
If I just whistle innocently, odds are good that I’m unleashing a little IoT-grade security upon the world. If I give them the level of trust they deserve, I end up spending more time walling them off and controlling them at the router/IDS/firewall level than I do actually making whatever service I want served happen. Maybe this is just me but I don’t have too many openings for servers that I can’t even pretend to have a decent reason to trust.
#VNC SERVER NO ROOT .APK INSTALL#
It’s a pity, since the hardware is often abundantly capable but android device firmware is usually a ghastly nightmare 3rd party support built partly on cobbled-together binary blobs and bits is uneven and “here’s how you install debian ARM/build Yocto for it” counts as a minor miracle for most models.
#VNC SERVER NO ROOT .APK SOFTWARE#
Is anyone else a trifle queasy at the prospect of building a ‘server’ on top of something that is almost invariably not getting any sort of remotely useful updates often came out of the box with a rather…boisterous…collection of software courtesy of Android OEMs and has then been rooted(which implies the existence of a known, unfixed, privilege escalation vulnerability) often with an opaque binary rooting utility that does god-knows-what-else besides? Posted in Android Hacks, Network Hacks Tagged android, android linux, android root, chroot, linux, phone Post navigation We’ve also advocated for using old Android phones for ARM dev. If getting more from your Android phone is your thing, perhaps you’d like to know about installing Busybox on it. But to buy a Pi, SD card, screen, and UPS, as he points out you’d have to spend a lot more than you would for a second-hand phone from eBay - or a free, slightly broken, one from friends or family. You might ask what would be the point of this exercise, given that you can do the same thing much more easily with a single board computer such as a Raspberry Pi. The result is surprisingly useful, after some installation steps upon which he goes into detail. Then bringing a Linux system to it could be achieved with the LinuxDeploy app. Rooting the phone was straightforward process using the KingRoot app, a sideloaded version as it seems there’s a bogus copy on the Play Store. He proceeded to put a Debian installation on it, upon which he runs his collection of server processes. gave it a try when a friend gave him a Chinese quad-core Android phone with a broken screen. It was one of those things that’s simple in theory, but extremely convoluted in practice.īut six years have passed since those days, phones have gotten much faster and so has the software for tasks such as rooting, so maybe it’s time to return to the topic of Linux on an Android device. You’d then have to set up a VNC server and VNC into it, and eventually you’d feel immensely proud of your very slow tiny-screen Linux desktop that you’d slaved over creating. There was normally a convoluted rooting process followed by somehow squeezing your own Linux filesystem tree onto the device, then chroot-ing into it. Android is sort of Linux, right, or so the story went, so of course you must be able to run Linux on an Android phone and do all sorts of cool stuff with it.Īs anyone who tried to root an Android phone from 2010 will tell you, it was a painful and unrewarding process.
#VNC SERVER NO ROOT .APK FULL#
There was a time a few years ago when the first Android phones made it to market, that they seemed full of promise as general purpose computers.
