-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 103
FAQ
-
Recommended
-- Pointless or outright negative packages, and/or apps available through Google Play. -
Advanced
-- Breaks obscure or minor parts of functionality, or apps that aren't easily enabled/installed through Settings/Google Play. This category is also used for apps that are useful (default keyboard/gallery/launcher/music app.) but that can easily be replaced by a better alternative. -
Expert
-- Breaks widespread and/or important functionality, but nothing important to the basic operation of the operating system. Removing anExpert
package should not bootloop the device (unless mentioned in the description) but we can't guarantee it 100%. -
Unsafe
-- Can break vital parts of the operating system. Removing anUnsafe
package have an extremely high risk of bootlooping your device.
UAD write logs to the user’s cache directory (see more)
-
Linux:
$XDG_CACHE_HOME/uad
or$HOME/.cache/uad
(e.g:/home/alice/uad/
) -
Windows:
Win
+R
=>%LOCALAPPDATA%\uad
(e.g:C:\Users\alice\AppData\Local\uad
) -
MacOS:
$HOME/Library/Caches/uad
(e.g:/Users/alice/Library/Caches/uad/
)
Tip
You can easily locate the logfiles from UAD-ng by pressing the Locate the logfiles
button in the About
section.
It's actually not possible.
All system apps are installed on the /system
partition by the phone's manufacturer. This partition is in read-only and only the manufacturer has the right to write things on through OTA updates.
System apps also use another partition: the /data
partition (also called user-space). All the users' data and cache are stored in this partition. It basically stores all the modifications you could have done on the phone. All the apps you install are fully stored in there, including updated system apps.
FYI, performing a factory reset from recovery is simply doing a wipe of /data
and a wipe of /cache
.
Without the right to mount /system
as read-write, it is thus impossible to delete system packages from the phone. The only thing you can do is delete its cache and all the related user data. In the end, this method doesn't save any space on your phone.
Note
You understood right. A factory reset will restore all the debloated packages!
The good thing is you can prevent any package to be loaded in memory. That's the trick. Even after a reboot, these process will not be waken up.
This software clears all the system bloat in /data
and freezes these packages by uninstalling them for all the users. That means for the current user (id=0
) and for any other user's profile.
Before Android 6.x (Marshmallow), pm disable <package>
or pm disable-user --user <user> <package>
can't be used without root permission.
Uninstall: pm uninstall --user <user> <package>
Restore: cmd package install-existing --user <user> <package>
Disable: pm disable-user --user <user> <package>
+ pm am force-stop --user <user> <package>
+ pm clear --user <user> <package>
Enable: pm enable <package>
Uninstall: pm hide <package>
Restore: pm unhide <package>
Uninstall: pm block <package>
Restore: pm unblock <package>
Uninstall: pm uninstall <package>
This will needs root. You can't really do anything without root on those really old devices.
Yes, but only in the sense that you can't brick your phone. You shouldn't encounter bootloop but... We can't guarantee it 100%.
We try to list all the packages we came across. Even those you should not delete. Those are classified in the unsafe list. This way, you know the purpose of each package.
You can, for instance, freeze Play Store and Google Play Services (not recommended if you need WhatsApp, Discord, etc...). If you mostly use apps from F-Droid, de-googling shouldn't cause too much trouble.
If you plan to replace stock apps (Gallery, Videos etc...) by other apps, we'd like to propose the install of FOSS replacement, stay tuned.
If I don't have the phone on hand, I can't do anything... but you do! and it will be very nice if you can do it ! 😃
We'd gladly add your list into this software!
See the How to contribute section
The 1st thing to do is read the descriptions of your recently-removed packs, and restore the ones that might be related to the broken feature.
If that fails, you should do a binary search, similar to how git bisect
works:
- Restore half of the apps you've uninstalled recently.
- If issue persists, restore the other half and (optionally) re-uninstall current half.
- If issue is fixed, re-uninstall half of the apps within the half you've just restored (quarter of total)
- Repeat until you've found the app you need
This method has some caveats:
- If the issue is caused by multiple apps being dependencies, it'll be hard to find which ones you should restore, as your selection may not be sorted
- In the worst case, there might be multiple layers of dependencies: where multiple apps are responsible for the same feature, and each app has multiple recursive dependencies
You could try a linear-search after a binary-search. That way, you can narrow the set of packs to a small group, then uninstall/restore one-by-one until you find the smallest set
Common steps to perform a full reset:
- Hold power and vol-down keys
- Wait for vibration
- Instantaneously (upon vibration), hold vol up key
- Proceed and perform a "clear data"