[Q] Nook Rooted - won't turn on without sd card with cm10 on it - Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet

Ok. I have the cm-10.1 from June installed internal on the nook. It boots wonderfully and everything seems to work except for that when you reboot or shutdown and turn on it won't do anything unless there is a formatted boot ready cm versioned sdcard installed. I unfortunately have no idea where to start. It seems that everyone who has sdcard problems is usually when they have one inserted.
Any help would be great! Thanks in advance.

Sounds like you might be booting and running CM off SD all along ...
Does the Cyanoboot screen say it's loading internal boot or SDC boot when you boot/reboot with the SD card in?

digixmax said:
Sounds like you might be booting and running CM off SD all along ...
Does the Cyanoboot screen say it's loading internal boot or SDC boot when you boot/reboot with the SD card in?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I hold down the N and choose int boot to use the internal disk... so it is using the internal disk...
I guess to describe the issue further would be to explain that there is not even an "N" logo when pushing the power button and the screen backlight doesn't come on until I have inserted the sd card with cyanoboot installed... Could this be an issue with how the internal partitions are formatted - and or missing info? I looked at the "About" screen in Jellybean and it doesn't know my serial # and a few other things and searching around, I found out there are some files on one of the partitions that are supposed to contain these, but I haven't found them...
Any more ideas?

I'd suggest you try re-installing CM10.1 internally using the process outlined at http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=43326042&postcount=123.

OK. So, it was terribly messed up... possibly from a bad partition experience earlier in its life (it was bricked when I obtained it...) Anyway, so I followed the page at:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=24995518&postcount=1
This got my partitions formatted again correctly. I then also used adb to copy in the partition 5 files from the succulent github
https://github.com/succulent/acclaim_recovery_sdcard/blob/CM7/README.md
(in the flash_restore_stock.zip file).
Then I followed your link to
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=43326042&postcount=123
and flashed those files...
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!

Related

[ROM][CM7] [v1.3] Size-agnostic SD Card image and CM7 installer for SD Cards.

Due to popular demand I have created a size-agnostic SDCard CM7 installer.
Also allows to install unmodified CM7 builds on SD card.
Current version: 1.3
Grab the installer image here:
http://crimea.edu/~green/nook/generic-sdcard-v1.3.img.gz
it's a ~9M image that would unpack into ~130M disk image.
Also note - not all SD cards are created equal. Here is a thread of interest is you have not bought one yet: http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=12964262
Short version: buy Sandisk-branded class 4 microSD cards.
Write the image on your SD card. I tested with 2G, 4G and 8G cards and all worked.
Any uSD card of 1G or bigger in size should work if it is recognized by your nook.
Write on Windows by using WinImage and on Linux/MacOS X by using dd (to the entire device, not one of the partitions. The device name should not have any numbers at the end. The command is something like dd if=/somewhere/generic-sdcard.img of=/dev/sdX bs=1024k)
After done with writing, eject and then re-insert the uSD card into your computer.
Download a CM nightly build from here http://download.cyanogenmod.com/?device=encore (It is recommended to choose -87 nightly or later. If you plan to use prior version for initial install, stick with installer 1.2.1 for a different u-boot version)
Or just use your own update-cm-*-KANG-signed.zip file that is produced if you do your own builds.
The image would correctly detect unmodified CM7 builds and would make necessary adjustments to make them work on SD card.
Put the file to the SD card (there is only one partition). Don't change the name of the file.
unmount the uSD card and insert it into the nook.
Boot from this SD card. It'll boot and will update you on progress.
When it's done, it'll power off.
That's it, you now have CM7 on your SD card.
How to install market and gapps:
After you have booted into the CM7 on SD card for the first time and set up wifi access (important!)
Go to http://wiki.cyanogenmod.com/index.php?title=Latest_Version and at the end there is a table with various google apps versions. Get the one suitable for your cyanogen version (CM7 is the latest for now). The file is named gapps-....zip
shutdown your nook and take the SD card out, insert it into your computer.
Copy the gapps-... file to the SD card on the first partition (titled boot) without changing the file name.
Insert the uSD card back into the NOOK and boot into "Recovery mode" (hold nook N key and then press and hold power until the "Loading..." message appears and then disappears with screen going blank. Release power button, then press it again and hold for ~5 seconds, the bootloader "Loading..." message should be on the screen for three seconds or so before you release power button, keep holding N button until screen blanks again. If the screen went off while you were holding the power key, that means you were holding it for too long).
Alternatively if you do not want to fight the timing, boot normally into Android, then from desktop hold power key until a poweroff menu appears, In the poweroff menu choose "reboot", in the next menu choose "recovery" and press "OK". The nook would reboot straight into recovery.
How to update to a new build:
put the new build you want to try on the first partition. (the name must be update-cm-*.zip or cm_encore_full*.zip or just update-*.zip)
Boot from the SDcard in the recovery mode (see above) and the new snapshot would be installed.
The partition layout would be preserved, filesystems are NOT reformatted, so your data should be safe.
Installing other stuff:
Booting in recovery mode would install all files that are named "update-..." and end with .zip The files would then be deleted! Most of the packages should work, but I only tested a subset and not entire syntax of updater script is implemented. Certainly format and delete are not implemented.
OC Kernel installation instructions:
Starting with v1.2.1 there are no special instructions, install normally as described above.
Partition layout for the SD cards depends on size:
Less than 600M - unsupported.
up to 1G cards gets: system of ~300M and data of the rest of space. No FAT partition
2G cards (more than 1G up to 1800M) gets: 300M system, 612M data, rest is FAT sdcard
more than 2G cards gets: 460M system, 975M data, rest is FAT for sdcard.
How to update if you already installed using older version of the installer and don't want to reinstall (understandably):
Get update zip from http://crimea.edu/~green/nook/update-genimage-1.3.zip
Put the zip file as is onto the first partition of your sdcard..
reboot into recovery (triggered by the keys, the reboot into recovery does not work yet).
The new version would be installed and you are done.
You can combine this installation together with updating to .32 kernel in one step. Just put the update-cm file and the update-genimage-1.3.zip to the first partition. Make sure there is still at least 1M of space left!
Changes in 1.3
Install u-boot.bin and MLO loaders if provided.
Fixed a problem that led to overwrite of recovery kernel if a nightly was installed more than once)
(only in full image) updated u-boot to ignore BCB as that was a common source of problems. (that's why this version is not recommended for initial install with older nightlies, those don't provide a more correct u-boot for later operations. It's fine to do the update from older installer release, though)
Changes in 1.2.1
Really fixed dalingrin kernel packages installation
A bit more robust handling of install scripts
Changes in 1.2
Updated to new u-boot from B&N 1.2 update
Ability to obey BCB in eMMC (allows reboot into recovery from CM7)
Hopefully simplified the timing to trigger recovery boots from keyboard
Added support for Dalingrin's kernel update packages
The v1.1 version that is known good to work with 2.6.29 kernel releases is located at http://crimea.edu/~green/nook/generic-sdcard-v1.1.img.gz
This is very cool, thanks! My father bought a nook color after seeing mine, and after hearing what I have been able to get mine to do (thanks to the efforts of all the devs here) he has wanted to play a little more with his. Thanks to you, I have an easy way to set up the SD card and then ship it up to him. I can give him a taste without having to force him to even root his yet. Thanks again!
Very nice! Thanks.
Care to share the dates and differences between your build and say CM's? or perhaps a link to your builds progress?
I know you have done great work with BT, didn't want to get off topic, but I'm curious.
Thanks again.
12paq said:
Very nice! Thanks.
Care to share the dates and differences between your build and say CM's? or perhaps a link to your builds progress?
I know you have done great work with BT, didn't want to get off topic, but I'm curious.
Thanks again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I did not work on BT (other than helping with testing), so I don't claim any credits there.
The difference between standard build and my build so far is only that my build has patched init files to boot from SD right in the zip file. (CM7 checkout as of today ~12pm), it was only created for testing, before I rolled the code that could update vanilla builds to work on SD cards.
You can use unmodified CM7 nightlies with this sdcard image now. The image itself does not contain any CM7 code, you need to copy zip file with it after writing the image to the SD card, but before attempting to boot.
Verygreen, I believe you have won the game. Congratulations!
Ah yes, I stand corrected, you created the first CM7 sd bootable for testing of BT.
Thanks again for your time on this latest project!
First off, this works very well! Thanks!
Now, after getting CM7 running on the sdcard, I plug the device into the usb port on my computer and instruct it to mount the sdcard. But, instead of the sdcard partition being mounted, the emmc partition is mounted.
Was that intentional or is it a bug?
Thanks
Thanks very easy to setup!
atomclock said:
First off, this works very well! Thanks!
Now, after getting CM7 running on the sdcard, I plug the device into the usb port on my computer and instruct it to mount the sdcard. But, instead of the sdcard partition being mounted, the emmc partition is mounted.
Was that intentional or is it a bug?
Thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
New code in CM7 actually should cause both internal MMC AND sdcard to be mounted.
That is unless you used 1G sdcard, 1G sdcard does not have any mountable free space and then you'd only see emmc content as mountable.
verygreen said:
New code in CM7 actually should cause both internal MMC AND sdcard to be mounted.
That is unless you used 1G sdcard, 1G sdcard does not have any mountable free space and then you'd only see emmc content as mountable.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm using an 8Gb sdcard and I can access both the emmc and sdcard partitions through ADB but only the emmc partition is mounted.
So, I just need to try this with a different nightly build until I find one where the issue is corrected?
Well, I tried it with both cm_encore_full-25 and cm_encore_full-26 and still only the emmc partition is mounted.
atomclock said:
I'm using an 8Gb sdcard and I can access both the emmc and sdcard partitions through ADB but only the emmc partition is mounted.
So, I just need to try this with a different nightly build until I find one where the issue is corrected?
Well, I tried it with both cm_encore_full-25 and cm_encore_full-26 and still only the emmc partition is mounted.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As long as everything is mounted internally I don't think my changes broke anything else, so if there is a bug it's in the CM7 build itself.
I don't actually mount my nook on the computer, so I don't even know how to enable it by default come think of it.
I just know there was an ongoing work in this area to allow simultaneous mounting of multiple volumes and I heard it was already included, though I am not 100% sure about that.
To verygreen:
Well, I'm certainly doing something wrong here:
1. Using Win32DiskImager release 0.2 r23, i burnt my 2 GB with your generic.... .img image.
2. Copied your update.... .zip (on a second attempt an original cm_encore... .zip, plus gapps-GB-20110307-...zip, as installer was asking for it, at least to inflate), now I suspect your "put" is not equal to my "copy".
3. Tried to boot, enjoyed the penguin and boot scroll, but after everything was finished and prepared to "really" boot the boot was executed from my eMMC instead.
aludal said:
To verygreen:
Well, I'm certainly doing something wrong here:
1. Using Win32DiskImager release 0.2 r23, i burnt my 2 GB with your generic.... .img image.
2. Copied your update.... .zip (on a second attempt an original cm_encore... .zip, plus gapps-GB-20110307-...zip, as installer was asking for it, at least to inflate), now I suspect your "put" is not equal to my "copy".
3. Tried to boot, enjoyed the penguin and boot scroll, but after everything was finished and prepared to "really" boot the boot was executed from my eMMC instead.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, the automatic reboot boots into eMMC for now, I am looking into it.
So just reboot again with the card in.
also, don't put gapps on the card at the first try. This combination does not boot for me into the desktop for some reason that I did not get to the root of. Possibly because it want internet connection setup that still is not if you try it on your first boot.
Thanks verygreen! This is a fantastic build! I was able to quickly and easily install this on my sd card.
Thanks again!
verygreen said:
Yes, the automatic reboot boots into eMMC for now, I am looking into it.
So just reboot again with the card in.
also, don't put gapps on the card at the first try. This combination does not boot for me into the desktop for some reason that I did not get to the root of. Possibly because it want internet connection setup that still is not if you try it on your first boot.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Somehow I went into non-booting phase, lol. My guess is after booting into my rooted Eclair with bookmarks-and-other-stuff-to SD I've got me an SD card not really good for "second" boot. Just have no idea what Eclair might do to that EXT4.
Anyways, repeated the experiment, now with pressing Power for >5 sec. Has booted into CyanogenMod 7 without a problem.
Can't do whatever testing: missing GAPPS very mucho! Please, Mr. verygreen, compile it into your image. In any case, I'm not really interested in swapping nightlies on this card -- by the last commits they didn't change much/significantly since n18. Just a static SD image of CM7 n26 + latest (03072011) Gapps will be a very desirable "mod" of yours. In any case you did exactly that (minus Gapps) for n17. Sure, there's a complete procedure of building SD image, but it's obviously much better followed when with a Linux box, and I don't have it.
aludal said:
Somehow I went into non-booting phase, lol. My guess is after booting into my rooted Eclair with bookmarks-and-other-stuff-to SD I've got me an SD card not really good for "second" boot. Just have no idea what Eclair might do to that EXT4.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Supposedly nothing. I routinely boot into eclair and then insert CM7 sdcard and it's fine.
aludal said:
Can't do whatever testing: missing GAPPS very mucho! Please, Mr. verygreen, compile it into your image. In any case, I'm not really interested in swapping nightlies on this card -- by the last commits they didn't change much/significantly since n18. Just a static SD image of CM7 n26 + latest (03072011) Gapps will be a very desirable "mod" of yours. In any case you did exactly that (minus Gapps) for n17. Sure, there's a complete procedure of building SD image, but it's obviously much better followed when with a Linux box, and I don't have it.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I can't distribute gapps, like I said
Well, until I figure out why recovery boot does not work what you can try to do is this:
after initial install was successful (and you setup your wireless), power off the nook, get the sd card.
Download gapps-gb-...zip and put it on the first partition.
move the uImage file to uImage.bak and uRamdisk to uRamdisk.bak.
Copy uRecImage to uImage and uRecRam to uRamdisk.
boot with the resulting image. It should say that it found the gapps archive and unpack it.
After it flushes caches and reboots, power off, put the sd card back into the computer
move uImage.bak to uImage and uRamdisk.bak to uRamdisk
boot off the card again, hopefully the gapps are working after that.
Please let me know if any problems arise.
verygreen said:
Supposedly nothing. I routinely boot into eclair and then insert CM7 sdcard and it's fine.
I can't distribute gapps, like I said
Well, until I figure out why recovery boot does not work what you can try to do is this:
after initial install was successful (and you setup your wireless), power off the nook, get the sd card.
Download gapps-gb-...zip and put it on the first partition.
move the uImage file to uImage.bak and uRamdisk to uRamdisk.bak.
Copy uRecImage to uImage and uRecRam to uRamdisk.
boot with the resulting image. It should say that it found the gapps archive and unpack it.
After it flushes caches and reboots, power off, put the sd card back into the computer
move uImage.bak to uImage and uRamdisk.bak to uRamdisk
boot off the card again, hopefully the gapps are working after that.
Please let me know if any problems arise.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I just tried following your directions for installing the gapps zip file. After renaming the uImage and the uRamdisk files the nook boots to your recovery with the penguin shows up with the follow:
Populating /dev using udev: done
Initializing random number generator....done
modprobe: chdir (2.6.32.9): No such file or directory
Starting network...
Detected Standard B&N nook layout, emmc first
It appears the SD card is already properly formatted
Skipping format
Mounting /dev/mmcblk1p1 as /boot
Looking for the install images....
Initial Install files not found
Please download it from nook.linuxhacker.ru
and put on first partition of this SD card
the name should start with updatei-cm and end with .zip
Then the cursor just sits. No installation of the .zip file. Do I have to have the original cm zip file on the sd card with the gapp zip file? I thought it was posted that doesn't work.
Also thanks for the great work on this so far.
Absolutely Fantastic and pain free. You have done a great service.
Thanks
verygreen -
Would this work with an Android 3.0 Honeycomb Preview build, instead of a CM7 build ?
Modra76 said:
I just tried following your directions for installing the gapps zip file. After renaming the uImage and the uRamdisk files the nook boots to your recovery with the penguin shows up with the follow:
Populating /dev using udev: done
Initializing random number generator....done
modprobe: chdir (2.6.32.9): No such file or directory
Starting network...
Detected Standard B&N nook layout, emmc first
It appears the SD card is already properly formatted
Skipping format
Mounting /dev/mmcblk1p1 as /boot
Looking for the install images....
Initial Install files not found
Please download it from nook.linuxhacker.ru
and put on first partition of this SD card
the name should start with updatei-cm and end with .zip
Then the cursor just sits. No installation of the .zip file. Do I have to have the original cm zip file on the sd card with the gapp zip file? I thought it was posted that doesn't work.
Also thanks for the great work on this so far.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Seeing the same. Also tried naming the gapps file "update.zip", to no avail.

[HOW-TO] Building a CM10.1 (JB 4.2.x) SD card for Nook Tablet

[Caveat emptor: adopt/follow this guide at your own risk].
FWIW, below is a digest of the process to create a SD card running CM10.1 builds by XDA Developer Succulent which is posted at his blog http://iamafanof.wordpress.com and which I have used to build a CM10.1 (version dated 20130629) SD card for my Nook Tablet. Thanks to Succulent for this great CM10.1 build!!!
[Note that Succulent provides at his blog (http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013...-1-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet-0110/) pre-made images of his CM10.1 builds that can simply be burn to SDcard (using DiskImage_1_6_WinAll or Win32DiskImager) after which the SD card would be immediately ready-for-use. The process in this post is meant for those folks who would like to build the SDcard image "from scratch" – so as to avoid downloading the large-size (420+MB) pre-made images, or to have a bit more flexibility in sizing the various partitions on the card].
Using a disk partition tool (such as MiniTool Partition Wizard Home Edition) create 4 partitions: boot (Primary, FAT32), system (Primary, Ext4), data (Primary, Ext4), and sdcard (Primary, FAT32). Set the partition ID type for the boot partition to 0x0C FAT32 LBA and set its Active flag (otherwise the SDcard will not be bootable). Once this is done, the boot partition should appear as a (read/write accessible) drive under Windows. (Note that you can adjust the suggested sizes of the partitions upward to fill up the entire SDcard; FWIW the sizes I use on my 8GB card for the 4 partitions are, respectively: 0.5GB/0.5GB/2GB/[remainder of SDcard]).
Download boot.zip from http://goo.im/devs/succulent/acclaim/boot.zip (or alternatively from http://www.mediafire.com/download/000wv0dmfwqpvzi/boot.zip).
Extract and copy to the boot partition of the SD card the following files from boot.zip: MLO, u-boot.bin, and flashing_boot.img. (These 3 files can also be found in the /boot partition of any of Succulent's pre-made CM10.x SD card images).
Download the pair of files cm_acclaim_10.1_[ddmonthyear]_HD_SDC.zip and gapps-jb-20130301-signed-SDC.zip from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013/02/18/cm10-1-jellybean-android-4-2-2-for-nook-tablet-0218/.
Copy to the boot partition of the SD card cm_acclaim_10.1_[ddmonthyear]_HD_SDC.zip and gapps-jb-20130301-signed-SDC.zip.
Extract and copy to the boot partition of the SD card the following files from cm_acclaim_10.1_[ddmonthyear]_HD_SDC.zip: boot.img and recovery.img.
Put the SD card into the NT, and boot from its power off by inserting a powered USB cable. Press and hold the N button as soon as CyanoBoot comes up to get the boot menu to display.
Select SDC Recovery.
Select "Install zip from SD card" and install the cm_acclaim_10.1_[ddmonthyear]_HD_SDC.zip file.
Select "Install zip from SD card" and install the gapps-jb-20130301-signed-SDC.zip file.
Press and hold power button to turn off the NT.
Boot the NT from its power off by inserting a powered USB cable; the NT will boot into Cyanoboot which will load (CM10.1) boot by default, after about a couple of minutes you should see boot animation lasting for a few minutes followed by initial wifi network and google account setup process, after which your CM10.1 on SD is ready for use.
A few additional points worth noting:
The two most common symptoms of failed SD boot (on insertion of a powered USB cable) and their likely causes are:
The NT boots straight to stock -- most likely the boot partition's type and/or flags are not correctly set, or the NT cannot find the MLO in the boot partition (see comment re: the ordering in file copying above).
The NT screen stays dark for minutes then eventually boots to stock -- most likely the MLO or u-boot.bin are corrupted. I have had this happen to me a few times in the process of extracting them from archive zip files and also in ftp transfers between machines (need to use "binary" instead of "auto" mode). When in doubt, check the exact size of the files in bytes, they should be respectively 38,356 and 179,812.
Generally the lower rating (and also cheaper) class 4 SD cards are more suitable for running a ROM than the higher classes 6 and 10 cards (since the latter are optimized for large & sequential block read/write at the expense of random read/write). So if you happen to use a class 10 or 6 card and your apps frequently crash or freeze, consider switching to a lower class SD card. See this thread http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1005633 for extensive discussion of SD card makes/models' comparative performance for use in hosting ROM.
To update the SDcard when Succulent posts a new build, simply repeat steps 4 through 12.
Thanks for this. I have an old SD card for CM7 that I did months ages ago so this will be good.
Sent from my Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet using xda premium
Booting always requires powered USB cable connection?
digixmax said:
Boot the NT from its power off by inserting a powered USB cable...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
After initial installation and setup, is the powered USB cable connection required for all subsequent boots? I won't bother if booting always requires tethering to a PC.
b3rt0h said:
After initial installation and setup, is the powered USB cable connection required for all subsequent boots? I won't bother if booting always requires tethering to a PC.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It doesn't ... I was confused by this also. I went ahead and did the SD card and now I can boot to CM7 or CM10. I'm really liking CM10, works great !
You're one of the lucky ones to have an NT which can boot off SD un-tethered.
digixmax said:
You're one of the lucky ones to have an NT which can boot off SD un-tethered.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's definitely something to do with more than the device itself. I formatted a Samsung 8gb class 6 and it wouldn't boot without being tethered. I then formatted a SanDisk 16gb class 10, same device, and it boots fine without usb tether.
Sent from my Nexus 10 using Tapatalk HD
Neither of the two Tablets I have had need the cable to boot.On those occasions when I have had problems booting to the card (or to internal CWM) what I've done is press and hold the "n" button right after I pressed power.
asawi said:
Neither of the two Tablets I have had need the cable to boot.On those occasions when I have had problems booting to the card (or to internal CWM) what I've done is press and hold the "n" button right after I pressed power.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This is exactly how mine is doing. I have found that a power down is the best way to go between OS's. I really like CM10.1 so much I'm ready to bite the bullet and go with it. I think it's just as stable as my CM7 OS The guys and gals writing this stuff are GREAT :good:
ps: When I go into CM7 with the boot SD card it takes around 2 mins to boot. It is slower but it works.
Partition sizes on larger micro SDXC card.
Hope this helps others... I followed OPs procedure to install cm-10.1-20130117-acclaim-HD-SDC.zip and cm-10.1-20121212-gapps.zip. At first I had a bad experience because I used gapps-jb-20121212-signed.zip from the google website ( IE would not let me download the "cm" version.) I then used Foxfire to download the "cm" version from iamafanof and everything seems to work fine. Followed OPs directions exactly. I'm using a SanDisk Ultra 64GB sdxc card with partition sizes: BOOT (2GB) , SYSTEM (2GB), DATA1 (16 GB), SDCARD (all the rest).
success! boots without PC tether
b3rt0h said:
After initial installation and setup, is the powered USB cable connection required for all subsequent boots? I won't bother if booting always requires tethering to a PC.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I successfully built a working CM10.1 SD card. It boots without PC tether just fine.
Data point: Nook Tablet 16GB. SanDisk 16GB Class 6 microSDHC Card. cm-10.1-20130117-acclaim-HD-SDC.zip.
Thanks to all the developers for making this possible. And thanks to digixmax for posting the instructions.
First, thank you for the well-written instructions.
I'm trying to learn how to build an SD card that would just have CyanoBoot, CWM (as main recovery), and TWRP (as alternate recovery), and default by default into Internal eMMC Normal. I've done steps 1, 2, 3, and 6. I then grabbed flashable_TWRP_2.4.3.0.zip from http://goo.im/devs/succulent/acclaim/recovery, extracted it's recovery.img and put it in the Boot partition as altboot.img.
It boots to CyanoBoot, and I can run CWM, but when I try to select SDC ALTBOOT, it just flashes back to the CyanoBoot screen for a few moments and then I just a blank screen.
Question 1: Am I doing something incorrect in my method to get TWRP as an alternate recovery?
Question 2: How do I configure it to boot to eMMC by default? fattire has this instruction:
To Make Default Always Boot To EMMC
$ echo -n “1” > /bootdata/u-boot.device
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Being on a Windows pc, I tried creating a file (with Notepad++) in the BOOT partition called u-boot.device, with just the number 1 in it, but it still attempts to boot from SDC.
Thanks in advance.
InUrKitchin said:
First, thank you for the well-written instructions.
I'm trying to learn how to build an SD card that would just have CyanoBoot, CWM (as main recovery), and TWRP (as alternate recovery), and default by default into Internal eMMC Normal. I've done steps 1, 2, 3, and 6. I then grabbed from http://goo.im/devs/succulent/acclaim/recovery, extracted it's recovery.img and put it in the Boot partition as altboot.img.
It boots to CyanoBoot, and I can run CWM, but when I try to select SDC ALTBOOT, it just flashes back to the CyanoBoot screen for a few moments and then I just a blank screen.
Question 1: Am I doing something incorrect in my method to get TWRP as an alternate recovery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
flashable_TWRP_2.4.3.0.zip is meant for flashing into /recovery on emmc; you need to use instead twrp_2.4.3.0_acclaim_recovery_sdcard.img, just rename it to altboot.img and copy the renamed file to SDcard /boot.
Question 2: How do I configure it to boot to eMMC by default? fattire has this instruction
To Make Default Always Boot To EMMC
$ echo -n “1” > /bootdata/u-boot.device
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Click to collapse
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I believe fattire's instruction is meant only for booting and running on emmc.
Thanks, that worked. I assumed that since it didn't say "internal" or "external" that it was for either.
Sent from my Acclaim using xda app-developers app
Thanks for the well laid out guide OP. I used it to flash CM10.1. Somehow I ended up flashing CM10 to emmc but all is well . This guide was a tremendous help.
lrs421 said:
Thanks for the well laid out guide OP. I used it to flash CM10.1. Somehow I ended up flashing CM10 to emmc but all is well . This guide was a tremendous help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You must have picked up the ROM and Gapps zip file versions that are built for EMMC. The versions compiled by Succulent (http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013/02/18/cm10-1-jellybean-android-4-2-2-for-nook-tablet-0218/) for SD have filenames ending with SDC.zip suffix.
digixmax said:
You must have picked up the ROM and Gapps zip file versions that are built for EMMC. The versions compiled by Succulent (http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013/02/18/cm10-1-jellybean-android-4-2-2-for-nook-tablet-0218/) for SD have filenames ending with SDC.zip suffix.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yup. That's exactly what I did. I flashed the SDC zips first then flashed CM10 and matching gapps.
Sent from my Barnes & Noble Nook Tablet using xda premium
Hi, I've followed the instructions in the OP but my NT stays blank when I plug in the USB cable and then boots to stock. The only thing I've changed is the partitions (0.5GB/0.5GB/8GB/remainder) on a 32GB micro SD card. It has worked before so I don't think my card is the problem. Does anyone have any advice?
SDragon64 said:
Hi, I've followed the instructions in the OP but my NT stays blank when I plug in the USB cable and then boots to stock. The only thing I've changed is the partitions (0.5GB/0.5GB/8GB/remainder) on a 32GB micro SD card. It has worked before so I don't think my card is the problem. Does anyone have any advice?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
See note under "The two most common symptoms of failed SD boot" in OP.
If you have re-sized the partitions of a previously working CM10 SD image, I'd suggest checking to make sure the boot partition is still of the correct type 0x0C FAT32 LBA and with Active flag set. In my experience, the partition re-sizing operation occasionally messed up the partition table causing the first partition to become not bootable (even when it was not the partition that got re-sized).
I've checked the two most common problems in the OP and verified the sizes of both the MLO and u-bin files and I've ensured that I've copied the necessary files in the order required by the OP. I've also set the boot partition to active and the ID to 0x0C FAT32 LBA but the NT stays blank when I plug in the USB cable.
FWIW I'm using cm_acclaim_10.1.1-RC0_07JUL2013_HD_SDC.zip.

[Q] Nook Tablet 8GB Dead. need help figuring it out.

I have a Nook Tablet 8GB that wont boot, just hangs on the 'N' logo.
I have been going though every suggested nook tablet "bricked" and "dead" forum post i can find. most are for the 16gb model.
I can get the CWM_NT to boot from external SD card, but it hangs at the "tapped box" logo.
I can get the cyan boot loader to work, and i try to load CWM "recovery.img" and the TWRP "altboot.img" from SD card, and they seem to load, but the screen gets all pixel filled and hangs, wont boot into any recovery from the SD card.
I was unable to get ADB to load in windows, and im not sure how to get that working in ubuntu.
Im looking for help to get the stock nook software working on the internal SD. I may need to reformat the internal partitions, and im willing to try everything.
anyone who can help me, and any questions i can answer for you please let me know i could really use your help.
jbrennan said:
I have a Nook Tablet 8GB that wont boot, just hangs on the 'N' logo.
I have been going though every suggested nook tablet "bricked" and "dead" forum post i can find. most are for the 16gb model.
I can get the CWM_NT to boot from external SD card, but it hangs at the "tapped box" logo.
I can get the cyan boot loader to work, and i try to load CWM "recovery.img" and the TWRP "altboot.img" from SD card, and they seem to load, but the screen gets all pixel filled and hangs, wont boot into any recovery from the SD card.
I was unable to get ADB to load in windows, and im not sure how to get that working in ubuntu.
Im looking for help to get the stock nook software working on the internal SD. I may need to reformat the internal partitions, and im willing to try everything.
anyone who can help me, and any questions i can answer for you please let me know i could really use your help.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can use this to get back to stock:
http://raywaldo.com/2012/06/how-to-un-brick-a-nook-tablet-8gb-or-16gb/
I suggest using an SDC boot instead of internal ROM, especially if you don't know what you're doing.
Head over to goo.im for succulent builds. Download the SDC image for cm10. Once you flash use whatever SDC ROM you want.
Thanks for the fast reply, i have tried that method, and the parted fix it recommends. but i cant seem to get ether to work. I flash my sd card with the repart.img and boot my nook tablet 8gb, but it wont do anything. i leave it alone for 20-30 minutes on a the N logo, that software install message never shows up.
i have android sdk installed, and try to adb push parted command as well, and it fails with device not found. i have the nook showing up as "acclaim" in device manager.
still bricked.
datallboy said:
...
I suggest using an SDC boot instead of internal ROM, especially if you don't know what you're doing.
Head over to goo.im for succulent builds. Download the SDC image for cm10. Once you flash use whatever SDC ROM you want.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@jbrennan: as @datallboy suggested you should try to burn and run Succulent CM10.0 image (cm-10-20121231-NOOKTABLET-acclaim-HD-SDC-img posted at http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/) off SD card. If that does not boot successfully your NT is likely hosed hardware-wise, but if it does you can try the next step of recovering internal ROM.
Thanks again for the fast replies.
I can get the nook tablet 8GB to boot the SD card, and when i let it "boot" SDC normal, or pick recovery SDC, i get a screen that hangs like this picture i took attached.
is it hosed? or fixable?
jbrennan said:
Thanks again for the fast replies.
I can get the nook tablet 8GB to boot the SD card, and when i let it "boot" SDC normal, or pick recovery SDC, i get a screen that hangs like this picture i took attached.
is it hosed? or fixable?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That might be hardware related. The older versions of cyanoboot make a similar screen when booting anything. It only happens for a second then boots into the ROM or recovery.
It might not be able to boot into anything is all. So if it is hardware related I can't help much.
Could it be the partition table? i read that if that's damaged nothing will boot. is there a way to fix the partition table if SD card wont boot recovery?
jbrennan said:
Could it be the partition table? i read that if that's damaged nothing will boot. is there a way to fix the partition table if SD card wont boot recovery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well if your boot data partition is damaged then it might not boot. Adam outlet total reflash might have helped it, but for some reason it only works on 16 GB tablet.
I don't know of any ways you could essentially rebuild your boot data partition. Maybe another me member might be able to help though.

[Q] NT With CM7 & CM10 Cannot recognize WIFI

I am new at rooting, this is the first device I have tried to root. I followed the thread for a triple boot CM7 , CM9 and CM10 (also stock OS) from Malloneem. I decided to only flash CM7 and CM10 to NT 1.4.3. Everything worked great, except during the initial setup of both CM7 and CM10 it will not recognize my WiFi. I have tried twice, after first time I wiped NT and reformatted the sd card and started from scratch. same result both times.
I read through the replies and noticed that someone else had the same problem. the response said to wipe the cache and it should fix the dalvik. I wiped both the cache then tried and then wiped the dalvik and had the same results. With the CM10 it says "turning on wifi" and stays there.
I am a new member to xda so I cannot post a reply to the original thread.
Any help would be much appreciated.
If I cannot get this to work is there another method where you can use CM10 and stock OS? (something that is extreamly easy to follow)
Bears85 said:
I am new at rooting, this is the first device I have tried to root. I followed the thread for a triple boot CM7 , CM9 and CM10 (also stock OS) from Malloneem. I decided to only flash CM7 and CM10 to NT 1.4.3. Everything worked great, except during the initial setup of both CM7 and CM10 it will not recognize my WiFi. I have tried twice, after first time I wiped NT and reformatted the sd card and started from scratch. same result both times.
I read through the replies and noticed that someone else had the same problem. the response said to wipe the cache and it should fix the dalvik. I wiped both the cache then tried and then wiped the dalvik and had the same results. With the CM10 it says "turning on wifi" and stays there.
I am a new member to xda so I cannot post a reply to the original thread.
Any help would be much appreciated.
If I cannot get this to work is there another method where you can use CM10 and stock OS? (something that is extreamly easy to follow)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can use this:
http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013...-1-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet-0110/
Write the image file to an SD card and you'll be good to go. You can use a repartitioning software to expand the partitions on your SD if you want. Use the instructions on the link I provided.
The SD card image will contain CM10.1 4.1.2. If you want to use a different ROM you can download the SDC version of any ROM ( has to be SDC!), place the zip on your SD card or internal storage. Boot into SDC recovery and installed the zip file. You'll need the GAPPS zip also (which has to be SDC also.)
Thank you for the help. My appologies for the redundant question but when I flash this ROM I will be able to bounce between CM10 and the stock B& N OS correct?
Bears85 said:
Thank you for the help. My appologies for the redundant question but when I flash this ROM I will be able to bounce between CM10 and the stock B& N OS correct?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes. Because CM 10 will be on your SD card. Stock will be on your internal. If your internal partitions or anything is messed up ( maybe the reason you can't boot stock) you can tell from CM.
datallboy said:
Yes. Because CM 10 will be on your SD card. Stock will be on your internal. If your internal partitions or anything is messed up ( maybe the reason you can't boot stock) you can tell from CM.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you again. I have read throught the instructions on the link you provided and I am a little confused on the partitioning part. As I mentioned before this is my first time rooting anything. The instructions on the triple boot regarding the partitioning of the sdc were clear giving sizes for the newly created partitions etc., I didn't see that on this link (unless I missed it). Could you explain it so a newbie can understand it?
Thanks.
Bears85 said:
Thank you again. I have read throught the instructions on the link you provided and I am a little confused on the partitioning part. As I mentioned before this is my first time rooting anything. The instructions on the triple boot regarding the partitioning of the sdc were clear giving sizes for the newly created partitions etc., I didn't see that on this link (unless I missed it). Could you explain it so a newbie can understand it?
Thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well is there any reason why you would like triple boot? You need a fairly good size SD card if you want three systems. I just provided the simplest way to run cm on the nook. Write the image to your SD card and it will make it boot able. If you want to triple boot then setup your SD card partitions like you had before, but you only need to install the zips as alt boots.
Again, you probably don't need triple boot. Cm10+ has everything you'll need.
datallboy said:
Well is there any reason why you would like triple boot? You need a fairly good size SD card if you want three systems. I just provided the simplest way to run cm on the nook. Write the image to your SD card and it will make it boot able. If you want to triple boot then setup your SD card partitions like you had before, but you only need to install the zips as alt boots.
Again, you probably don't need triple boot. Cm10+ has everything you'll need.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No, I dont need the triple boot. Being a newbie I may have misread something (probably the case) but the link you gave me directed me to partition the sd card. it was this portion that was not clear to me. I was referencing the directions for partitioning on the triple boot thread as a comparison. The site you gave me said to partition the card but gave reference as to how big to make each partition. I don't need the triple boot.
My kid uses the NT to help read (read to me, etc...) I wanted something to get more of a tablet feel while keeping the stock system as well.
Thank you again. I appreciate the help. I will look at it again.
Bears85 said:
No, I dont need the triple boot. Being a newbie I may have misread something (probably the case) but the link you gave me directed me to partition the sd card. it was this portion that was not clear to me. I was referencing the directions for partitioning on the triple boot thread as a comparison. The site you gave me said to partition the card but gave reference as to how big to make each partition. I don't need the triple boot.
My kid uses the NT to help read (read to me, etc...) I wanted something to get more of a tablet feel while keeping the stock system as well.
Thank you again. I appreciate the help. I will look at it again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On the iamafanof site you can scroll down there will be an SDC image. There is a difference between the image and the zips. All you need to do is download the SDC image, write it go your SD card using an file writer ( win32 disk writer will do) and your SD card will be ready to boot. Put it in your nook and and it will boot cyanoboot and should automatically do a SDC boot. It takes a little bit for the first boot to start ( usually 2 or 3 minutes)
Once you get your nook to boot cm I can tell you how to expand your SD partitions to hold more apps.
If you still have problems with WiFi it may be a different problem ( shouldn't happen).
If you need help or need a step by step guide I can find one or make one for you.
datallboy said:
...
If you need help or need a step by step guide I can find one or make one for you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just in time, "hot off the press" (almost) step-by-step guide: http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013...-2-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet-0416/.
For a more stable ROM build, use the CM10.0 image dated 12/31 in cm-10-20121231-NOOKTABLET-acclaim-HD-SDC-img.rar posted at http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/.
datallboy said:
On the iamafanof site you can scroll down there will be an SDC image. There is a difference between the image and the zips. All you need to do is download the SDC image, write it go your SD card using an file writer ( win32 disk writer will do) and your SD card will be ready to boot. Put it in your nook and and it will boot cyanoboot and should automatically do a SDC boot. It takes a little bit for the first boot to start ( usually 2 or 3 minutes)
Once you get your nook to boot cm I can tell you how to expand your SD partitions to hold more apps.
If you still have problems with WiFi it may be a different problem ( shouldn't happen).
If you need help or need a step by step guide I can find one or make one for you.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you for your help. I worked and was simple. If you could explain the partitioning that would be great. If not, its working just the way I want it.
Thank you again!!
Bears85 said:
Thank you for your help. I worked and was simple. If you could explain the partitioning that would be great. If not, its working just the way I want it.
Thank you again!!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have 4 partitions on your SD card: boot, system, data, sdcard. Your boot partition holds the files the boot CM. This is where recovery, mlo, uboot, etc is. System holds files essential for the ROM to work.
The only two you need to worry about are data and SD. Your data partitions holds apps. That is when you download an app the files in the apk file are put there. This would be like your internal storage for any phone or tablet. SD card is like an external SD card for your phone or tablet. Its where extra data files, photos, music etc go.
Depending on what size of SD card you have determines how big you can expand your data or SD partition.
Using a partitioning software ( like GParted) you can change the partitions and expand them to the side you want. I have a 16 GB SD card. So I expanded my data partition to 4 GB, and the rest went to SD card. Its okay to delete data or SD partition to expand it, but don't delete boot or system because you'll have to reformat the card and write the image file to the card again ( and ain't nobody got time for that.)
datallboy said:
You have 4 partitions on your SD card: boot, system, data, sdcard. Your boot partition holds the files the boot CM. This is where recovery, mlo, uboot, etc is. System holds files essential for the ROM to work.
The only two you need to worry about are data and SD. Your data partitions holds apps. That is when you download an app the files in the apk file are put there. This would be like your internal storage for any phone or tablet. SD card is like an external SD card for your phone or tablet. Its where extra data files, photos, music etc go.
Depending on what size of SD card you have determines how big you can expand your data or SD partition.
Using a partitioning software ( like GParted) you can change the partitions and expand them to the side you want. I have a 16 GB SD card. So I expanded my data partition to 4 GB, and the rest went to SD card. Its okay to delete data or SD partition to expand it, but don't delete boot or system because you'll have to reformat the card and write the image file to the card again ( and ain't nobody got time for that.)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
This worked great!! thanks for all your help!!

[Q] Successful CM10 install, now can't boot from SD

After succesfully burning and running the img from iamafanof.wordpress jellybean-android-4-3-for-nook-tablet. I decided I wanted to have more control over partition size etc and load a ROM from an SD card instead.
So I followed or at least thought I followed the instructions here. iamafanof.wordpress how-to-guide-bootable-cm7cm9cm10-sdcard-for-nook-tablet. However, I thought I was creating a bootable SD card with the ROM on it, but I installed the ROM on the internal nook memory by mistake. The nook tablet runs CM10 well.
The issue is I intended to be able to switch from CM10 on the SD card to the Nook OS like I could originally with the SD card img I mentioned previously. I cannot get the Nook Tablet 8gb to boot from the SD card. I only get CyanaBoot with the options to boot internet or boot internal recovery. The recovery options does nothing and the internal boot takes me into CM10. The SD options are greyed out. I have tried probably 5 different SD boot images including 2 that I know have worked previously. Also tried 3 different SD cards 2 of which I know worked previously. I am powering completely off and then plugging in USB to turn back on as described through the forum. I have tried using the Nook Recovery and it goes through the steps it looks as if it restoring to original state, but it only restores CM10 to original state.
My question is how to I get my Nook to boot to SD or can I somehow use my working CM10 ROM to get things restored to original NOOK OS. My goal is to wipe the Nook clean and go back to original state and then correctly create a CM10 SD boot card. I am a newbie to the Nook, but feel like I have explored all of the most easy to find options on the this forum to fix this.
I have no idea what you were trying to do and what went wrong (because what you say doesn't make sense).
Anyway... Try using the repart.img to get back to stock.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1663836
Instruction in the link I provided is very detailed. Short version: Downolad the 1.42 recovery, unzip and burn an sd-card with the repart.img you will find in the extracted folder. Boot to that sd-card and a restore process will start. After a while (a few minutes?) a green checkmark hopefully appears. Pop out the card and the Tablet will reboot and finish the process and you're back to stock 1.4.0 or something like that.
Iamafanof has ready-made sd images oc both CM10 and CM10.1. Use one of those. Don't overcomplicate things. Use one of them! (Not that I get why you couldn't stay with the one you were running already... That's kind of what doesnät make sense to me.)
CM10 http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/ (my favourite)
CM 10.1 http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013...-1-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet-0110/
asawi said:
I have no idea what you were trying to do and what went wrong (because what you say doesn't make sense).
Anyway... Try using the repart.img to get back to stock.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1663836
Instruction in the link I provided is very detailed. Short version: Downolad the 1.42 recovery, unzip and burn an sd-card with the repart.img you will find in the extracted folder. Boot to that sd-card and a restore process will start. After a while (a few minutes?) a green checkmark hopefully appears. Pop out the card and the Tablet will reboot and finish the process and you're back to stock 1.4.0 or something like that.
Iamafanof has ready-made sd images oc both CM10 and CM10.1. Use one of those. Don't overcomplicate things. Use one of them! (Not that I get why you couldn't stay with the one you were running already... That's kind of what doesnät make sense to me.)
CM10 http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2012/11/18/cm10-0-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet/ (my favourite)
CM 10.1 http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013...-1-jellybean-sdcard-img-for-nook-tablet-0110/
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry for not being clear. After I accidentally installed CM10 internally on the nook I can no longer boot from an SD card. I have tried your guide and at least 5 others now. I follow the steps to a T. I have made 3 working SD boot cards for the Nook prior to installing CM10 internally. I understand the process. I have 3 different SD cards and none of which make a bootable SD card. Somehow now that CM10 is installed and the cyanaboot comes up on reboot with the options to boot internal or boot internal recovery. The SD options are greyed out. No matter how many different SD cards I use and boot instructions I follow. It will not read the SD card on boot. It does read it fine once the OS boots. I do not currently have gapps installed. So even If i wanted to keep the internal CM10 install I still need to be able to boot from SD to install gapps.
bpowner said:
...
Somehow now that CM10 is installed and the cyanaboot comes up on reboot with the options to boot internal or boot internal recovery. The SD options are greyed out.
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Instead of rebooting while in CM, have you tried to boot off SD from power-off state and by inserting a powered USB cable?
digixmax said:
Instead of rebooting while in CM, have you tried to boot off SD from power-off state and by inserting a powered USB cable?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes. That is the method I am using. power down. Insert USB. Nook powers up. Cyanotboot Menu comes up. SD boot options are not available. At this point I am ok with just having CM10 on it, but I really need to get the google apps loaded onto the Nook. It simply will not boot from SD or recognize the SD card during boot. It does recognize from within the android OS and on my Windows machine. It shows Nook as an external device and I can access the SD card that way. It just will not boot from the SD card.
Just confirm: you've tried Succulent's pre-made CM10.x SD image (suc as cm_acclaim_10.2.0-RC0_13OCT2013_HD_SDC_IMG.7z from http://iamafanof.wordpress.com/2013...id-4-3-for-nook-tablet-imgsdc-boot-09aug2013/ -- unpack it with 7-zip then write the image to SD with win32diskimager) and it didn't boot either?
FWIW, you can find some info/pointers on making bootable SDcard from http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=36685310&postcount=1 and http://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=37515697&postcount=31.

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