If your device isn't rooted, then you can run
the following ADB command to disable this system application on your OnePlus device:
The following ADB commands are for Windows machines.
Not exact matches
When the Windows
command prompt loads you will need to enter the
following command line and start the updating process:
adb sideload update.zip
Then enter the
following commands: «
adb shell», «su», «rm / data / data / com.
To disable over the air updates, from the
ADB command line, send the
following commands:
Use
adb to send the
following instructions (there are 6
commands, execute them one by one, not by copying the entire block).
To test whether
ADB is working properly, connect your Android device to your computer using a USB cable and run the
following command:
To do that, type the
following command into the
ADB shell window:
Once everything is unpacked, reboot back into the bootloader — using the
adb reboot bootloader
command from earlier — and run the
following commands, pressing Enter after each one, to manually flash each item to your device.
From here, connect your device, then open an
ADB command prompt window, and send the
following command:
Next, type the
following commands in order to open a shell on the device via
adb and run the
commands on your Android device itself.
Once you've confirmed
ADB access is working, open up a
command prompt and enter the
following command:
Users can easily check whether their Android device supports seamless updates by running the
following command in
ADB shell or a Terminal Emulator app.
Bonus: For those who want to take this a step further, you can
follow this new tutorial we put together that will walk you through how to setup
ADB so that you can use the
command from any directory on a Windows or Linux desktop.
For the installation to start you will need to enter the
following command line:
adb sideload update.zip
When the Windows
command prompt loads you will need to enter the
following command line and start the updating process:
adb sideload update.zip