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Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli, 06/08/2020 06:56 PM


BackupsResearch

Introduction

The BackupTheEFS page has instructions to backup the EFS. This page instead tries to document why it is done in that way, and what are the advantages and disadvantages of various other backups methods.

This can also be useful to write more generic backup instructions to do a more complete backup.

Doing the backup of partitions or other block devices

adb shell cat pipe

Old versions of the EFS backup instructions (up to revision 17) used the following command:

adb shell "cat /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS" > EFS.img

At some point or under some condition, this stopped working and the backup were corrupted.

adb shell cat adb pull

With something like that:

adb shell "cat /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS > /EFS.img" 
adb pull /EFS.img ./

Two steps

Doing it in two stages like that seem to be widely used in other instructions (like the ones found in XDA forums).

The advantage is that the '*' enables to use the same command across many more devices.

And we need two steps because the '*' is not interpreted by a shell when using adb pull:

$ adb pull /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS
adb: error: remote object '/dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS' does not exist
$ adb pull "/dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS" 
adb: error: remote object '/dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS' does not exist
$ adb pull '/dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS'
adb: error: remote object '/dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS' does not exist

See the part on adb-pull-the-block-device for more details on how to workaround the lack of expansion and have only 1 command to do the job.

This method requires the partition to be small enough. Otherwise it will create several issues:
  • If the partition is bigger than the RAM, the resulting file in / will end up exhausting all the ram, and the backup will fail.
  • It instead the partition is big but still fits, doing that would not be very efficient as you would copy the partition once on / to then copy it again through adb.

dd

Normally cat should produce a valid backup, however it might be better to use dd for extra safety.

On Replicant 6.0 0004, at least the recoveries for the following devices have 'dd':
  • Galaxy SII (GT-I9100)
  • Galaxy Nexus (GT-I9250)
  • Galaxy SIII (GT-I9300)

adb pull the block device

The following should also work:

adb pull /dev/block/mmcblk0p3 ./EFS.img

The advantage is that it can also backup huge partitions like the user data partition or Replicant system partition.

You cannot do adb pull /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS as the expansion of * will fail.

There are possible workarounds:

part="`adb shell "ls /dev/block/platform/*/by-name/EFS" | head --bytes=-2`" 
adb pull "$part" ./EFS.img

Be aware of the head --bytes=-2 which is needed to get rid of the nasty 0x0d 0x0a line ending returned by adb.
(Tested on Recovery of Replicant 6.0 0003.)

Backup applications.

It might be a good idea to have a list of backup applications and/or to ship one with Replicant.

  • This backup app might be a good option for Replicant 9 or 10: https://github.com/stevesoltys/backup
  • F-droid might also has applications. As F-droid packages are not all FSDG compliant, we would need to make sure that the backup application we recommend or ship are FSDG compliant.

It might also be a good idea to understand if the backup solution chosen is sustainable in the long term: If the development stop or upstream decide to make the new version proprietary some users might have a hard time adapting to new backup applications or systems.

Updated by Denis 'GNUtoo' Carikli over 4 years ago · 22 revisions

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