How to Change a File System From Read Only Through Adb

Read only file system on Android

I recently rooted my Droid X and everything seems to be working perfectly. I made some changes to build.prop and when I do adb push build.prop /system/ I get the following error: failed to copy 'c:uild.prop' to '/system//build.prop': Read-only file system.

How can I fix this?

Answer #1:

Not all phones and versions of android have things mounted the same.
Limiting options when remounting would be best.

Simply remount as rw (Read/Write):

                          # mount -o rw,remount /system                      

Once you are done making changes, remount to ro (read-only):

                          # mount -o ro,remount /system                      

Answer #2:

            adb remount                      

works for me and seems to be the simplest solution.

Answer #3:

Got this off an Android forum where I asked the same question. Hope this helps somebody else.

On a terminal emulator on the phone:

            mount -o rw,remount -t yaffs2 /dev/block/mtdblock3 /system                      

Then on the cmd prompt, do the adb push

Answer #4:

While I know the question is about the real device, in case someone got here with a similar issue in the emulator, with whatever tools are the latest as of Feb, 2017, the emulator needs to be launched from the command line with:

            -writable-system                      

For anything to be writable to the /system. Without this flag no combination of remount or mount will allow one to write to /system.

After the emulator is launched with that flag, a single adb remount after adb root is sufficient to get permissions to push to /system.

Here's an example of the command line I use to run my emulator:

            ./emulator -writable-system              -avd Nexus_5_API_25 -no-snapshot-load -qemu                      

The value for the -avd flags comes from:

            ./emulator -list-avds                      

Answer #5:

I think the safest way is remounting the /system as read-write, using:

            mount -o remount,rw /system                      

and when done, remount it as read-only:

            mount -o remount,ro /system                      

Answer #6:

On my Samsung galaxy mini S5570 (after got root on cellphone):

Fist, as root, I ran:

            systemctl              start              adb                      

as a normal user:

            adb shell  su                      

Grant root permissions on touch screen

            mount                      

list all mount points that we have and we can see, in my case, that /dev/stl12 was mounted on /system as ro (ready only), so we just need do:

            mount -o rw,remount /dev/stl12 /system                      

Answer #7:

            adb disable-verity adb reboot adb root adb remount                      

This works for me, and is the simplest solution.

Answer #8:

Try the following on the command prompt:

            >adb remount >adb              push              framework-res_old.apk /system/framework-res.apk                      

Answered By: scue

Answer #9:

Here is what worked for me. I was running an emulated Android 7.1.1 (Nougat) device.

On a terminal, I hit the following command. One thing to be noticed is the -writable-system flag

            ./emulator              -writable-              system              -avd Nexus_6_API_25              -              partition              -size              280                      

On another tab

            ./adb shell su mount -o rw,remount -t ext4 /dev/block/vda /system                      

All the changes that you do on the /system contents will survive a restart.

Answer #10:

I checked with emulator and following worked.

  1. adb reboot
  2. adb root && adb remount && adb push ~/Desktop/hosts /system/etc/hosts

As mentioned above as well, execute second step in single shot.

Answered By: CoDe

Answer #11:

Open terminal emulator on the phone: then

            adb shell                      

after that daemon is started

            su mount -o rw,remount /mnt/sdcard                      

then the read only is converted into the read-Write.

Answer #12:

            mount -o rw,remount /dev/stl12 /system                      

works for me

Answer #13:

            This worked              for              me              #Mount as ReadOnly              su -c              "mount -o rw,remount /system"              # Change Permission for file              su -c              "chmod 777 /system/build.prop"              #Edit the file to add the property              su -c              "busybox vi /system/build.prop"              # Add now              service.adb.tcp.port=5678              # Reset old permissions              su -c              "chmod 644 /system/build.prop"              # Mount as readonly again once done              su -c              "mount -o ro,remount /system"                      

Answer #14:

I found this article from google, and thought I'd add the steps necessary on a Sony Xperia Z (4.2.2).

The Sony has a watchdog process which detects when you've changed ro to rw on / and /system (these are the only ones I was trying to modify) and possibly others.

The following was what I ran to perform the changes I was trying to achieve. I pasted these into a window, because removing the execute bit from /sbin/ric needs to be done quickly in order to stop it restarting itself. (I tried stop ric; this doesn't work - although it worked on a previous version of android on the phone).

            pkill -9              ric; mount -o rw,remount -t rootfs /              chmod              640              /sbin/ric mount -o rw,remount /system                      

I modified the hosts file here, so this is the place you make the changes you need to the filesystem. To leave things the way we found them, do this:

            mount -o ro,remount /system              chmod              750              /sbin/ric mount -o ro,remount -t rootfs /                      

At which point ric should automatically restart. (It restarted for me automatically.)

Answered By: Paul

Answer #15:

Adding a little bit more to Jan Bergström's answer: Because Android is a Linux based system, and the path in Linux contains forward slashes(../), while using push command, use "/" to define destination path in the Android device.

For Example, the command goes: adb push C:UsersadminDesktop1.JPG sdcard/pictures/

Notice that here, back slashes are used to define source path of the file to be pushed from windows PC and forward slashes are used to define destination path because Android is a Linux based system. You don't have to act as a root to use this command and also, it works perfectly fine on production devices.

Answer #16:

Sometimes you get the error because the destination location in phone are not exist. For example, some android phone external storage location is /storage/emulated/legacy instead of /storage/emulated/0.

Answer #17:

Thanks, Sérgio, for "mount" command without parameters idea. I'd need to made adb push into /data/data/com.my.app/lib for some test issue, and get "Read-only filesystem" message.

ls command shows me:

[email protected]:/ # ls -l /data/data/com.my.app/
drwxrwx--x u0_a98 u0_a98 2016-05-06 09:16 cache drwxrwx--x u0_a98 u0_a98 2016-05-06 09:04 files lrwxrwxrwx system system 2016-05-06 11:43 lib -> /mnt/asec/com.my.app-1/lib

So, it's understood, that "lib" directory is separated from other application directories.

Command mount -o rw,remount /mnt/asec didn't resolve "r/o fs" issue, it wants device parameter before directory parameter.

"df" command didn't help also, but shows that my /mnt/asec/com.my.app-1 directory is at the separate mount point.

Then I looks by mount and voila!

[email protected]:/ # mount ......... /dev/block/dm-4 /mnt/asec/com.my.app-1 ext4 ro,dirsync,relatime 0 0

Next steps are already described upwards: remount to RW, push and remount back to RO.

Answer #18:

it sames that must extract and repack initrc.img and edit init file with the code of mount /system

Answer #19:

Copy files to the SD-card?

Well, I assume you like to copy data to the Sd-card from the developers computer? You might have rooted the devise and made the area you address available?) I had about the same problem to upload data files for my application(Android Studio 1.3.2 in Win7), but.

  • First the adb command-shell has to be found in th path: PATH=%PATH%;C:UsersXXXXXAppDataLocalAndroidsdkplatform-tools (the folder AppData is hidden, so you have to set the folder setup not hiding concealed files and folder to find it, Path works regardless)
  • You have to spell the folder path right or you get a read-only error message, most likely it must start with /sdcard or it is read only area. As soon as I did no problem pushing the file to the emulator.

So for instance the the adb command can look like this:

adb push C: estdata .txt /sdcard/download/t.txt

Answer #20:

If there's a failure in copying the read-only file you can try locating the original file in the root directory and modify it with a root text editor (preferably) RB text editor, it comes with ROM Toolbox app.

Answer #21:

Try this in a Terminal Emulator as root:

                          restorecon              -v -R              /                data/media                      

Answer #22:

In my case I was using the command adb push ~/Desktop/file.txt ~/sdcard/

I changed it to ~/Desktop/file.txt /sdcard/ and then it worked.

Make sure to disconnect and reconnect the phone.

Answer #23:

As chen-xing mentioned the simplest way is:

            adb reboot                      

But for me I had to change my settings first:

Settings → Developer options → Root access

Make sure ADB has Root access:

enter image description here

Answer #24:

I just only needed this:

            su -c              "mount -o rw,remount /system"                      

How to Change a File System From Read Only Through Adb

Source: https://www.examplefiles.net/cs/33002

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