q] Unroot Device

Hi guys!
Haven't been here for so long. I don't even know how to begin...
Well, here goes. As the title of this thread states, I need to unroot my device. It is a g900f snapdragon/international version. It's running 5.0 atm, vodafone cnx region.
I am writing this because I can't find any answer on the forum. I've seen many similar threads, but with no answers.
Can I unroot it without losing all my data? I don't want to just rewrite the entire firmware... Just a quick patch like the one used for rooting. Or something.
Please help me, or at least help me find an answer.
Settings of SuperSU have a full unroot option
*Detection* said:
Settings of SuperSU have a full unroot option
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you. I hope it will work with no issue and completely unroot my device. Don't care for the warranty, didn't have any to begin with.
EDIT:
Sorry but it's not working at all. That option is crap. The only thing it did was uninstall SuperSU.
Any other ideas please?
Anyone else got a good idea? Or any idea at all?
Lucian Andries said:
Thank you. I hope it will work with no issue and completely unroot my device. Don't care for the warranty, didn't have any to begin with.
EDIT:
Sorry but it's not working at all. That option is crap. The only thing it did was uninstall SuperSU.
Any other ideas please?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
SuperSU is root, uninstalling it removes root, just try to use a root app now, it will fail
Factory reset your phone
*Detection* said:
SuperSU is root, uninstalling it removes root, just try to use a root app now, it will fail
Factory reset your phone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You couldn't be more wrong than this... Root and SuperSU are TWO different things! Only that SuperSU allows you to do some other stuff that I don't know and don't care.
I had to rewrite the entire Firmware to unroot. What a drag...
Oh well, thanks anyway.
Lucian Andries said:
You couldn't be more wrong than this... Root and SuperSU are TWO different things! Only that SuperSU allows you to do some other stuff that I don't know and don't care.
I had to rewrite the entire Firmware to unroot. What a drag...
Oh well, thanks anyway.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have a lot to learn
Root = access to, and R/W permissions on system files
SuperSU grants you R/W access to the root system files
So SuperSU = Root
There are other root apps, but SuperSU is the main one
Unrooting via SuperSU settings = Full unroot
If you altered system files while you were rooted, then the device knows it has been modified regardless if SuperSU is installed - in that case, of course you need to re-write the firmware to get back to stock....

Rooting / Custom Recovery - Knox - Warranty void

Hey I believe many people have questions around the KNOX and warranty void if you root/install custom recovery.
So I woud like to know:
Is there any software besided KingOroot (doesn't work in A5 510M) or Kingroot (I'm not installing that thing because plenty of people says it steal your data or are impossible to remove) which can root without messing with partitions / custom recovery, meaning it won't trigger the knox counter?
Has anyone confirmed that by only having the KNOX counter triggered samsung has denied to give warranty? Even if the phone is unroot?
Is there any method that roots the device without KNOX tripping?
Thanks
if you are on a 5.1.x device, you might wanna give systemless root a try, i think they ported it to 5.1.x as it was a Marshmallow solution initially.
aside of that, nope.
also, a few regions, like Europe, do not accept root, and especially knox triggering as a warranty void.
and my personal two cents, trigger it, no worth at all, if your device ends up unbootable, there is no way they are going to bother reading through your chip of what you have done, most of the time you'll win the procedures if you need warranty
PlutoDelic said:
if you are on a 5.1.x device, you might wanna give systemless root a try, i think they ported it to 5.1.x as it was a Marshmallow solution initially.
aside of that, nope.
also, a few regions, like Europe, do not accept root, and especially knox triggering as a warranty void.
and my personal two cents, trigger it, no worth at all, if your device ends up unbootable, there is no way they are going to bother reading through your chip of what you have done, most of the time you'll win the procedures if you need warranty
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks pal! I believe samsung has made it very easy for support to check whether the knox is triggered or not, otherwise how would it help anything with them fixing less phones?
In germany (its in europe,lol) knox counter on 1 is not a problem when in warranty,just look my thread in q/a section.
The only way they would know that is through going in Download Mode... So, this is just a crazy thought, but I always planned that if something went so wrong that I couldn't fix it myself (I mean if I can go to Download I can probably still fix whatever is wrong unless the device is bricked), I would just break the volume buttons, so that they can't get to Download Mode either. I know, a rash decision, but just food for thought.
Kingroot is easily removed. Don't believe all the silly scare mongering.
It's the most successful root exploit available without tripping knox.
ashyx said:
Kingroot is easily removed. Don't believe all the silly scare mongering.
It's the most successful root exploit available without tripping knox.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have read plenty of cases of the thing working like a virus, sending data to china, making it impossible to remove. I will not put that in my phone. I have tried kinOroot and it didn't work. But sent stuff outside anyways...
fscussel said:
I have read plenty of cases of the thing working like a virus, sending data to china, making it impossible to remove. I will not put that in my phone. I have tried kinOroot and it didn't work. But sent stuff outside anyways...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So you just go from what read rather than try it yourself and you think KingOroot is different? It does contact servers in China, that's how it works.
It's easily removed by simply uninstalling or using SuperSume.
Millions of people have used it and I don't know of one documented case of someone being hacked after using it lol.
KingRoot contacts servers in China because it takes little-to-no space. A version of it that doesn't have to contact any server, and still grant you root access... Well, such an app would be over 3GB big, and would be of the same size, even after it finishes the job and gets you root access. It would be extremely inefficient, and that is an understatement. The servers in China contain the exploits that can be used to grant access to root without using a custom recovery (as a custom recovery would trip KNOX). There are thousands and thousands of files in those servers. As I said, it would be possible to make a one-click-root app that can root thousands of devices and that doesn't make contact with any server, but you would have to include all those thousands of files in the app, in order for it to work. No one is crazy enough to do such a thing.
ashyx said:
So you just go from what read rather than try it yourself and you think KingOroot is different? It does contact servers in China, that's how it works.
It's easily removed by simply uninstalling or using SuperSume.
Millions of people have used it and I don't know of one documented case of someone being hacked after using it lol.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
King-V said:
KingRoot contacts servers in China because it takes little-to-no space. A version of it that doesn't have to contact any server, and still grant you root access... Well, such an app would be over 3GB big, and would be of the same size, even after it finishes the job and gets you root access. It would be extremely inefficient, and that is an understatement. The servers in China contain the exploits that can be used to grant access to root without using a custom recovery (as a custom recovery would trip KNOX). There are thousands and thousands of files in those servers. As I said, it would be possible to make a one-click-root app that can root thousands of devices and that doesn't make contact with any server, but you would have to include all those thousands of files in the app, in order for it to work. No one is crazy enough to do such a thing.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have read that if you try to remove it you can in fact brick your cell...
fscussel said:
I have read that if you try to remove it you can in fact brick your cell...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Holy smokes...is this serious? :sly:
ashyx said:
Holy smokes...is this serious? :sly:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
why so funny? Reson is simple:
After people install kingroot it add many unwanted programs, and also refuses to be uninstalled. People then try to use SuperSU ME to remove it and leave just supersu, and in this process many have got a bricked device. They say this happens because of the kingroot's code to fight anything that tries to remove it.
Now, are you some sort of associate of kingroot?
PlutoDelic said:
if you are on a 5.1.x device, you might wanna give systemless root a try, i think they ported it to 5.1.x as it was a Marshmallow solution initially.
aside of that, nope.
also, a few regions, like Europe, do not accept root, and especially knox triggering as a warranty void.
and my personal two cents, trigger it, no worth at all, if your device ends up unbootable, there is no way they are going to bother reading through your chip of what you have done, most of the time you'll win the procedures if you need warranty
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
systemless root needs custom recovery installed as far as I can tell. So knox counter already 0x1 because of custom recovery.
Also I would like to know, if I install custom recovery, and the an OTA update comes, for 6.0, I would have to first remove TWRP, as so to use the OTA, after that, reinstall TWRP, would that trigger the knox again?
0x2 ??
fscussel said:
why so funny? Reson is simple:
After people install kingroot it add many unwanted programs, and also refuses to be uninstalled. People then try to use SuperSU ME to remove it and leave just supersu, and in this process many have got a bricked device. They say this happens because of the kingroot's code to fight anything that tries to remove it.
Now, are you some sort of associate of kingroot?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They say, he says, she says, do you actually have a clue what you are talking about?
I'm pretty sure I do.
It can be removed like any other app.
If you actually knew what you were talking about you'd know that.
It wont allow another root exploit to easily replace it, this is down to some silliness between Chainfire and King team. It is a pain but it can still be removed or replaced no problem. I wrote a whole guide how to do it.
Literally millions have achieved root with KingRoot and for many is the only way they can.
I dont advocate it nor am I against it.
Dont judge something until you've tried it.
I'll say no more on the matter now as I'm getting dizzy.
ashyx said:
They say, he says, she says, do you actually have a clue what you are talking about?
I'm pretty sure I do.
It can be removed like any other app.
If you actually knew what you were talking about you'd know that.
It wont allow another root exploit to easily replace it, this is down to some silliness between Chainfire and King team. It is a pain but it can still be removed or replaced no problem. I wrote a whole guide how to do it.
Literally millions have achieved root with KingRoot and for many is the only way they can.
I dont advocate it nor am I against it.
Dont judge something until you've tried it.
I'll say no more on the matter now as I'm getting dizzy.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1) I don't know if it works in my A5 2016 510M, can't find a compatible list or a report.
2) I have read reports of problems uninstalling it.
3) I have read reports of problems uninstalling it with SuperSU Me, including bricking.
4) I find you very arrogant.
fscussel said:
1) I don't know if it works in my A5 2016 510M, can't find a compatible list or a report.
2) I have read reports of problems uninstalling it.
3) I have read reports of problems uninstalling it with SuperSU Me, including bricking.
4) I find you very arrogant.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are obviously learning what you know from other misinformed users.
1. Just try it if it doesn't work it doesn't work just uninstall it.
2. As I have said, no such issue.
3. There's a reason why replacing it with SuperSU bricks some devices and it has absolutely nothing to do with kingroot.
If you attempt to replace it with SuperSU on anything above 5.0.2 on a Samsung device it's likely to soft brick it and cause a boot loop.
This is due to Samsungs root restriction policy in the kernel. The same goes for Android 6.0 devices.
To root with supersu on these devices you need a patched boot.img to remove the selinux restriction.
4. I find you very misinformed.
ashyx said:
You are obviously learning what you know from other misinformed users.
1. Just try it if it doesn't work it doesn't work just uninstall it.
2. As I have said, no such issue.
3. There's a reason why replacing it with SuperSU bricks some devices and it has absolutely nothing to do with kingroot.
If you attempt to replace it with SuperSU on anything above 5.0.2 on a Samsung device it's likely to soft brick it.
This is due to Samsungs root restriction policy in the kernel. The same goes for Android 6.0 devices.
To root with supersu on these devices you need a patched boot.img to remove the selinux restriction.
4. I find you very misinformed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
very misinformed but I have just saved my device from brick, because if you did your work your would see it's android 5.1.1 and it's samsung.
Now let me know if it works with a samsung 5.1.1 with KNOX and perhaps I will try it.
Also let me know how to remove it and install SuperSU over it.
fscussel said:
very misinformed but I have just saved my device from brick, because if you did your work your would see it's android 5.1.1 and it's samsung.
Now let me know if it works with a samsung 5.1.1 with KNOX and perhaps I will try it.
Also let me know how to remove it and install SuperSU over it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Kingroot won't brick your device, replacing it with supersu will. Not sure where in this discussion I said anything to the contrary? :what:
ashyx said:
Kingroot won't brick your device, replacing it with supersu will. Not sure where in this discussion I said anything to the contrary? :what:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
very non-productive answer... please check again

Any systemless root for Verizon S7?

So I got the "engboot" root method to work, and it's pretty sweet... but, that means I can't play Pokémon Go anymore.
I tried using Magisk and it bricked my phone, because of Qualcomm SecureBoot - I had to use KIES to flash the stock image back (which wiped all my data in the process, ugh)
I've seen people talking about using Magisk and phh superuser on an S7, but I believe they're talking about the Exynos variant, not the Snapdragon one. And since they're talking about TWRP, that likely involves tripping Knox.
Is there some way to do something similar via FlashFire? All TWRP does is let you flash stuff to /system anyway... besides making backups. no reason you really need TWRP to set up systemless root - just that the auto installers try to piggyback off of TWRP (or Magisk which tries to alter your boot files, which causes SecureBoot to have a hissy fit)
I noticed in psouza's guide, he mentions "making a change" that disables root to be able to use Android Pay (which uses SafetyNet just like Pokémon Go)... but searching the thread, nobody has actually mentioned how to do what he talks about doing. I tried using SuperSU to disable root, and that just screwed it up entirely. SuperSU was unable to re-enable root, and I still had root built into the engboot image, so SafetyNet was still failing. Had to redo the adb commands to get my root usable again.
Ended up just going back to stock for now until a real solution emerges...
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=69021494&postcount=1592
Try this out.
zimgir124 said:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=69021494&postcount=1592
Try this out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Wait, what? Seriously, I can just use that suhide xposed module and not even need to disable my root?
If that actually works... then that's pretty fricking amazing. That's the impression I got from reading that post, anyway - have YOU tried it? Curious if actually does what it says on the tin.
drfsupercenter said:
Wait, what? Seriously, I can just use that suhide xposed module and not even need to disable my root?
If that actually works... then that's pretty fricking amazing. That's the impression I got from reading that post, anyway - have YOU tried it? Curious if actually does what it says on the tin.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, i just read through it again and forgot it need systemless supersu installed which our devices dont have.
So sorry for the confusion.
I just recently switched bavk to my s7 edge,
But this is what i used on my nexus.
Yeah I was going to say, there's no way it's that easy.
Honest question though - assuming you have the "normal" root method (where it has /system/bin/su or /system/xbin or something similar), why can't you take those binaries that are written by the root exploit (along with the superuser app - which in the case of the S7 engboot method, I believe is stored as a normal user app anyway, not a system one) and copy them to wherever the systemless root puts the files? Not sure if it normally uses /data or one of the user folders. Then delete the binaries - since with root access you have r/w access to /system anyway.
I've been using Android long enough to know they're just different folders/partitions on the same device. You have /system, /data, /cache plus others these days.

Install TWRP

I've managed to install TWRP - ver twrp-3.1.1-0-gracelte.img.tar (for N7) via Odin. Straightforward. Could access recovery, but need now to work out how to deal with encryption in order to make backup. Any help would be appreciated.
We're on our way!
Great job keep us posted
zamzenos said:
I've managed to install TWRP - ver twrp-3.1.1-0-gracelte.img.tar (for N7) via Odin. Straightforward. Could access recovery, but need now to work out how to deal with encryption in order to make backup. Any help would be appreciated.
We're on our way!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think you would need a boot.img that disables it. Or you can disable encryption manually and erase all data to keep it disabled.
zamzenos said:
I've managed to install TWRP - ver twrp-3.1.1-0-gracelte.img.tar (for N7) via Odin. Straightforward. Could access recovery, but need now to work out how to deal with encryption in order to make backup. Any help would be appreciated.
We're on our way!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@jcadduono can help you to have a perfect job about TWRP ...
Ask him on irc ...
Backup failed because /data cannot be mounted, which suggests a mismatch twixt TWRP and device. Decided to push on and try to root. This failed, so that stock firmware had to be installed. I've hacked a number of phones and tabs here, so I was itching to see what could be done with existing N7 mods. Now I know.
It looks as though we need recovery etc specific to FE. Not sure we will have the numbers for it, though. If anyone has any ideas...
zamzenos said:
I've managed to install TWRP - ver twrp-3.1.1-0-gracelte.img.tar (for N7) via Odin. Straightforward. Could access recovery, but need now to work out how to deal with encryption in order to make backup. Any help would be appreciated.
We're on our way!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Your a brave man for trying this and the first to do so on here so thank you!.
As for the encryption on all the last few sammy devices ive had/have including the original Note 7 once you flash twrp you have to format data in twrp (not wipe mind you...format) to remove encryption.
We also had to then flash a zip to deal with dm verity but now SU does that anyway and also keeps the device decrypted when you reboot.
Id hazard a guess and say if you formatted and flashed SU this might actually work.
Now that we know flashing twrp (which was my main worry) and then odin stock without any issues this just got alot less risky.
sent from my Note FE, S8 plus, S7 edge or S6
Well I'm traveling now and will give this a go when I return home. Question: does DM Verity and Magic's or SU root require a a Note FR boot image to work or can they simply patch the boot image?
force70 said:
Your a brave man for trying this and the first to do so on here so thank you!.
As for the encryption on all the last few sammy devices ive had/have including the original Note 7 once you flash twrp you have to format data in twrp (not wipe mind you...format) to remove encryption.
We also had to then flash a zip to deal with dm verity but now SU does that anyway and also keeps the device decrypted when you reboot.
Id hazard a guess and say if you formatted and flashed SU this might actually work.
Now that we know flashing twrp (which was my main worry) and then odin stock without any issues this just got alot less risky.
sent from my Note FE, S8 plus, S7 edge or S6
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, I followed directions I found on the N7 forum, from which I assumed that SU would do the encryption. This is the first time I have come up against this barrier. I was resigned to possibly not having root, but from what you say I now think we might well manage it.
I've had a number of narrow shaves with various devices, so I felt that I could find my way out of any difficulty I encountered hacking the FE (maybe just fool's luck) . While cortez.i will try it at some stage, I am tempted to dive back in and see what happens.
Incidentally, sammobile didn't have the K variant firmware (may have now). I found it through google on a vietnamese site.
Just found this comprehensive guide to removing dm-verity:
http://www.theandroidsoul.com/disable-dm-verity-forced-encryption-galaxy-note-7/
Posting this separately.
FE WILL ROOT!
Factory reset is automatic (with less KT bloat, for some reason).
Titanuim can uninstall apps. But Adaway cannot copy edited hosts file. Sdfix cannot release the card: says there are no groups in WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE. Keep getting a security warning with each reboot from security log agent, but no action on reboot. Hopefully, all this can be sorted.
Finally, TWRP backup successful. Assume for now that it would restore, if needed.
zamzenos said:
Posting this separately.
FE WILL ROOT!
Factory reset is automatic (with less KT bloat, for some reason).
Titanuim can uninstall apps. But Adaway cannot copy edited hosts file. Sdfix cannot release the card: says there are no groups in WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE. Keep getting a security warning with each reboot from security log agent, but no action on reboot. Hopefully, all this can be sorted.
Finally, TWRP backup successful. Assume for now that it would restore, if needed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You are THE MAN !!!!
WOOOOOOOOOO
wolfgart said:
You are THE MAN !!!!
WOOOOOOOOOO
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I second that!
You shoukd be able to freeze security log agent with TIBU or package disabler pro to get rid of that message
force70 said:
I second that!
You shoukd be able to freeze security log agent with TIBU or package disabler pro to get rid of that message
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I uninstalled the log agent with Titanium, ripped out all the Knox, still getting that message. I think I'll backup progress so far and restart FE from within the warning message and see what happens...**
Thank you both for the kudos. But some work still to be done. I'm finding some apps won't start - unfortunately some of them important. It's OK for now - I'm not using the FE yet - but need to get some real benefits from root, otherwise it's back to stock with Adhell (tho' I'd say sammy will spike that soon). Maybe folk with more tech xp than I have can work out what's wrong here.
**Restart from within Security boots into Recovery - in this case TWRP. Looks like a response to the decrypted state, and is set off by any root level action. Can we get rid of this?
zamzenos said:
Posting this separately.
FE WILL ROOT!
Factory reset is automatic (with less KT bloat, for some reason).
Titanuim can uninstall apps. But Adaway cannot copy edited hosts file. Sdfix cannot release the card: says there are no groups in WRITE_EXTERNAL_STORAGE. Keep getting a security warning with each reboot from security log agent, but no action on reboot. Hopefully, all this can be sorted.
Finally, TWRP backup successful. Assume for now that it would restore, if needed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
which root package did you use, Magix or SU and did you have to use no verity disable zip?
EDIT: Nevermind, i'm rooted with SuperSU. have a 4 hour plane ride home so i'll have plenty time to checkout root before i get home..
cortez.i said:
which root package did you use, Magix or SU and did you have to use no verity disable zip?
EDIT: Nevermind, i'm rooted with SuperSU. have a 4 hour plane ride home so i'll have plenty time to checkout root before i get home..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just curious if Knox is now tripped,by using SU ?
For myself,I'm not too worried about it either way,but,those interested in root may want to know,for future Samsung Pay use/possible resale value loss due to Knox 0x1/etc....
KOLIOSIS said:
Just curious if Knox is now tripped,by using SU ?
For myself,I'm not too worried about it either way,but,those interested in root may want to know,for future Samsung Pay use/possible resale value loss due to Knox 0x1/etc....
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes sir as soon as you flash twrp its tripped.
And we need twrp for SU so no way around it.
sent from my Note FE, S8 plus, S7 edge or S6
force70 said:
Yes sir as soon as you flash twrp its tripped.
And we need twrp for SU so no way around it.
sent from my Note FE, S8 plus, S7 edge or S6
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I figured that much hadn't changed since I last rooted/ROM'd a Samsung device,thanks for confirming. :good:
Again,for myself,it's not much of an issue,I plan on keeping this phone for the long haul (at least 1-2 yrs) & loss of Samsung Pay/Android Pay is of no consequence to me.
KOLIOSIS said:
I figured that much hadn't changed since I last rooted/ROM'd a Samsung device,thanks for confirming. :good:
Again,for myself,it's not much of an issue,I plan on keeping this phone for the long haul (at least 1-2 yrs) & loss of Samsung Pay/Android Pay is of no consequence to me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ive never cared about knox either....and this phone I will keep until it dies or I do lol
force70 said:
Ive never cared about knox either....and this phone I will keep until it dies or I do lol
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
+1
LMFAO,let's hope for the former................... :highfive:
so... after renaming SecurityLogAgent.apk from TWRP, i've had no problems running root apps, modifying build.prop, etc. google Adaway Vesion 3.2 and install this version and it will configure hosts files without issue (at least on my device). will continue testing and report findings should things changes. thanks @zamzenos for risking your device to confirm that the Note 7 version of TWRP is working.
cortez.i said:
so... after renaming SecurityLogAgent.apk from TWRP, i've had no problems running root apps, modifying build.prop, etc. google Adaway Vesion 3.2 and install this version and it will configure hosts files without issue (at least on my device). will continue testing and report findings should things changes. thanks @zamzenos for risking your device to confirm that the Note 7 version of TWRP is working.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The Adaway update worked. Thanks for that. I followed the N7 forum guide, except that I formatted data using TWRP, and used SU as advised. I uninstalled the log agent with Titanium (and as much of Knox as I could find). I no longer get security notifications, but something is still being tripped by any root activity. The apps that won't start don't require root, for instance, Adobe Reader, and sms and call log restore apps. I cannot see any common cause here. SDfix (latest version) says it can't find any groups, so can't do its work.
I'll nose around the S7 & 8 forums and see if any of these problems are turning up there (dev on the N7 was seriously interrupted by the problems caused by sammy's battery restrictions).

[Question]How do I remove system app?

So I was fortunate enough to have ArnovaG82 to look into the camera app of Essential and he said they enabled compression of 90%, so he changed it to 100%. You can find the modded apk here https://drive.google.com/open?id=1aQ50MgaKjHwVwNDe_1LA2Q46sQl0QtqE . However, it won't let me install due to having same file name or what not. So I used a system uninstall app from the Play Store with root enabled, but it would not remove the stock camera app. No matter what I do, it does a self restart and the app is there again.
If someone figured out how to completely uninstall the stock app and install the modded apk, please share!
Do you have TWRP? Might remove it from there and then install the modded apk. Otherwise, can you remove it and then immediately install the replacement? Titanium Backup to remove it and then install the modded and then TB it to a system app?
Seamonkey79 said:
Do you have TWRP? Might remove it from there and then install the modded apk. Otherwise, can you remove it and then immediately install the replacement? Titanium Backup to remove it and then install the modded and then TB it to a system app?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Would you mind testing it? You sound like you know what you are doing vs me.
xterminater07 said:
Would you mind testing it? You sound like you know what you are doing vs me.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I won't be able to immediately, I just got this new again today, have to use it for a bit before I'll be able to unlock the bootloader and root.
Seamonkey79 said:
Do you have TWRP? Might remove it from there and then install the modded apk. Otherwise, can you remove it and then immediately install the replacement? Titanium Backup to remove it and then install the modded and then TB it to a system app?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seamonkey79 said:
I won't be able to immediately, I just got this new again today, have to use it for a bit before I'll be able to unlock the bootloader and root.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Why do you have to use it for a bit before rooting and unlocking bootloader? Just curious
xterminater07 said:
Why do you have to use it for a bit before rooting and unlocking bootloader? Just curious
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Because I make it a rule never to do something that can ruin warranty claims until I know something works properly first
Seamonkey79 said:
Because I make it a rule never to do something that can ruin warranty claims until I know something works properly first
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Essential already stated rooting and unlocking bootloader will not void warranty.
xterminater07 said:
Essential already stated rooting and unlocking bootloader will not void warranty.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Possibly, then there's this thread - https://forum.xda-developers.com/es...sential-phone-tech-support-using-xda-t3699646
Suffice it to say, I'm going to probably use my phone the way I see fit, regardless of what a manufacturer says or another user requests It's seldom worth the risk.
The phone is so good stock Root hardly seems worth it. I read all the threads about roms and rooting and will literally gain me nothing in the end but give me unwanted headaches.
I am rooting it for the sole purpose of replacing the stock camera app with the one that is modded by Arnova

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