Possible source code - Motorola Photon 4G

Dear all.
Somehow I ran across the site and it seems that it contains some valuable source code of android on Photon (e.g. kernel_tegra.tar.gz which may include source code for Tegra2 driver). Hope this can help the further development of Photon ROM!
I hope it would also contains hints on unlock bootloader as my friend and I are still stuck at the Japanese stock ROM that are currently NOT unlockable.
Many thanks!

I am sorry that this seems to be old news already as people are already discussing on this thread.
I find something interesting on the system_core.tar.gz, there is a engineering_key.p12 (private key with cert, seems to require passphase) on \system\core\fastboot\. I wonder if this is used for signing the bootloader.

Related

[Q] how to port ics (serious learner)

Lemme get some things out of the way.. I am a noob. I have searched. I have read some of the results from the search. I am overwhelmed by the 20+ pages of results (lol). I am not 100% sure this is the correct forum for this (not sure where else would be ).. I believe this is one of those things where I need help based on my situation.. Ok, so here I go.
I wish to start porting ICS to my phone. That's my goal. I have general understanding of how linux works, but I do not know much about the android specifics of how they work, or what needs to be modified for this to work. I do not plan to use the kitchen tool as I wish to learn this the hard way. I believe this will help me become more understanding in what I am doing. However, at this point I don't and that's why I'm here. My phone model is irrelevant almost because its prepaid and usually the communities don't even recognize their existence.. at least that's how I feel about it. But I digress. My phone is the zte warp by boost mobile and I am here to learn hopefully the things that will get me started on porting ICS to this phone. I right now believe that the best thing for me to learn is how the android related files work because as it is, I only looked at guides on how linux works and I understand most of it. I'm not sure that's the best thing that will help me port ics, but I'm certain it is important.
Please help me figure out where I should start in learning how to port ICS to my phone basically.
Thanks XDA
anyone? I am quite serious about wanting to do and go into this but I have yet one thread that anyone's ever replied to.. (or post iirc) which puts a damper on me
Snake X said:
Lemme get some things out of the way.. I am a noob. I have searched. I have read some of the results from the search. I am overwhelmed by the 20+ pages of results (lol). I am not 100% sure this is the correct forum for this (not sure where else would be ).. I believe this is one of those things where I need help based on my situation.. Ok, so here I go.
I wish to start porting ICS to my phone. That's my goal. I have general understanding of how linux works, but I do not know much about the android specifics of how they work, or what needs to be modified for this to work. I do not plan to use the kitchen tool as I wish to learn this the hard way. I believe this will help me become more understanding in what I am doing. However, at this point I don't and that's why I'm here. My phone model is irrelevant almost because its prepaid and usually the communities don't even recognize their existence.. at least that's how I feel about it. But I digress. My phone is the zte warp by boost mobile and I am here to learn hopefully the things that will get me started on porting ICS to this phone. I right now believe that the best thing for me to learn is how the android related files work because as it is, I only looked at guides on how linux works and I understand most of it. I'm not sure that's the best thing that will help me port ics, but I'm certain it is important.
Please help me figure out where I should start in learning how to port ICS to my phone basically.
Thanks XDA
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
From my limited knowledge, I think it is a huge task undertaking, you can download Android source code from Google, the hard part will be the device driver development and porting for Linux kernel (and maybe portion of Android). If you are lucky, you can use the existing phone bootloader (or you have to port one). Understanding the inner of the phone (different chip set may need different device driver) will be another challenging task.
by the device driver development, you mean all the libs that go into the phone? Couldn't I just copy/paste the pre-existing libs that are already made for the phone? Also the phone im working with is a bit strange really.. noone has been able to compile the kernel from its source and get it to boot yet.. when it was compiled the zImage was different than that of the stock one.
And yeah, I have downloaded the aosp source.. I just need to know where to start at and the processes involved really
Snake X said:
by the device driver development, you mean all the libs that go into the phone? Couldn't I just copy/paste the pre-existing libs that are already made for the phone? Also the phone im working with is a bit strange really.. noone has been able to compile the kernel from its source and get it to boot yet.. when it was compiled the zImage was different than that of the stock one.
And yeah, I have downloaded the aosp source.. I just need to know where to start at and the processes involved really
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To answer you question no the drivers and lib files are different for aosp based rooms then they are for the stock OEM from. The first step will be to get a working kernel. Without anything you do will be pointless
I'm somewhat interested in the same thing, and from what I've gathered, you'll need to do these things to begin ROM development:
1. Read every page on the AOSP site and grab a copy of the AOSP source. It probably wouldn't hurt to read the regular Android developer wiki as well.
2. Learn about Linux driver development:
http://lwn.net/Kernel/LDD3/ (this is apparently considered THE BOOK on Linux driver development)
http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/drivers_linux
3. Learn pretty much every detail about your phone and its hardware, especially when it comes to how ROMs are installed on it. For example, my phone (the Droid X2) has a locked bootloader, so 2nd init has to be used to boot new ROMs, and this makes it so that we cannot update the kernel.
You can usually find this sort of information on your phone manufacturer's website. Sometimes they even post the source code to their phone's drivers, which is helpful.
4. Look at other ROMs (preferably for your phone) and see how they work. The source code is freely available for most popular ROMs.
For example: CyanogenMod keeps their source code in a public git repository: https://github.com/cyanogenmod
5. Get to work on porting!
I would highly recommend starting with something smaller, however, just as a start. One good jumping-off point is probably this guide: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1272270
If any part of this was wrong, or if I left something out, somebody feel free to correct me, I'm still a noob.
Thank you so much for your direction, however,, android kitchen.. im not sure about that because isnt that only ment for htc devices? My phone is made by zte
what device do you even have?
if it's stuck officialy on 2.1 or 2.2 there's no hope that if you even port it that it'll work
its the zte warp from boost mobile (prepaid). Btw if I compile an aosp ics launcher and put that on my phone whats the chances of that working?
edit: it uses 2.3.5
Well Sebastian responded on android forums, apparently zte is very bad at version control with their kernel sources. So when they complete one project, they use the same source for the next project, and what they release could be for anything. Apparently the blade source had the same issues, it took him a while to get them to correct the source
Sent from my N860 using Tapatalk
Yeah I noticed that there were ppl saying there were things similar but I'm not sure what will work or what won't.. guess its time to start a petition on zte to release the source code lol
edit: seems like zte's bein a bad company and violated the GNU GPL license for not providing a complete source code.. I compiled an email and sent it to someone who can proof read it and send it to the right person for this kinda thing.. danggit zte

Request for help with kernel for the P505/P506

First of all sorry if this is the wrong place for this and also sorry this is not exactly a post for the P500. I am here asking for help with developing a kernel that will work for the P505 (Pheonix) and the P506 (Thrive) which are nearly clones of the P500. A group of us over and androidcentral.com have been trying to come up with a working kernel that we can use to patch over top of the P500 ROM's due to some screwiness with the video when the ROMs are loaded and ran directly. We had a .32 kernel developed for us but the developer and the community had a falling out when he was asked for his source code and refused to give it. So I am trying to undertake compiling a kernel for our group but due to the lack of good documentation and the hit or miss nature of the search results I get back I'm still left somewhat in the dark. I have tried talking with people on IRC to get a better idea of what is needed but I always get conflicting answers. We have the stock source code for our kernel/ROM (2.3.4) but we are lacking in good documentation and expertise on how to go about modifying this source code to work with the P500 Cyanogen or MIUI builds. As the P500 roms were orginally ported from another phone (if my understanding is correct) I am assuming that someone in here would have the knowledge needed to help us get over this hurdle. Thank you for taking the time to read this and I hope this isn't too far off topic as to upset the Moderator.

[Q] Samusung XCOVER/GT-S5690 questions.

Hi all,
i'm a noob to android, but i have nit of experience on other unix based systems.
I was wondering, why there is no custom roms for GT-S5690?
What's the problem?
Is bootloader locked some other way or is it somehow different from example Gio/GT-S5660?
There is a bunch of roms for gio..
I have one xcover, wich has no screen and covers, i thought i could use it for testing.
I think there are too less people who have a xcover, and I was actually pretty disappointed when I say there is a successor to the xcover available only in the US (Rugby Smart / Pro <-- with ICS!).
From the technical side, I don't know. Even the source code of the firmware is available at opensource.samsung.com. The Bootloader seems pretty much unlocked.
For me, the xcover is the best phone ever, it takes so much abuse. Maybe someday someone will port a newer ROM from the Ace/Gio/idk. It's a shame Samsung abandons their old phones :crying:
xkawer said:
I think there are too less people who have a xcover, and I was actually pretty disappointed when I say there is a successor to the xcover available only in the US (Rugby Smart / Pro <-- with ICS!).
From the technical side, I don't know. Even the source code of the firmware is available at opensource.samsung.com. The Bootloader seems pretty much unlocked.
For me, the xcover is the best phone ever, it takes so much abuse. Maybe someday someone will port a newer ROM from the Ace/Gio/idk. It's a shame Samsung abandons their old phones :crying:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I didn't were aware of successor models, now i'm very dissappointed.
I'm downloading these source codes at the moment, i'll check these out.
I'm not a developer, atleast YET..
AFAIK, hardware of s5690 is way different from any other samsung phones,
correct me if i'm wrong..
jonezy82 said:
AFAIK, hardware of s5690 is way different from any other samsung phones,
correct me if i'm wrong..
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seems like it's the only one with a Marvell MG2.
Let me know if you do anything interesting with the sources
Just flashed my xcover to XXLJ2 yesterday. At least it seems a bit faster now, but I have a weird bug when scrolling. If I give a list (for example settings) momentum, it doesn't stop when I put my finger on it again. But it does stop if I release the finger the second time.
jonezy82 said:
I'm downloading these source codes at the moment, i'll check these out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did the same. The GT-S5690_Platform.txt says:
Code:
How to build platform
1. Get android open source.
: version info - Android gingerbread 2.3.6
( Download site : http://source.android.com )
2. Remove external\webkit module in android open source which you got.
And then execute "clean build"
2. Copy files and modules to original Gingerbread source tree (overwrite)
3. build
- ./build.sh user
So wouldn't it be possible to download the JB sources, and compile them with the original kernel? Would be so cool.
Edit: It seems you need device specific binaries (drivers) since ICS. see: http://www.freeyourandroid.com/guide/compile-ics
Found a git https://github.com/manakeri/android_device_samsung_xcover, there is a
Code:
cyanogen_xcover.mk
file, this seems interesting. Apparently someone is trying to port it.
Edit2: In this git, there is also a "extract-files.sh"-file, which is neccessary to pull the proprietary files from the phone! With this I think we actually have everything we need to compile ICS/JB, like in the "freeyourandroid" tutorial.
I have never done this before, but someone must try it lol.
Oh look, there are more people who care about it!
http://www.droidevelopers.com/f338/14412-gt-s5690-opensource-kernel-available.html
Someone discovered my link and made a overclock kernel from the sources! This is so cool.
I hope we are going to see more :good:
xkawer said:
Oh look, there are more people who care about it!
http://www.droidevelopers.com/f338/14412-gt-s5690-opensource-kernel-available.html
Someone discovered my link and made a overclock kernel from the sources! This is so cool.
I hope we are going to see more :good:[/QUOTE
I own an xcover too a developer on another forum looked at some files i pulled using adb to try to port clockworkmod but no success. Told me the files i sent weren't standard android img but he would continue to look into it. Apparently the teamhacksungs goal is to port cyanogenmod for every Samsung device surely they can get it done. I've been waiting a long time to see some development for the awesome xcover
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If its possible on the galaxy mini its got to be possible on xcover!. Ive tried to get involved and learn to port cyanogenmod but when it comes to git, repo, source tree, source code e.t.c e.t.c its a bit behond me for now.
Step in the right direction it seems. Fingers crossed

What are the first steps to develop ROM's for a "forgotten" device?

I bought a Xperia C, a fairly popular model here in Brazil, but I just found out that it's bootloader was locked until some months ago, when Sony decided it was time to let people unlock it.s bootloader.
But now I see the phone has never receveid an update after Jelly Bean 4.2.x and no Custom ROM was ever developed for it (all ROM's that I found are just themed versions of the OEM 4.2 Jelly Bean).
So I decided that maybe I could build CM or AOSP for this device but after reading about the process I discovered that there's no device tree or vendor or kernel info available anywhere for this device.
I think this is all because Sony allowed the bootloader to be unlocked just now the phone is discontinued, so the possible developers this phone had moved away from it too quickly...
It's a shame, because it's indeed a good device, but it's stuck in a old firmware because of Sony's lack of support - same thing happened to the Xperia SP, another excellent device, which at least had an unlocked bootloader which allowed a lot of Custom ROM's to be developed.
So, I wish to know if there's any salvation for this device or if I should give up on it...
PS: I am a software developer, but I don't understand anything about android or Java. I'm willing to learn and develop ROM's for this device with someone's else help... I'll just need to find time to do that...
if your bootloader is unlocked the first step is compile a custom recovery, normally twrp that you can find tutorials in here. the kernel source code is always provided because of the linux open source license, I'm on the cellphone so I cant post links but search for the twrp compiling guide in here. i hope this helps

i want to get started with customising my own android

hi peeps. thank u for stopping by
i want to get into android development and make personal touches and changes to my phone. i quite like oxygenOS so i would like to stick with this and modify that slowly. but i cant figure out how to begin specifically with oxygenos? it doesnt appear as if they release their source code anymore. could anyone please point me in the right direction? thank you
kieran_buffet said:
hi peeps. thank u for stopping by
i want to get into android development and make personal touches and changes to my phone. i quite like oxygenOS so i would like to stick with this and modify that slowly. but i cant figure out how to begin specifically with oxygenos? it doesnt appear as if they release their source code anymore. could anyone please point me in the right direction? thank you
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
First of all, OnePlus do release their source code. But if you want to modify your phone and keep OxygenOS, you don't look it the right place.
With root you can have a lot more possibilities for customization, so I'll advice you to check Magisk (a root manager/ customization tool with which you can install modules).
If you want to theme your device you can use Substratum, and install themes from the Play Store.
Search about them and give them a try if you want to
Raiz said:
Hi,
First of all, OnePlus do release their source code. But if you want to modify your phone and keep OxygenOS, you don't look it the right place.
With root you can have a lot more possibilities for customization, so I'll advice you to check Magisk (a root manager/ customization tool with which you can install modules).
If you want to theme your device you can use Substratum, and install themes from the Play Store.
Search about them and give them a try if you want to
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thank u for getting back to me! i took a look at their github page but it said they stopped releasing the source code because it can be found elsewhere, and i cant find where exactly that is. i dont want to modify the OS as is (root it and customise that way), i mean getting the source code, changing, removing and adding things and then flash my own custom flavour of oxygenOS onto my phone. i figure going with what comes with my phone is best when getting into android development so that there are as few compatibility issues as possible. would you be able to point me exactly how i might obtain the source code? it would be very cool my dude
kieran_buffet said:
thank u for getting back to me! i took a look at their github page but it said they stopped releasing the source code because it can be found elsewhere, and i cant find where exactly that is. i dont want to modify the OS as is (root it and customise that way), i mean getting the source code, changing, removing and adding things and then flash my own custom flavour of oxygenOS onto my phone. i figure going with what comes with my phone is best when getting into android development so that there are as few compatibility issues as possible. would you be able to point me exactly how i might obtain the source code? it would be very cool my dude
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I hope you're familiar with git. I believe this is what you're looking for. https://github.com/OnePlusOSS
Spaceminer said:
I hope you're familiar with git. I believe this is what you're looking for.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i am indeed familiar with git, but i dont exactly understand what i am wanting from that page. i want the full source code to oxygenos and the kernal/binary specific packages for my phone. i previously found this site before but to my knowledge what is on there doesnt get me the source code. am i missing something? thank you for your helps
kieran_buffet said:
i am indeed familiar with git, but i dont exactly understand what i am wanting from that page. i want the full source code to oxygenos and the kernal/binary specific packages for my phone. i previously found this site before but to my knowledge what is on there doesnt get me the source code. am i missing something? thank you for your helps
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Check under the Android section on that page. Which specific OnePlus device do you have? There are many of them. I can help you find it if I know your model.
Spaceminer said:
Check under the Android section on that page. Which specific OnePlus device do you have? There are many of them. I can help you find it if I know your model.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i see where you mean. but it seems like they stopped doing these releases. on their latest release (11 months ago) they said; "based on conversations we had with our dev community and the fact that we have only made few changes on AOSP(Qualcomm BSP) device tree, we will not be releasing AOSP device trees for future devices, the community can get the baseline from our device and get the source code from Qualcomm."
"the community can get the baseline from our device and get the source code from Qualcomm." i have no idea where to get what they are talking about.
i have the oneplus 8 pro
kieran_buffet said:
i see where you mean. but it seems like they stopped doing these releases. on their latest release (11 months ago) they said; "based on conversations we had with our dev community and the fact that we have only made few changes on AOSP(Qualcomm BSP) device tree, we will not be releasing AOSP device trees for future devices, the community can get the baseline from our device and get the source code from Qualcomm."
"the community can get the baseline from our device and get the source code from Qualcomm." i have no idea where to get what they are talking about.
i have the oneplus 8 pro
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They're probably referring to CAF sources for the Qualcomm bit. The baseline part is probably a reference to the script that's in the Android section. This is the closest thing to what you're after that I can find.
https://github.com/AndroidBlobs/device_oneplus_OnePlus8Pro
https://github.com/AndroidBlobs/vendor_oneplus_OnePlus8Pro
https://github.com/codeauroraforum (CAF)
Spaceminer said:
They're probably referring to CAF sources for the Qualcomm bit. The baseline part is probably a reference to the script that's in the Android section. This is the closest thing to what you're after that I can find.
https://github.com/AndroidBlobs/device_oneplus_OnePlus8Pro
https://github.com/AndroidBlobs/vendor_oneplus_OnePlus8Pro
https://github.com/codeauroraforum (CAF)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ah yes. my brain has clicked with the baseline part, i would plug my phone in and it would use adb to extract the "baseline"? i understand this process. is what i am asking for difficult? perhaps i am better off taking the kernal files for my phone and integrating it with stock android that i would build and practicing with that? i really appreciate your effort but this "android blobs" is apparantly for reference only, i have no idea what android blobs is. i went into this knowing oneplus isnt extremely AOSP friendly compared to Sony for example, but i am going to push on. do you have any advice? this doesnt appear to be a friendly introduction into existing OS modification by sticking with OxygenOS

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