remove some stock apps and then disable/ restrict any further software changes - Android Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

After I root a phone, I would like to be able to uninstall/remove some stock apps (for example, stock Messaging app) and add some new apps (for example, 3d-party Messaging app).
Do I need Titanium app to achieve that? Or is there something more lightweight?
After I complete the setup, I want to disable/ restrict any further software changes. Pretty much the same as Window OS "Admin" VS "Standard User"
So I guess I would need some app manager capable of permission managing.
Any advice on my project? Will my phone be as stable as the original stock after such modding?
The phones: Moto E2 and Moto G2 and G3, Android 5.01 or 6.01

Well, Backing Up the Stock Content before doing any Modding to your Phone is a Good Practice and Extremely Recommended in Case of any worst case scenarios and you can achieve the same by Titanium Back or any Other app Readily available on Play Store.
After Back up, Yes, you can Uninstall PreInstalled apps or any other bloatware that you may don't want in your phone. And Install 3rd Party apps in place of stock Ones.
Talking about Permissions, until/unless you give Root Access to that App, it won't be able to Make any changes in the System. So, you also have to keep a check on giving Root permissions to apps.
Your Phone Will remain stable When you know what actually you are doing with it and what measures could be taken to revert it.

abhinavp649 said:
Talking about Permissions, until/unless you give Root Access to that App, it won't be able to Make a.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Once the phone is rooted, will I be able to block/restrict both: uninstalling apps (which are already installed) and installing new apps? The phone will be used by my kids, so I want to prevent them from making any phone changes.

rybshik said:
Once the phone is rooted, will I be able to block/restrict both: uninstalling apps (which are already installed) and installing new apps? The phone will be used by my kids, so I want to prevent them from making any phone changes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can't restrict to install and uninstall apps. As abhinavp649 said the application makes modifications to the system if you give root permission to them. If you are using SuperSU superuser app then you can set pin to grant root permission to the app from the settings of supersu

rybshik said:
Once the phone is rooted, will I be able to block/restrict both: uninstalling apps (which are already installed) and installing new apps? The phone will be used by my kids, so I want to prevent them from making any phone changes.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To Prevent app from uninstalling the best way is to hide it From Home screen Or Make that as System.
And Revoke SU permissions from those apps which can uninstall system apps or any similar one.
Hit thanks if Helped :laugh:

abhinavp649 said:
to hide it From Home screen Or Make that as System.:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How can I do that?
Additionally, can I, for example, turn on Location (GPS) and prevent the phone user from turning it OFF? thanks!

rybshik said:
How can I do that?
Additionally, can I, for example, turn on Location (GPS) and prevent the phone user from turning it OFF? thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Installing an App as system is a easy and you can find tools easily on play store. Just search 'make app system' or something else similar.
Using GPS to prevent Turn off? I think you are expecting too too much out of a device.
However, you can disable Power Off from options you get by holding lock button.
To do this You Have to Install Xposed Framework in your Device.
Xposed Framework allows you to do Amazing modding to your Android device. You can just do everything with the device(Exceptions are always present)

rybshik said:
How can I do that?
Additionally, can I, for example, turn on Location (GPS) and prevent the phone user from turning it OFF? thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you are thinking of turning on GPS for the sake of tracking your kids, then make sure you tell them you are doing so. Have known a few people that got into legal trouble for not doing so.
In the end if the kids are smart enough there will be nothing you can really do as they can just reset the device and everything you did is gone.

zelendel said:
nothing you can really do as they can just reset the device
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So, can I prevent that by disabling/removing or password-protecting the option of "Factory Reset" on a rooted Android 6.0?

rybshik said:
So, can I prevent that by disabling/removing or password-protecting the option of "Factory Reset" on a rooted Android 6.0?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No. You can not restrict or disable factory data reset option by any ways even you are rooted. Some brands like Samsung gives FRP (factory reset protection) to their device. Devices without FRP easily factory data reset by entering in recovery mode or in settings.

Related

[Q] Greenify useful without root?

Is it worth using the app at all if I am not root? I do not plan to do so for awhile so I want to use the app as it is but is there any real value in attempting to save my battery?
an_xda said:
Is it worth using the app at all if I am not root? I do not plan to do so for awhile so I want to use the app as it is but is there any real value in attempting to save my battery?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If there's no root the only benefit you lose is; practically nothing. The boost mode is the one that offers so much. The "non-root" feature is there for a reason. I believe, it will benefit you :good:
TechnoSparks said:
If there's no root the only benefit you lose is; practically nothing. The boost mode is the one that offers so much. The "non-root" feature is there for a reason. I believe, it will benefit you :good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, this can easily be uninstalled if it fails to benefit me right? I know there is this auto-hibernation mode but I was reading the description about having no lock screen for it to work. I currently use the fingerprint scanner on my Note 4 so I am not sure if Greenfiy will work with this.
Is there any difference between the root and non-root mode aside from the automation differences?
Does root mode also force close apps in the background to achieve app hibernation or is it a different method from the non-root mode?
i cannot figure out how to uninstall greenify (non-root). Uninstall button in play store is not there - only deactivate is shown and brings an error that some administrative thing needs to be removed first? I cannot clear cache or stop the greenify service in the App list because its all greyed out. Please can somebody help me?
Andiii said:
i cannot figure out how to uninstall greenify (non-root). Uninstall button in play store is not there - only deactivate is shown and brings an error that some administrative thing needs to be removed first? I cannot clear cache or stop the greenify service in the App list because its all greyed out. Please can somebody help me?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Settings, Device Administraor. Uncheck Greenify. That is what "deactivate" means.
Additionally, if necessary, switch off Greenify in SETTINGS>Accessibility before uninstalling though it may not be necessary.
theprodigy85 said:
Does root mode also force close apps in the background to achieve app hibernation or is it a different method from the non-root mode?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The hibernation method used in both modes should be almost identical IMO. A possible delay of reopening a greenified app should occur in both modes, as the greenified app's process needs to be recreated. However, the root mode brings a few more benefits which could be inferred according to the root exclusive options provided in the "Experimental features" option.
since this thread is about(ishhhh ) root, i have a quick question concerning v2.5 final, doesnt greenify need root permission anymore? i installed the lastest version in a fresh installed rom, selected some apps to greenify but even in root or boost working mode, it didnt ask to give root permissions. so i ask, is this normal in this version?
NAZUnlimited said:
since this thread is about(ishhhh ) root, i have a quick question concerning v2.5 final, doesnt greenify need root permission anymore? i installed the lastest version in a fresh installed rom, selected some apps to greenify but even in root or boost working mode, it didnt ask to give root permissions. so i ask, is this normal in this version?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Did you enable the options in Experimental Mode that are meant for root?
Also check your Supersu settings to see whether you have enabled the setting for the app to not ask for root permission on updating.

[Q] Security of rooted Android devices

Hello!
I have some basic questions about the security of rooted android devices. I'm running Cyanogenmod 11 actually on my SGS3. Of course I rooted it to install custom Recovery and ROM. So is there any possibility for an App to get Root Access without recognition?
I dont need the Root access anymore, I only wanted to install Cyanogenmod and thats it. What to do to fully unroot Cyanogen?
Another question:
If i have enabled "only install from trusted sources" am I safe? Or could there be sort of drive-by-downloads for example on this site sometimes i get the pop-up "your phone has (13) viruses, click ok ...".
Yeah thats it, I'm a little bit paranoid especially according to my passwords, are they safe!?
Thanks a lot and Greets from Germany!
RedMr said:
I'm running Cyanogenmod 11 actually on my SGS3. Of course I rooted it to install custom Recovery and ROM. So is there any possibility for an App to get Root Access without recognition?
I dont need the Root access anymore, I only wanted to install Cyanogenmod and thats it. What to do to fully unroot Cyanogen?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You can't be unrooted and have CyanogenMod installed; that's an oxymoron. You can, of course, be unrooted without CM installed, but you can't have 'em both.
RedMr said:
If i have enabled "only install from trusted sources" am I safe? Or could there be sort of drive-by-downloads for example on this site sometimes i get the pop-up "your phone has (13) viruses, click ok ...".
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You're safe even without "only install from trusted sources" turned on. Just make sure not to install anything at all that you didn't specifically tell your device to install.
RedMr said:
I'm a little bit paranoid especially according to my passwords, are they safe!?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unless you have an actual trojan or virus installed on your phone, your passwords are perfectly safe.
To check and make sure you're secure, download and install the avast! Mobile Security & Antivirus app from Google Play, and run a device scan.
Is there any possibility for getting installed without recognizing?
Can an app get Root permissions without giving them?
RedMr said:
Is there any possibility for getting installed without recognizing?
Can an app get Root permissions without giving them?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you're not already, you need to use a Super User app like SuperSU (the best one). It allows you to grant/deniy apps root access. If it asks to grant/deny permission to an app that you didn't install or isn't a function of CM, or simply don't want to grant root access, then deny it permission.
EDIT: As Nookie said, you can't accidentally install something even if you allow installations of apps that aren't from "trusted sources". If you do install apps from non "trusted sources", just be smart about it.

[Q]Can an app keep onto its root access after reboot?

Hey guys! I'm new to this community so first of all I want to say hello to you all! Sadly my arrival is mostly based on a possible-problem for me.
So here's the situation:
1- Bad Guy runs an app on Good Guy's phone that asks for root access, this app is malicious and can be used to steal almost everything (like theftspy that was developed by a dev from xda)
2-Bad Guy grants it the access and sets SuperSU to "grant on demand" for this specific app. Then deletes all the logs of all this and removes this app from APPS tab of SuperSU.
3- Good Guy is completely unaware of all these.
4-A few weeks later Good Guy learns that this Bad Guy could have been installed an app on his phone that can steal sensitive information. He performs an Avast Mobile Security scan that returns clean and later performs a complete wipe of his phone and loads a new ROM.
So I'm the Good Guy here I confronted Mr. Bad Guy about it who ultimately denied that, but I got some strong suspicions that he might be lying. Data in the phone was private (mostly business) so even the probability of this being stolen is scary.
Without any further ado my question is: Can this malicious app keep onto its root access after a reboot (can any app do that)? Because if it can not, then even if it starts itself after boot, it'll have to grant root access again which would leave logs and would be seen on SuperSU this time, which neither was there so would mean I am safe. Also is Avast's scan result reliable on this basis?
Thanks to everyone who took their time to read, any help is so much appreciated.
Bump
Well, there are many root apps that run after system startup. It depends on the app that was installed on your phone.
If Mr.Bad removed app from SuperSU and deleted logs, that means the app isn't in use and will no longer do its work. That means, the app is just installed with no harm.
Also there was no need to change your ROM and factory reset. Just by uninstalling the app you'll be done.
Even, you scanned through AntiVirus and didn't found anything.
Stilling data from one phone and sending to other phone must need a medium to transmit data, in your case it must be internet. You could have check in Data Usage in Setting weather there is any anonymous app that is using your data.
Still there is probability, that your personal data must be stolen.
It depends on the duration between 'granted root permission to app and removing app from SuperSU list'
Also you said about 'grant on demand' its similar to 'prompt' was applied to the app in SuperSU.
Have you granted permission anytime? I yes them probably your data is stolen by Me.Bad.
Hope you understand everything
Regards,
hitman-xda
hitman-xda said:
Well, there are many root apps that run after system startup. It depends on the app that was installed on your phone.
If Mr.Bad removed app from SuperSU and deleted logs, that means the app isn't in use and will no longer do its work. That means, the app is just installed with no harm.
Also there was no need to change your ROM and factory reset. Just by uninstalling the app you'll be done.
Even, you scanned through AntiVirus and didn't found anything.
Stilling data from one phone and sending to other phone must need a medium to transmit data, in your case it must be internet. You could have check in Data Usage in Setting weather there is any anonymous app that is using your data.
Still there is probability, that your personal data must be stolen.
It depends on the duration between 'granted root permission to app and removing app from SuperSU list'
Also you said about 'grant on demand' its similar to 'prompt' was applied to the app in SuperSU.
Have you granted permission anytime? I yes them probably your data is stolen by Me.Bad.
Hope you understand everything
Regards,
hitman-xda
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks for answer hitman!
I haven't granted any app root access. But Mr. Bad could have done it before I got my phone back. After starting to use my phone I rebooted it. I wonder if this app can start running with root access on its own after a reboot. Or should it get granted root access again by the user.
If so, then that'd be like NSA level coding / spying to avoid detection and still run after resetting.
es0tericcha0s said:
If so, then that'd be like NSA level coding / spying to avoid detection and still run after resetting.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Resetting as in like restarting your phone right? And not returning to factory state.
remorseful said:
Thanks for answer hitman!
I haven't granted any app root access. But Mr. Bad could have done it before I got my phone back. After starting to use my phone I rebooted it. I wonder if this app can start running with root access on its own after a reboot. Or should it get granted root access again by the user.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If the app is setup such that it runs on startup and SuperSU is set as 'prompt' for that app, it must have asked user for granting permission after every reboot.
remorseful said:
Resetting as in like restarting your phone right? And not returning to factory state.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nope dude! Resetting means going back to factory state.
Say, Mr.Bad could have installed an app in your phone that you are unaware of.
Whats more important is the permissions of that app. If it can claim sensitive permissions like access to contacts / messages / sdcard , then he can get that data even when the app doesn't have root access. And if the app has root access, then the damage could have been done already before he deleted the supersu logs. And no, it cannot be granted root access after the logs are deleted automatically on startup.
And Mr.Bad could have installed his malicious app on to system partition in which case u may not be aware of what the app is. And what damage it does. In such case even a factory reset doesn't help.
It is advised to reinstall the rom and protect superuser with some pin / password.
bharat g said:
Say, Mr.Bad could have installed an app in your phone that you are unaware of.
Whats more important is the permissions of that app. If it can claim sensitive permissions like access to contacts / messages / sdcard , then he can get that data even when the app doesn't have root access. And if the app has root access, then the damage could have been done already before he deleted the supersu logs. And no, it cannot be granted root access after the logs are deleted automatically on startup.
And Mr.Bad could have installed his malicious app on to system partition in which case u may not be aware of what the app is. And what damage it does. In such case even a factory reset doesn't help.
It is advised to reinstall the rom and protect superuser with some pin / password.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I'm mostly scared of screenshots being taken remotely which requires root access.
HA! That's what I wanted to hear! The startup part!
Yeah since resetting won't clear off a possible /system infection I performed a full wipe and installed Cloudy ROM.
Yet I have done it after a few weeks.Still, a possible spy app would need to grant root access again on device start up by me which didn't happen so I assume I'm safe Is there a known way for an app to grant root access without user permission once the device is turned off and turned back on ?
remorseful said:
Well I'm mostly scared of screenshots being taken remotely which requires root access.
HA! That's what I wanted to hear! The startup part!
Yeah since resetting won't clear off a possible /system infection I performed a full wipe and installed Cloudy ROM.
Yet I have done it after a few weeks.Still, a possible spy app would need to grant root access again on device start up by me which didn't happen so I assume I'm safe Is there a known way for an app to grant root access without user permission once the device is turned off and turned back on ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Once an app gets root granted and is in whitelist of superuser management app, then if such app can autostart on boot it can get root granted without user permission.
Eg: Firewall app.
bharat g said:
Once an app gets root granted and is in whitelist of superuser management app, then if such app can autostart on boot it can get root granted without user permission.
Eg: Firewall app.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
True but if it is whitelisted on the Superuser management app then it is pretty easy to detect since it'll be listed there.
P.S:I assume you mean to be "set to "'grant on demand'" on SuperSU by "being whitelisted".

Need to root, convert to system app, then unroot. How to do this?

Hello everyone,
I currently have the Canadian Model of the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge (SM-G925W8 with Android 6.0.1). I have need to convert an application on my phone to a System App, which is something you can only do while rooted. After performing some research, it appears this website provides a root methods to use on this particular phone. The thing is - once I convert the application to a system application, I need to revert back to an unrooted phone (obviously with the system app still in tact). My question is: after performing the conversion, how to I return to an unrooted phone while keeping the converted app a system app?
Please let me know,
Thank you.
Can i ask which app?
callumbr1 said:
Can i ask which app?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sure, it's a GPS Spoof app (obviously for Pokemon Go). I actually have a Galaxy S8+ but, with the game's increased security and Android 7.0's security updates, spoofing has been disabled on that phone altogether. I still however have my S6 Edge which is on Android 6.0.1 therefore bypassing a lot of Android 7.0's security. After a lot of research, it appears that the only way to spoof your location within that app is to move the GPS spoof app as a system app, then unrooting so the game will play. (This prevents the need to turn on Mock Locations within developers menu which Pokemon Go flags).
I attempted to run the root linked above however it caused my phone to hang on the boot screen. I'm currently trying to fix this by flahsing stock firmware however Odin keeps telling me it failed....not the usual PASS notification. Help would be appreciated :angel:
vgplayer54 said:
Sure, it's a GPS Spoof app (obviously for Pokemon Go). I actually have a Galaxy S8+ but, with the game's increased security and Android 7.0's security updates, spoofing has been disabled on that phone altogether. I still however have my S6 Edge which is on Android 6.0.1 therefore bypassing a lot of Android 7.0's security. After a lot of research, it appears that the only way to spoof your location within that app is to move the GPS spoof app as a system app, then unrooting so the game will play. (This prevents the need to turn on Mock Locations within developers menu which Pokemon Go flags).
I attempted to run the root linked above however it caused my phone to hang on the boot screen. I'm currently trying to fix this by flahsing stock firmware however Odin keeps telling me it failed....not the usual PASS notification. Help would be appreciated :angel:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh I see, have you tried magisk and magisk hide, I use it with Pokemon go and it doesn't detect root.
When you say it hangs on boot screen do you mean the Samsung logo or powered by Android logo? It can hang on Samsung logo for a short while it's normal.
Finally what error are you getting in odin and we can fix that first?
callumbr1 said:
Oh I see, have you tried magisk and magisk hide, I use it with Pokemon go and it doesn't detect root.
When you say it hangs on boot screen do you mean the Samsung logo or powered by Android logo? It can hang on Samsung logo for a short while it's normal.
Finally what error are you getting in odin and we can fix that first?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thank you for your quick response! I managed to successfully flash the stock firmware on the phone, allowing me to get past the Boot screen (the samsung screen is where it froze before). I attempted to flash the root package once more and this time it was successful!
I then opened Titanium Backup, converted my GPS Spoofing app to a system app, which caused my phone to say "Processing...". This screen remained here for the duration of the entire night. When I woke up this morning, it STILL said "Processing...". I then force closed TB and rebooted the phone. When it restarted, I checked Settings - Applications - Application Manager and, yes, I can see my GPS Spoofing app listed under the system apps dropdown menu. The problem now is...how do I launch it to use with pokemon Go? I'll need to unroot, figure out how to launch the application, and hopefully it will work then...
vgplayer54 said:
Thank you for your quick response! I managed to successfully flash the stock firmware on the phone, allowing me to get past the Boot screen (the samsung screen is where it froze before). I attempted to flash the root package once more and this time it was successful!
I then opened Titanium Backup, converted my GPS Spoofing app to a system app, which caused my phone to say "Processing...". This screen remained here for the duration of the entire night. When I woke up this morning, it STILL said "Processing...". I then force closed TB and rebooted the phone. When it restarted, I checked Settings - Applications - Application Manager and, yes, I can see my GPS Spoofing app listed under the system apps dropdown menu. The problem now is...how do I launch it to use with pokemon Go? I'll need to unroot, figure out how to launch the application, and hopefully it will work then...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Now that you have it installed as a system app does it show in the app drawer? What I can tell you is I have tried a lot of GPS spoofing apps for Pokemon go and none of them actually worked. You can always flash magisk and hide Pokemon go from detecting root status and passing safety net. Then you can keep root
callumbr1 said:
Now that you have it installed as a system app does it show in the app drawer? What I can tell you is I have tried a lot of GPS spoofing apps for Pokemon go and none of them actually worked. You can always flash magisk and hide Pokemon go from detecting root status and passing safety net. Then you can keep root
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately, no. The GPS Spoofing app does not appear in the App drawer after converting it to a system app. And Magisk sounds great but, to be honest, I am not interested in keeping root, I just needed the one app to be a system app to hide it from Pokemon Go's flagging (as well as Mock Locations in Developers menu). Do you know where I could launch the app from?
vgplayer54 said:
Unfortunately, no. The GPS Spoofing app does not appear in the App drawer after converting it to a system app. And Magisk sounds great but, to be honest, I am not interested in keeping root, I just needed the one app to be a system app to hide it from Pokemon Go's flagging (as well as Mock Locations in Developers menu). Do you know where I could launch the app from?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't know Sorry, you can try moving the apk to system/priv-app and reboot. But I know the app needs to be hidden from root and safety net to be able to work with Pokemon go.
callumbr1 said:
I don't know Sorry, you can try moving the apk to system/priv-app and reboot. But I know the app needs to be hidden from root and safety net to be able to work with Pokemon go.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As far as I know, Pokemon Go cannot see system apps within system\apps or system\priv-app. I will attempt to uninstall the system app and perhaps place the apk file into the suggested folder, ensuring permissions are rw-r--r-- (which I believe is the correct permission settings). After that, i will unroot, allowing my phone to pass safety net, then, in theory, it should work. The only problem is I still need the icon to launch the spoofing app, which is not located in the drawer...if I cannot launch it, it cannot be used.
callumbr1 said:
I don't know Sorry, you can try moving the apk to system/priv-app and reboot. But I know the app needs to be hidden from root and safety net to be able to work with Pokemon go.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey! A quick update - I don't think I succeeded in getting the GPS Spoofer to be a system app however I semi-got it to work. This particular app has a setting that is called "Privacy Mode" which apparently allows it to hide it from being detected by Mock Location settings in Developer Options. When I use this, I was able to spoof successfully once from my home (real location) however my character would run back and forth like a crazy person. The second time I attempted to spoof from a different location, I signed in successfully however the phone's GPS wouldn't pick up a location and I was in a huge empty field with a GPS error (The location settings were set to GPS only). Do you know how I can get around this to spoof successfully?

Accidentally went too far adb uninstalling system apps, system now half broken, how to fix?

A few days ago I had a joyful night uninstalling a bunch of system apps with adb pm uninstall. Maybe because I did not check thoroughly on which package I should uninstall, now I have faced some consequences: OneUI Home crashing on widget page, settings crash on accessibility page etc..
So I am fixing the phone right now. Since I deleted system apps, so factory reset may not work (?). I think I can also flash a factory rom on the phone if needed. However, it would be great if I do not have to wipe everything since some of my apps' data cannot be backed up easily.
I am thinking about grabbing a factory firmware, extract all original apk and try adb install them back, that will make the app a user app, so will that work? Also for future references, is there a safer way to backup an apk file before I attempt to adb uninstall?
Edit: S21 home screen pinch to widget screen crash: Apparently I am not the only one. There might be a bug at One UI Home's late February update.
Factory reset.
A package disabler can be an easier/better option plus you can do it on the fly as needed.
Home - Package Disabler
The only NON-root solution that let’s you disable any unwanted packages that come pre-installed / installed with your phone / tablet.
www.packagedisabler.com
blackhawk said:
Factory reset.
A package disabler can be an easier/better option plus you can do it on the fly as needed.
Home - Package Disabler
The only NON-root solution that let’s you disable any unwanted packages that come pre-installed / installed with your phone / tablet.
www.packagedisabler.com
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I actually decided to adb uninstall instead of package disabling due to my previous ccswe app manager only works for like a week...
920329 said:
I actually decided to adb uninstall instead of package disabling due to my previous ccswe app manager only works for like a week...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I've been using this one for years.
I know it works with Pie. Lol, no Q for me.
Updates can kill it so if it works... leave it be.
blackhawk said:
I've been using this one for years.
I know it works with Pie. Lol, no Q for me.
Updates can kill it so if it works... leave it be.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I was thinking about making a script to do that. (And my baby step almost killed my phone).
Forgot to mention I actually did not know the existence of package disabler you linked. I should give it a try.
920329 said:
I was thinking about making a script to do that. (And my baby step almost killed my phone).
Forgot to mention I actually did not know the existence of package disabler you linked. I should give it a try.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's a good app. Useful in tracking down issues as well since it's running in real time.
It can also clear system apk caches that Settings can't touch presumably because the latter leaves nulls. I was able the repair a system apk cache glitch like this saving me a factory reset.
Just protect your critical data; OS's are expendable
ADB AppControl appears to be safe as it backs up .apk if user selects Uninstall

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