[ADB | FASTBOOT | LINUX COMMANDS] BootLoader, Kernel, Recovery, ROM, Root, Backup

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mirfatif

Senior Member
Oct 18, 2016
695
489
t.me
NOTE:
I'm not a developer or something even near to that. All information provided here is copied from different sources and according to the best of my knowledge.
I have tested this on different devices using Windows 8.1 & 10. I'll not be responsible for any harm to you or your device. It works perfectly for me. You may try it on your own risk.
Save / backup your data before performing any actions.


WHAT IS ADB/FASTBOOT
ADB and fastboot are different protocols used through PC to perform different command line operations on device through USB in ROM/Recovery and bootloader mode respectively.
Android Debugging Bridge is basically used by developers to identify and fix bugs in OS (ROM). ADB works in ROM and recovery both.
Fastboot works in bootloader mode even when phone is not switched on in Recovery or ROM or even if Android isn't installed on phone. In later case, bootloader can be accessed by certain button combination while powering on device; usually Power + Vol. Down. See here the booting process of Android devices.
Fastboot/ADB setup is to be made on PC to use this mode. ADB mode has more flexibility than fastboot as it supports more types of flashable files to be flashed. ADB also supports backing up Apps and Data. ADB/fastboot commands can be used to flash recovery and boot images. It can also flash ROMs and mods like rooting solutions and XPOSED by booting into recovery. And above all, it is the only way to unlock bootloader without which the device functionality is too limited. Read here why we need to unlock bootloader.
In bootloader mode, usually boot logo or fastboot logo appears on device screen.

SETUP
  1. Enable USB Debugging in Settings > Developer Options. If not available, Dev. Options can be accessed by tapping 5 (or 7) times Build Number in Settings > About Phone.
  2. Allow ADB root access in Dev. Options or SuperSU. Some commands need root.
  3. Allow data transfer over ADB when prompted on device screen. Otherwise you might get errors like device unauthorized etc. So keep screen unlocked at first connect.
  4. Disable MTP, PTP, UMS etc. from USB computer connection on device to avoid any interruptions.
  5. Install Android SDK or simply install 15 Seconds ADB Setup 1.4.2. It works up to Android Lollipop (AOSP 5). Credits to Snoop05
    Windows 8.1 users who got error installing this setup should first install Windows Update KB2917929.
  6. You will have to navigate to adb folder each time you start cmd. Or setup adb to work globally. On your PC, go to System Properties > Advanced System Settings > Environment Variables. Click on New (User Variables). Variables Name: ADB ( Or anything you want). Variables Value: ;C:\adb (if installed 15 seconds setup) or ;C:\SDK\paltform-tools.
  7. Install ADB USB Drivers for your Android Device. To do this automatically, download and run ADB Driver Installer. Connect device through USB cable and install drivers.
  8. NOTE: Spaces in file paths don't work in adb commands. Non-English characters and languages don't work either. Also the commands are case-sensitive.

There is a long list of adb/fastboot commands to perform numerous operations. Here are a few of those being listed keeping in view certain tasks:

COMMON COMMANDS
On PC run Command Prompt as Administrator.
  • To check connected devices when ROM is running on phone:
    Code:
    adb devices
  • To boot into bootloader mode:
    Code:
    adb reboot bootloader
  • To check connected devices when in bootloader mode:
    Code:
    fastboot devices
  • To boot into ROM:
    Code:
    fastboot reboot
  • To boot into recovery:
    Code:
    fastboot reboot recovery
There are some common Linux commands which can be used in combination with these commands to perform certain operation. However, ADB | FASTBOOT is not necessarily required for these Linux commands. These can be run directly from Terminal Emulator in ROM or Custom Recovery. Some of them are given below.

UNLOCK BOOTLOADER
NOTE: Some newer devices don't allow unlocking of bootloader directly to ensure more security. Instead an official method is provided to unlock BL using PC.
Read here to know about the risks of BL unlocking.


To check the bootloader status:
Code:
fastboot oem device-info
“True” on unlocked status.
If "false", run the following to unlock:
Code:
fastboot oem unlock

However these are OEM specific commands and may differ or not work on all devices. Fastboot's own commands (which are part of AOSP source and) that can unlock bootloader allowing flashing of partitions:
Code:
fastboot flashing unlock
Allow flashing of bootloader related partitions too:
Code:
fastboot flashing unlock_critical

FORMAT DATA PARTITION
This will erase your data.
Code:
fastboot format:ext4 userdata
It can be performed on other flash partitions as well. A general syntax is 'fastboot format:FS PARTITION'

FLASH RECOVERY
Download recovery.img (specific for your device) to adb folder.
To test the recovery without permanently flashing, run the following:
Code:
fastboot boot recovery.img
On next reboot, recovery will be overwritten by previous recovery.
Or to permanently flash recovery, run:
Code:
fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
fastboot reboot recovery
Stock ROM's often tend to replace custom recovery with stock one on first reboot. That's why, booting into recovery is recommended before booting into ROM.

FLASH KERNEL
Download boot.img (specific for your device) to adb folder and run following:
Code:
fastboot flash boot boot.img

FLASH ROM
Download ROM.zip (for your device) created for fastboot i.e. with android-info.txt and android-product.txt.
To wipe your device and then to flash .zip:
Code:
fastboot -w
fastboot update </path/to/your/Rom.zip>

PASSING FASTBOOT ARGUMENTS
Fastboot supports passing options. For example, while booting a modified kernel image with FramBuffer Console support, console device and its font can be provided as option:
Code:
fastboot boot -c "console=tty0,115200 fbcon=font:VGA8x8" boot-fbcon.img

GAIN ROOT (Not recommended method. Better flash directly through custom recovery).
Root is required to modify the contents of /system. You can read here further.
Download (flashable) supersu.zip and custom or modified recovery.img (having support to flash .zip files) to adb folder and run the following:
Code:
fastboot boot recovery.img
Now once you are in recovery, adb will work instead of fastboot.
To copy files from PC to device and then to extract files, run the following:
Code:
adb push supersu.zip /tmp
adb shell /sbin/recovery --update_package=/tmp/supersu.zip

BACKUP / RESTORE APPS & DATA (From/To PC)
To backup and restore all apps and their data:
Code:
adb backup -apk -shared -all -system -f C:\backup.ab
adb restore C:\backup.ab
Read here for details.

COPY WHOLE PARTITION IMAGE (within device)
This method can be used to backup whole device e.g. to backup /data/ including /data/media/ i.e. Internal SD Card which isn't backed up by custom recovery (TWRP). Or you can get any partition image for development purpose. This method retains complete directory structure as well as file permissions, attributes and contexts.
  • To jump from windows command prompt to android device shell:
    Code:
    adb shell
    These commands can also be given from Recovery Terminal instead of ADB.
  • To get SuperUser access (in ROM):
    Code:
    su
  • To list all available partitions or mount points on device:
    Code:
    cat /proc/partitions
    Or go to "/dev/block/platform/" folder on device. Search for the folder having folder "by-name" inside it. It's msm_sdcc.1 (on Nokia X2). Run the following:
    Code:
    ls -al /dev/block/platform/*/by-name
    Or simply use DiskInfo app to get partition name you want to copy. Say you want to copy /data (userdata) partition. On Nokia X2DS, it is mmcblk0p25.
    To confirm:
    Code:
    readlink /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/userdata
  • Run the following to copy partition:
    Code:
    dd if=/dev/block/mmcblk0p25 of=/sdcard/data.img
    or
    Code:
    cat /dev/block/mmcblk0p25 > /sdcard/data.img
    or
    Code:
    dd if=/dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/userdata of=/sdcard/data.img
    data.img will be copied to your SD card.
    It also works inversely (restore):
    Code:
    dd if=/sdcard/data.img of=/dev/block/mmcblk0p25
    data.img from your SD card will be written to device.
    Similarly you can copy system.img, boot.img or any other partition. However boot.img and other partitions may not be copied in ROM but in recovery mode only. So better use recovery for dd except if you're​ going to dd recovery partition itself. You can read here more about android partitions.

COPY WHOLE FOLDER (within device)
This method can be used to backup folders like /data/media/ which isn't backed up by custom recovery (TWRP).

To jump from windows command prompt to android device shell:
Code:
adb shell
These commands can also be given from Recovery Terminal.
To get SuperUser access (in ROM):
Code:
su
To copy from Internal Memory to SD Card:
Code:
cp -a /data/media/0/. /external_sd/internal_backup/
Or if you don't have SU permission:
Code:
cp -a /external_sd/. /sdcard/
To copy from SD Card to Internal Memory:
Code:
cp -a /external_sd/internal_backup/. /data/media/0/
However, if you are copying to an SD card with FAT32 file system, android permissions of files won't be retained and you would have to fix permissions yourself. In this case, you can use tar command to create archive of files along with their attributes ( permissions: mode & ownership + time-stamps) and security contexts etc. But FAT32 FS has also a limitations of 4GB maximum file size. You may use "split" command along with "tar" to split the archive in smaller blocks. Or use exFat or Ext4 filesystem for larger file support. Ext4 would give higher writing speed in Android but not supported in Windows i.e. SD card can't be mounted in Windows. MTP however works.
To jump from windows command prompt to android device shell:
Code:
adb shell
To get SuperUser access (in ROM):
Code:
su
To copy from Internal Memory to SD Card:
Code:
tar cvpf /external_sd/internal_backup/media.tar /data/media/0/
To extract from SD Card to Internal Memory (along with path):
Code:
tar -xvf /external_sd/internal_backup/media.tar
To extract from SD Card to some other location, use "-C":
Code:
tar -xvf /external_sd/internal_backup/media.tar -C /data/media/0/extracted_archive/

COPY WHOLE FOLDER (From/To PC)
This method can be used to backup folders like /data/media/ which isn't backed up by custom recovery (TWRP).

To copy from PC to device:
Code:
adb push \path\to\folder\on\PC\ /path/to/folder/on/device/
To copy from device to PC:
Code:
adb pull /path/to/folder/on/device/ \path\to\folder\on\PC\

After copying from PC to device's Internal Memory (/data/media/), you might get Permission Denied error e.g. apps can't write or even read from Internal Memory. It's because Android (Linux) and Windows have different file permissions system. To FIX PERMISSIONS, boot into recovery and run following commands:
(Credits to xak944 :))
Code:
adb shell
To take ownership of whole "media" directory:
Code:
chown -R media_rw:media_rw /data/media/
To fix permissions of directories:
Code:
find /data/media/ -type d -exec chmod 775 '{}' ';'
To fix permissions of files:
Code:
find /data/media/ -type f -exec chmod 664 '{}' ';'
 
Last edited:
D

Deleted member 1890170

Guest
On computer install the "Android USB Driver" provided by your device's manufacturer, if not already done yet.


Also worthwhile to know: Fastboot is differently implemented by manufacturers, means not all Fastboot commands works on every device..
 
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UnderTheLKW

Member
Oct 9, 2021
11
0
On computer install the "Android USB Driver" provided by your device's manufacturer, if not already done yet.


Also worthwhile to know: Fastboot is differently implemented by manufacturers, means not all Fastboot commands works on every device..
Driver are installed and adb finds my device but If i tipe „fastboot getvar all“ to look at the bootloader status says bootloader: and then nothing
 

UnderTheLKW

Member
Oct 9, 2021
11
0
Again:

Code:
adb devices
adb reboot fastboot
fastboot devices
fastboot getvar all
fastboot reboot
thats what shows up , i dont see if the bootloader is aktive or not

C:\adb>adb devices
List of devices attached
xxxxxxxxxxx device


C:\adb>
C:\adb>adb reboot fastboot

C:\adb>
C:\adb>fastboot devices

C:\adb>
C:\adb>fastboot devices
xxxxxx fastboot

C:\adb>
C:\adb>fastboot getvar all
all:
Finished. Total time: 0.001s

C:\adb>
C:\adb>fastboot reboot
Rebooting OKAY [ 0.000s]
Finished. Total time: 0.007s
 
Last edited:
D

Deleted member 1890170

Guest
Last edited by a moderator:

UnderTheLKW

Member
Oct 9, 2021
11
0
Save boot ( correctly: Booting into Safe mode ) has nothing to do with device's bootloader per se.

Booting into Save mode is used to find problem apps.​



More info here:
.

meant that under Save boot, boot to bootloader is listed, but then by going thought it its start in fastboot, im trying to do it on linux now
 

coolek33

Senior Member
Jul 15, 2012
2,197
1,812
Zadupie
Huawei P30
Asus Zenfone 9
Hi. I'm attempting to downgrade from android 10 to 9 mine sony tv x900h via fastboot. I don't know if it's a good idea. Got images from payload.bin as on the photo. Maybe someone could point me the correct order to manual flash/commands. It has 2 slots and "b" is active one. I want "a" to be flashed with android 9.
 

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bnsmb

Senior Member
Aug 22, 2017
243
131
Frankfurt
Hi

is it possible to recover a phone by flashing images created via dd back on the phone using the "fastboot flash" command?

e.g

- boot the phone from a recovery image with adb support
- create a backup of the important partitions

boot
dtbo
vbmeta
vbmeta_system
vendor_boot
super

via dd:

adb shell dd if=/dev/block/by_name/<partition> | dd of=./<partition.img>


And then later use fastboot to restore the partitions from the images, e.g

fastboot flash super ./super.img

I tried it now a lot of times in different configurations (e.g. with the original Android 11 and Android 12, with ASOPExtended 9.x ; with and without reseting the phone before restoring the partition images, etc) but it did only work some times; most of the times the phone did not boot anymore after restoring the partitions. And I do not know why it works sometimes and sometimes not.

Unfortunatley I did not yet found any infos regarding this approach so: Should that work?

If not: Is there another method to restore the phone using partition images?

and for the records

I'm testing with an ASUS Zenfone 8; the recovery image to create the partition images is the recovery from Lineage 18.x.; the recovery to create the image from the boot partition is TWRP booted via the command "fastboot boot <file>"

regards

Bernd
 

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  • 41
    NOTE:
    I'm not a developer or something even near to that. All information provided here is copied from different sources and according to the best of my knowledge.
    I have tested this on different devices using Windows 8.1 & 10. I'll not be responsible for any harm to you or your device. It works perfectly for me. You may try it on your own risk.
    Save / backup your data before performing any actions.


    WHAT IS ADB/FASTBOOT
    ADB and fastboot are different protocols used through PC to perform different command line operations on device through USB in ROM/Recovery and bootloader mode respectively.
    Android Debugging Bridge is basically used by developers to identify and fix bugs in OS (ROM). ADB works in ROM and recovery both.
    Fastboot works in bootloader mode even when phone is not switched on in Recovery or ROM or even if Android isn't installed on phone. In later case, bootloader can be accessed by certain button combination while powering on device; usually Power + Vol. Down. See here the booting process of Android devices.
    Fastboot/ADB setup is to be made on PC to use this mode. ADB mode has more flexibility than fastboot as it supports more types of flashable files to be flashed. ADB also supports backing up Apps and Data. ADB/fastboot commands can be used to flash recovery and boot images. It can also flash ROMs and mods like rooting solutions and XPOSED by booting into recovery. And above all, it is the only way to unlock bootloader without which the device functionality is too limited. Read here why we need to unlock bootloader.
    In bootloader mode, usually boot logo or fastboot logo appears on device screen.

    SETUP
    1. Enable USB Debugging in Settings > Developer Options. If not available, Dev. Options can be accessed by tapping 5 (or 7) times Build Number in Settings > About Phone.
    2. Allow ADB root access in Dev. Options or SuperSU. Some commands need root.
    3. Allow data transfer over ADB when prompted on device screen. Otherwise you might get errors like device unauthorized etc. So keep screen unlocked at first connect.
    4. Disable MTP, PTP, UMS etc. from USB computer connection on device to avoid any interruptions.
    5. Install Android SDK or simply install 15 Seconds ADB Setup 1.4.2. It works up to Android Lollipop (AOSP 5). Credits to Snoop05
      Windows 8.1 users who got error installing this setup should first install Windows Update KB2917929.
    6. You will have to navigate to adb folder each time you start cmd. Or setup adb to work globally. On your PC, go to System Properties > Advanced System Settings > Environment Variables. Click on New (User Variables). Variables Name: ADB ( Or anything you want). Variables Value: ;C:\adb (if installed 15 seconds setup) or ;C:\SDK\paltform-tools.
    7. Install ADB USB Drivers for your Android Device. To do this automatically, download and run ADB Driver Installer. Connect device through USB cable and install drivers.
    8. NOTE: Spaces in file paths don't work in adb commands. Non-English characters and languages don't work either. Also the commands are case-sensitive.

    There is a long list of adb/fastboot commands to perform numerous operations. Here are a few of those being listed keeping in view certain tasks:

    COMMON COMMANDS
    On PC run Command Prompt as Administrator.
    • To check connected devices when ROM is running on phone:
      Code:
      adb devices
    • To boot into bootloader mode:
      Code:
      adb reboot bootloader
    • To check connected devices when in bootloader mode:
      Code:
      fastboot devices
    • To boot into ROM:
      Code:
      fastboot reboot
    • To boot into recovery:
      Code:
      fastboot reboot recovery
    There are some common Linux commands which can be used in combination with these commands to perform certain operation. However, ADB | FASTBOOT is not necessarily required for these Linux commands. These can be run directly from Terminal Emulator in ROM or Custom Recovery. Some of them are given below.

    UNLOCK BOOTLOADER
    NOTE: Some newer devices don't allow unlocking of bootloader directly to ensure more security. Instead an official method is provided to unlock BL using PC.
    Read here to know about the risks of BL unlocking.


    To check the bootloader status:
    Code:
    fastboot oem device-info
    “True” on unlocked status.
    If "false", run the following to unlock:
    Code:
    fastboot oem unlock

    However these are OEM specific commands and may differ or not work on all devices. Fastboot's own commands (which are part of AOSP source and) that can unlock bootloader allowing flashing of partitions:
    Code:
    fastboot flashing unlock
    Allow flashing of bootloader related partitions too:
    Code:
    fastboot flashing unlock_critical

    FORMAT DATA PARTITION
    This will erase your data.
    Code:
    fastboot format:ext4 userdata
    It can be performed on other flash partitions as well. A general syntax is 'fastboot format:FS PARTITION'

    FLASH RECOVERY
    Download recovery.img (specific for your device) to adb folder.
    To test the recovery without permanently flashing, run the following:
    Code:
    fastboot boot recovery.img
    On next reboot, recovery will be overwritten by previous recovery.
    Or to permanently flash recovery, run:
    Code:
    fastboot flash recovery recovery.img
    fastboot reboot recovery
    Stock ROM's often tend to replace custom recovery with stock one on first reboot. That's why, booting into recovery is recommended before booting into ROM.

    FLASH KERNEL
    Download boot.img (specific for your device) to adb folder and run following:
    Code:
    fastboot flash boot boot.img

    FLASH ROM
    Download ROM.zip (for your device) created for fastboot i.e. with android-info.txt and android-product.txt.
    To wipe your device and then to flash .zip:
    Code:
    fastboot -w
    fastboot update </path/to/your/Rom.zip>

    PASSING FASTBOOT ARGUMENTS
    Fastboot supports passing options. For example, while booting a modified kernel image with FramBuffer Console support, console device and its font can be provided as option:
    Code:
    fastboot boot -c "console=tty0,115200 fbcon=font:VGA8x8" boot-fbcon.img

    GAIN ROOT (Not recommended method. Better flash directly through custom recovery).
    Root is required to modify the contents of /system. You can read here further.
    Download (flashable) supersu.zip and custom or modified recovery.img (having support to flash .zip files) to adb folder and run the following:
    Code:
    fastboot boot recovery.img
    Now once you are in recovery, adb will work instead of fastboot.
    To copy files from PC to device and then to extract files, run the following:
    Code:
    adb push supersu.zip /tmp
    adb shell /sbin/recovery --update_package=/tmp/supersu.zip

    BACKUP / RESTORE APPS & DATA (From/To PC)
    To backup and restore all apps and their data:
    Code:
    adb backup -apk -shared -all -system -f C:\backup.ab
    adb restore C:\backup.ab
    Read here for details.

    COPY WHOLE PARTITION IMAGE (within device)
    This method can be used to backup whole device e.g. to backup /data/ including /data/media/ i.e. Internal SD Card which isn't backed up by custom recovery (TWRP). Or you can get any partition image for development purpose. This method retains complete directory structure as well as file permissions, attributes and contexts.
    • To jump from windows command prompt to android device shell:
      Code:
      adb shell
      These commands can also be given from Recovery Terminal instead of ADB.
    • To get SuperUser access (in ROM):
      Code:
      su
    • To list all available partitions or mount points on device:
      Code:
      cat /proc/partitions
      Or go to "/dev/block/platform/" folder on device. Search for the folder having folder "by-name" inside it. It's msm_sdcc.1 (on Nokia X2). Run the following:
      Code:
      ls -al /dev/block/platform/*/by-name
      Or simply use DiskInfo app to get partition name you want to copy. Say you want to copy /data (userdata) partition. On Nokia X2DS, it is mmcblk0p25.
      To confirm:
      Code:
      readlink /dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/userdata
    • Run the following to copy partition:
      Code:
      dd if=/dev/block/mmcblk0p25 of=/sdcard/data.img
      or
      Code:
      cat /dev/block/mmcblk0p25 > /sdcard/data.img
      or
      Code:
      dd if=/dev/block/bootdevice/by-name/userdata of=/sdcard/data.img
      data.img will be copied to your SD card.
      It also works inversely (restore):
      Code:
      dd if=/sdcard/data.img of=/dev/block/mmcblk0p25
      data.img from your SD card will be written to device.
      Similarly you can copy system.img, boot.img or any other partition. However boot.img and other partitions may not be copied in ROM but in recovery mode only. So better use recovery for dd except if you're​ going to dd recovery partition itself. You can read here more about android partitions.

    COPY WHOLE FOLDER (within device)
    This method can be used to backup folders like /data/media/ which isn't backed up by custom recovery (TWRP).

    To jump from windows command prompt to android device shell:
    Code:
    adb shell
    These commands can also be given from Recovery Terminal.
    To get SuperUser access (in ROM):
    Code:
    su
    To copy from Internal Memory to SD Card:
    Code:
    cp -a /data/media/0/. /external_sd/internal_backup/
    Or if you don't have SU permission:
    Code:
    cp -a /external_sd/. /sdcard/
    To copy from SD Card to Internal Memory:
    Code:
    cp -a /external_sd/internal_backup/. /data/media/0/
    However, if you are copying to an SD card with FAT32 file system, android permissions of files won't be retained and you would have to fix permissions yourself. In this case, you can use tar command to create archive of files along with their attributes ( permissions: mode & ownership + time-stamps) and security contexts etc. But FAT32 FS has also a limitations of 4GB maximum file size. You may use "split" command along with "tar" to split the archive in smaller blocks. Or use exFat or Ext4 filesystem for larger file support. Ext4 would give higher writing speed in Android but not supported in Windows i.e. SD card can't be mounted in Windows. MTP however works.
    To jump from windows command prompt to android device shell:
    Code:
    adb shell
    To get SuperUser access (in ROM):
    Code:
    su
    To copy from Internal Memory to SD Card:
    Code:
    tar cvpf /external_sd/internal_backup/media.tar /data/media/0/
    To extract from SD Card to Internal Memory (along with path):
    Code:
    tar -xvf /external_sd/internal_backup/media.tar
    To extract from SD Card to some other location, use "-C":
    Code:
    tar -xvf /external_sd/internal_backup/media.tar -C /data/media/0/extracted_archive/

    COPY WHOLE FOLDER (From/To PC)
    This method can be used to backup folders like /data/media/ which isn't backed up by custom recovery (TWRP).

    To copy from PC to device:
    Code:
    adb push \path\to\folder\on\PC\ /path/to/folder/on/device/
    To copy from device to PC:
    Code:
    adb pull /path/to/folder/on/device/ \path\to\folder\on\PC\

    After copying from PC to device's Internal Memory (/data/media/), you might get Permission Denied error e.g. apps can't write or even read from Internal Memory. It's because Android (Linux) and Windows have different file permissions system. To FIX PERMISSIONS, boot into recovery and run following commands:
    (Credits to xak944 :))
    Code:
    adb shell
    To take ownership of whole "media" directory:
    Code:
    chown -R media_rw:media_rw /data/media/
    To fix permissions of directories:
    Code:
    find /data/media/ -type d -exec chmod 775 '{}' ';'
    To fix permissions of files:
    Code:
    find /data/media/ -type f -exec chmod 664 '{}' ';'
    3
    i also have problem trying to issue some fastboot command
    bootloader have been unlock
    except fastboot reboot command, the rest of fastboot cannot be execute
    the error were
    ...
    FAILED (remote: Command not allowed)
    finished. total time: 0.00s

    can i issue fastboot command from twrp terminal
    i want to enable charge reboot

    on fastboot
    fastboot oem off-mode-charge disable

    how to issue comand from within twrp terminal?
    All vendors don't allow all fastboot commands. Despite of unlocked bootloader, some commands might not work or work differently on certain devices.
    No you can't control fastboot from TWRP. Bootloader / fastboot come at lower level in boot process. Recovery itself is loaded by bootloader. We can't control fastboot from recovery. However a few adb commands work in TWRP as well.
    2
    ".*" means everything from folder, right?
    Yes, including hidden files. You can search about globbing and wildcards. Start from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glob_(programming)#Windows_and_DOS
    2
    Just a question as I dont need to do any of this, but what happens with files without an extension? ie no dot in the filename.
    Globs has nothing to do with file extensions. On mostly shells * matches only non-hidden files. dotglob (.*) ensures that hidden files (starting with a .) are also matched.
    2
    Is there a way to use adb to backup the entire /data partition without root? I swear I have done it before but I can't seem to get it to work anymore. Perhaps I need to switch to an older version of adb?
    No you can't. (Why? See first paragraph of this answer: https://android.stackexchange.com/a/219926/218526). Your "adbd" must have been running with root privileges previously which now is not: https://android.stackexchange.com/a/213429/218526