[root] FlashFire v0.17 [root] FlashFire v0.17Requirements: 4.2+...
[root] FlashFire v0.17
[root] FlashFire v0.17
Requirements: 4.2+ ROOT
Overview: FlashFire is the spiritual successor to Mobile ODIN.
Notes and hints to help you use it:
- No kernels or recoveries are flashed for FlashFire to run, Android is torn down and restarted in a minimalist manner for the flashing part of the app to run. I’m sure this will completely fail on some devices.
- A lot(!) of memory is used, likely the entire operation will fail on low-memory devices. I strongly suggest you make an ‘ID’ backup as the very first test and see if that works at all.
- Technically it should be compatible with 4.2, but note virtually all of the testing so far has been done on 4.4 and 5.0 firmwares.
- While development has focused so far on Samsung and Nexus compatibility and features, it should be able to function on many devices. Specific support for some other manufacturers is coming via updates soon.
- Individual files need to be named correctly (after their partitions) to be flashable or be contained in archives. Archive-wise, TAR and ZIP are supported. Compression-wise, ZIP, GZIP and BZIP2 are supported. These can be embedded inside each-other, so yes, you can directly flash the standard ZIP-inside-TGZ Nexus firmwares, as well as TAR-inside-ZIP Samsung firmwares. More formats are to come.
- Backups can be to internal, external (sd) or USB storage. The backups are compressed. There is no way of knowing if the backup will fit, you are not warned about this.
- Backups are standard TGZ’s for file-based, and plain GZIP’d for raw partitions
- For block-level OTAs, flash a stock system partition or restore a (raw!) system (and vendor) backup before applying the OTA. After the OTA action, create a (raw!) backup of system (and vendor). The latter will be restorable to apply the next OTA.
- The embedded SuperSU version installed by EverRoot is v2.46.
- Pro version is unlocked if you have Mobile ODIN Pro installed, but you still see an upgrade option. This is a (much cheaper) In-App Purchase you can optionally do, so you don’t need to keep MOP installed.
- Pro version actually does nothing different at the moment.
WHAT’S NEW
- Added various partitions
- Experimental CM SU compatibility - not thoroughly tested
- Out of space errors now logged during backup instead of just freezing
- Added corrupt ZIP detection, in turn fixes several crashes caused by attempting to read corrupt ZIPs
- Added LZ4 compression
- Made threads used for GZIP configurable
- Added kernel wakelock
- Cache ZIP scans, speeds up file selection
- Fixed several issues on 64-bit devices
- SuperSU updated to v2.49 BETA
This app has no advertisements
More Info:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/d…hainfire.flash
Download Instructions:
https://userscloud.com/8x867vpwrt6j
Mirrors:
http://ul.to/xnx3l6f6
http://www.tusfiles.net/mo86tiew807z
Requirements: 4.2+ ROOT
Overview: FlashFire is the spiritual successor to Mobile ODIN.
Notes and hints to help you use it:
- No kernels or recoveries are flashed for FlashFire to run, Android is torn down and restarted in a minimalist manner for the flashing part of the app to run. I’m sure this will completely fail on some devices.
- A lot(!) of memory is used, likely the entire operation will fail on low-memory devices. I strongly suggest you make an ‘ID’ backup as the very first test and see if that works at all.
- Technically it should be compatible with 4.2, but note virtually all of the testing so far has been done on 4.4 and 5.0 firmwares.
- While development has focused so far on Samsung and Nexus compatibility and features, it should be able to function on many devices. Specific support for some other manufacturers is coming via updates soon.
- Individual files need to be named correctly (after their partitions) to be flashable or be contained in archives. Archive-wise, TAR and ZIP are supported. Compression-wise, ZIP, GZIP and BZIP2 are supported. These can be embedded inside each-other, so yes, you can directly flash the standard ZIP-inside-TGZ Nexus firmwares, as well as TAR-inside-ZIP Samsung firmwares. More formats are to come.
- Backups can be to internal, external (sd) or USB storage. The backups are compressed. There is no way of knowing if the backup will fit, you are not warned about this.
- Backups are standard TGZ’s for file-based, and plain GZIP’d for raw partitions
- For block-level OTAs, flash a stock system partition or restore a (raw!) system (and vendor) backup before applying the OTA. After the OTA action, create a (raw!) backup of system (and vendor). The latter will be restorable to apply the next OTA.
- The embedded SuperSU version installed by EverRoot is v2.46.
- Pro version is unlocked if you have Mobile ODIN Pro installed, but you still see an upgrade option. This is a (much cheaper) In-App Purchase you can optionally do, so you don’t need to keep MOP installed.
- Pro version actually does nothing different at the moment.
WHAT’S NEW
- Added various partitions
- Experimental CM SU compatibility - not thoroughly tested
- Out of space errors now logged during backup instead of just freezing
- Added corrupt ZIP detection, in turn fixes several crashes caused by attempting to read corrupt ZIPs
- Added LZ4 compression
- Made threads used for GZIP configurable
- Added kernel wakelock
- Cache ZIP scans, speeds up file selection
- Fixed several issues on 64-bit devices
- SuperSU updated to v2.49 BETA
This app has no advertisements
More Info:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/d…hainfire.flash
Download Instructions:
https://userscloud.com/8x867vpwrt6j
Mirrors:
http://ul.to/xnx3l6f6
http://www.tusfiles.net/mo86tiew807z
via Androidapkhere http://androidapkhere.tumblr.com/post/117827305075
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