Never rooted my OG EVO, but I think I'll start with the EVOLTE in hopes to fix the multi-taskingissuedesign and also to have tethering.
Right now all this root lingo is a little over my head (eg. AOSP? S-Off? 4ext? TWRP?), but I'm sure I can keep up.![]()
why would u root your phone? could you tell me?
what is s-offYes it voids your warranty. Yes it is legal.
Thru Htc you can root your phone but you do not achieve S-off (which is what you want)
Every month or so i install a new rom. Its like getting a new phone. Not to mention the added speed you can get from a good asop rom. Then you can add different apps and what not that you were not able to use before like lcd density, titanium backup, rom manager just to name a few.
Basically it allows you to do whatever you want with Your device
Rooting is awesome![]()
On our devices, the OS files, etc are stored on NAND Flash memory, with each portion of the OS installed on a specific partition. HTC's bootloader (also known as HBOOT) secures the data on these partitions so that it cannot be altered or changed by an unauthorized user. When any of the NAND Flash memory on a device is secure, the device shows as "S-ON" in the bootloader.what is s-off
Nandroid backups only handle the partitions that are writable when the bootloader is unlocked. So the boot, system & data partitions would still be accessible for backup using a custom recovery.So does that mean no NAND backups with S-on?
Sent from my LS670 using Android Central Forums
Hmm that's the name of this thread
On our devices, the OS files, etc are stored on NAND Flash memory, with each portion of the OS installed on a specific partition. HTC's bootloader (also known as HBOOT) secures the data on these partitions so that it cannot be altered or changed by an unauthorized user. When any of the NAND Flash memory on a device is secure, the device shows as "S-ON" in the bootloader.
When this security is disabled (S-OFF), the end user has control over the data on all of the device partitions, and can then edit the information on each, which includes the ability to install a custom recovery (recovery partition), gain root access (system partition), install custom kernels (boot partition) and update firmware using unsigned zip files (radio partitions). While having S-OFF allows the end user more control over the device, it also makes it easier to brick one, too.
For most users, the HTCDev unlock process (which typically only unlocks the boot, system, & recovery partitions, while leaving all other partitions secure) is sufficient. This allows the device to be rooted, for a custom recovery (and thus custom ROMs) to be installed, and custom kernels to be flashed (through fastboot), with the device remaining (overall) S-ON. This does take a bit more device knowledge to use, but is really safer in the end for most people.
For true Power Users, though, nothing compares to S-OFF.
On our devices, the OS files, etc are stored on NAND Flash memory, with each portion of the OS installed on a specific partition. HTC's bootloader (also known as HBOOT) secures the data on these partitions so that it cannot be altered or changed by an unauthorized user. When any of the NAND Flash memory on a device is secure, the device shows as "S-ON" in the bootloader.
When this security is disabled (S-OFF), the end user has control over the data on all of the device partitions, and can then edit the information on each, which includes the ability to install a custom recovery (recovery partition), gain root access (system partition), install custom kernels (boot partition) and update firmware using unsigned zip files (radio partitions). While having S-OFF allows the end user more control over the device, it also makes it easier to brick one, too.
For most users, the HTCDev unlock process (which typically only unlocks the boot, system, & recovery partitions, while leaving all other partitions secure) is sufficient. This allows the device to be rooted, for a custom recovery (and thus custom ROMs) to be installed, and custom kernels to be flashed (through fastboot), with the device remaining (overall) S-ON. This does take a bit more device knowledge to use, but is really safer in the end for most people.
For true Power Users, though, nothing compares to S-OFF.
So in order to achieve root access, the system partition simply needs to be unlocked? Or also new software flashed to the device?
In general, root is nothing more than the su binary and the accompanying superuser.apk both of which go in /system
No, that's not what unrEVOked does at all. Unrevoked uses an NV exploit to disable NAND security (S-OFF). THEN, it flashes a custom recovery, which allows you to install the su binary to /system/bin, which is what allows root access.Oic, so on my OG EVO when I ran unrevoked this is all it does?
Umm nooo, this is the one you wantActually that thread was closed, this should be the right one:
[Resources] HTC EVO 4G LTE Tutorials ● ROMs ● How to Root ● Radios ● & More - xda-developers