avbroot is a program for patching Android A/B-style OTA images for root access while preserving AVB (Android Verified Boot) using custom signing keys. It is compatible with both Magisk and KernelSU.
Having a good understanding of how AVB and A/B OTAs work is recommended prior to using avbroot. At the very least, please make sure the warnings and caveats are well-understood to avoid the risk of hard bricking.
avbroot applies two patches to the boot images:
-
Magisk is applied to the
boot
orinit_boot
image, depending on device, as if it were done from the Magisk app. -
The
boot
,recovery
, orvendor_boot
image, depending on device, is patched to replace the OTA signature verification certificates with the custom OTA signing certificate. This allows future patched OTAs to be sideloaded after the bootloader has been locked. It also prevents accidental flashing of the original OTA package while booted into recovery.
-
The device must use (non-legacy-SAR) A/B partitioning. This is the case on newer Pixel and OnePlus devices. To check if a device uses this partitioning sceme, open the OTA zip file and check that:
payload.bin
existsMETA-INF/com/android/metadata.pb
existsMETA-INF/com/android/metadata
contains the line:ota-type=AB
-
The device must support using a custom public key for the bootloader's root of trust. This is normally done via the
fastboot flash avb_custom_key
command. All Pixel devices with unlockable bootloaders support this, as well as most OnePlus devices. Other devices may support it as well, but there's no easy way to check without just trying it. -
Do not ever disable the
OEM unlocking
checkbox when using a locked bootloader with root. This is critically important. With root access, it is possible to corrupt the running system, for example by zeroing out the boot partition. In this scenario, if the checkbox is turned off, both the OS and recovery mode will be made unbootable andfastboot flashing unlock
will not be allowed. This effectively renders the device hard bricked. -
Any operation that causes an unsigned or differently-signed boot image to be flashed will result in the device being unbootable and unrecoverable without unlocking the bootloader again (and thus, triggering a data wipe). This includes:
-
Performing a regular (unpatched) A/B OTA update. This can be blocked via a Magisk module (see: Blocking A/B OTA Updates).
-
The
Direct install
method for updating Magisk. Magisk updates must be done by repatching as well.
-
avbroot signs a few components while patching an OTA zip:
- the root
vbmeta
image - the boot image
vbmeta
footers (if the original ones were signed) - the OTA payload
- the OTA zip itself
The boot-related components are signed with an AVB key and OTA-related components are signed with an OTA key. They can be the same RSA keypair, though the following steps show how to generate two separate keys.
-
Generate the AVB and OTA signing keys:
openssl genrsa 4096 | openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -scrypt -out avb.key openssl genrsa 4096 | openssl pkcs8 -topk8 -scrypt -out ota.key
-
Convert the public key portion of the AVB signing key to the AVB public key metadata format. This is the format that the bootloader requires when setting the custom root of trust.
python /path/to/avbroot/external/avb/avbtool.py extract_public_key --key avb.key --output avb_pkmd.bin
-
Generate a self-signed certificate for the OTA signing key. This is used by recovery for verifying OTA updates.
openssl req -new -x509 -sha256 -key ota.key -out ota.crt -days 10000 -subj '/CN=OTA/'
avbroot depends on the openssl
command line tool and the lz4
and protobuf
Python libraries. Also, Python 3.9 or newer is required.
On Linux, the dependencies can be installed from the distro's package manager:
Distro | Command |
---|---|
Alpine | sudo apk add openssl py3-lz4 py3-protobuf |
Arch Linux | sudo pacman -S openssl python-lz4 python-protobuf |
Debian | sudo apt install openssl python3-lz4 python3-protobuf |
Fedora | sudo dnf install openssl python3-lz4 python3-protobuf |
OpenSUSE | sudo zypper install openssl python3-lz4 python3-protobuf |
Ubuntu | (Same as Debian) |
Installing openssl and python from the Scoop package manager is suggested.
scoop install openssl python
Installing from other sources should work as well, but it might be necessary to manually add openssl
's installation directory to the PATH
environment variable.
To install the Python dependencies:
-
Create a virtual environment (replacing
<directory>
with the path where it should be created):python -m venv <directory>
-
Activate the virtual environment. This must be done in every new terminal session before running avbroot.
. <directory>\Scripts\Activate.ps1
-
Install the dependencies.
pip install -r requirements.txt
-
Make sure the caveats listed above are understood. It is possible to hard brick by doing the wrong thing!
-
Clone this git repo recursively, as there are several AOSP repositories included as submodules in the
external/
directory.git clone --recursive https://github.com/chenxiaolong/avbroot.git
If the repo is already cloned, run the following command instead to fetch the submodules:
git submodule update --init --recursive
-
Follow the steps to install dependencies.
-
Follow the steps to generate signing keys.
-
Patch the full OTA ZIP.
python avbroot.py \ patch \ --input /path/to/ota.zip \ --privkey-avb /path/to/avb.key \ --privkey-ota /path/to/ota.key \ --cert-ota /path/to/ota.crt \ --magisk /path/to/magisk.apk
If
--output
is not specified, then the output file is written to<input>.patched
.NOTE: If you are using Magisk version >=25211, you need to know the preinit partition name (
--magisk-preinit-device <name>
). For details, see the Magisk preinit device section.If you prefer to use an existing boot image patched by the Magisk app or you want to use KernelSU, see the advanced usage section.
-
[Initial setup only] Unlock the bootloader. This will trigger a data wipe.
-
[Initial setup only] Extract the patched images from the patched OTA.
python avbroot.py \ extract \ --input /path/to/ota.zip.patched \ --directory extracted
-
[Initial setup only] Flash the patched images and the AVB public key metadata. This sets up the custom root of trust. Future updates are done by simply sideloading patched OTA zips.
# Flash the boot images that were extracted for image in extracted/*.img; do partition=$(basename "${image}") partition=${partition%.img} fastboot flash "${partition}" "${image}" done # Flash the AVB signing public key fastboot erase avb_custom_key fastboot flash avb_custom_key /path/to/avb_pkmd.bin
-
[Initial setup only] Run
dmesg | grep libfs_avb
as root to verify that AVB is working properly. A message similar to the following is expected:init: [libfs_avb]Returning avb_handle with status: Success
-
[Initial setup only] Lock the bootloader. This will trigger a data wipe again. Do not uncheck
OEM unlocking
!WARNING: If you are flashing CalyxOS, the setup wizard will automatically turn off the
OEM unlocking
switch. Make sure to manually reenable it again from Android's developer settings. Consider using avbroot'soemunlockonboot
Magisk module to automatically ensure OEM unlocking is enabled on every boot.
To update Android or Magisk:
-
Follow step 5 in the previous section to patch the new OTA (or an existing OTA with a newer Magisk APK).
-
Reboot to recovery mode. If stuck at a
No command
screen, press the volume up button once while holding down the power button. -
Sideload the patched OTA.
-
Reboot.
avbroot's Magisk modules can be built by running:
python modules/build.py
This requires Java and the Android SDK to be installed. The ANDROID_HOME
environment variable should be set to the Android SDK path.
Alternatively, prebuilt modules can be downloaded from GitHub Actions. Select the latest workflow run and then download avbroot-modules-<version>
at the bottom of the page. Note that GitHub only allows downloading the file when logged in.
Unpatched OTA updates are already blocked in recovery because the original OTA certificate has been replaced with the custom certificate. To disable automatic OTAs while booted into Android, turn off Automatic system updates
in Android's Developer Options.
The clearotacerts
module additionally makes A/B OTAs fail while booted into Android to prevent accidental manual updates. The module simply overrides /system/etc/security/otacerts.zip
at runtime with an empty zip so that even if an OTA is downloaded, signature verification will fail.
Alternatively, see Custota for a custom OTA updater app that pulls from a self-hosted OTA server.
To help reduce the risk of OEM unlocking being accidentally disabled (or intentionally disabled as part of some OS's initial setup wizard), this module will attempt to enable the OEM unlocking option on every boot.
The logs for this module can be found at /data/local/tmp/avbroot_oem_unlock.log
.
Magisk versions 25211 and newer require a writable partition for storing custom SELinux rules that need to be accessed during early boot stages. This can only be determined on a real device, so avbroot requires the partition's block device name to be specified via --magisk-preinit-device <name>
. To find the partition name:
-
Extract the boot image from the original/unpatched OTA:
python avbroot.py \ extract \ --input /path/to/ota.zip \ --directory . \ --boot-only
-
Patch the boot image via the Magisk app. This MUST be done on the target device! The partition name will be incorrect if patched from Magisk on a different device.
The Magisk app will include a line like the following in the output:
- Pre-init storage partition device ID: <name>
Alternatively, avbroot can print out what Magisk detected by running:
python avbroot.py \ magisk-info \ --image magisk_patched-*.img
The partition name will be shown as
PREINITDEVICE=<name>
.Now that the partition name is known, it can be passed to avbroot when patching via
--magisk-preinit-device <name>
. The partition name should be saved somewhere for future reference since it's unlikely to change across Magisk updates.
If it's not possible to run the Magisk app on the target device (eg. device is currently unbootable), patch and flash the OTA once using --ignore-magisk-warnings
, follow these steps, and then repatch and reflash the OTA with --magisk-preinit-device <name>
.
avbroot can replace the boot image with a prepatched image instead of applying the Magisk root patch itself. This is useful for using a boot image patched by the Magisk app or for KernelSU. To use a prepatched boot image, pass in --prepatched <boot image>
instead of --magisk <apk>
. When using --prepatched
, avbroot will skip applying the Magisk root patch, but will still apply the OTA certificate patch.
For KernelSU, also pass in --boot-partition @gki_kernel
for both the patch
and extract
commands. avbroot defaults to Magisk's semantics where the boot image containing the GKI ramdisk is needed, whereas KernelSU requires the boot image containing the GKI kernel. This only affects devices launching with Android 13, where the GKI kernel and ramdisk are in different partitions (boot
vs. init_boot
), but it is safe and recommended to always use this option for KernelSU.
Note that avbroot will validate that the prepatched image is compatible with the original. If, for example, the header fields do not match or a boot image section is missing, then the patching process will abort. The checks are not foolproof, but should help protect against accidental use of the wrong boot image. To bypass a somewhat "safe" subset of the checks, use --ignore-prepatched-compat
. To ignore all checks (strongly discouraged!), pass it in twice.
avbroot can be used for just resigning an OTA by specifying --rootless
instead of --magisk
/--prepatched
. With this option, the patched OTA will not be rooted. The only modification applied is the replacement of the OTA verification certificate so that the OS can be upgraded with future (patched) OTAs.
avbroot supports replacing entire partitions in the OTA, even partitions that are not boot images (eg. vendor_dlkm
). A partition can be replaced by passing in --replace <partition name> /path/to/partition.img
.
The only behavior this changes is where the partition is read from. When using --replace
, instead of reading the partition image from the original OTA's payload.bin
, it is read from the specified file. Thus, the replacement partition images must have proper vbmeta footers, like the originals.
This has no impact on what patches are applied. For example, when using Magisk, the root patch is applied to the boot partition, no matter if the partition came from the original payload.bin
or from --replace
.
Some Android builds may ship with a root vbmeta
image with the flags set such that AVB is effectively disabled. When avbroot encounters these images, the patching process will fail with a message like:
ValueError: vbmeta flags disable AVB: 0x3
To forcibly enable AVB (by clearing the flags), pass in --clear-vbmeta-flags
.
avbroot prompts for the private key passphrases interactively by default. To run avbroot non-interactively, either:
-
Supply the passphrases via files:
avbroot patch \ --passphrase-avb-file /path/to/avb.passphrase \ --passphrase-ota-file /path/to/ota.passphrase \ <...>
On Unix-like systems, the "files" can be pipes. With shells that support process substituion (bash, zsh, etc.), the passphrase can be queried from a command (eg. querying a password manager).
avbroot patch \ --passphrase-avb-file <(command to query AVB passphrase) \ --passphrase-ota-file <(command to query OTA passphrase) \ <...>
-
Supply the passphrases via environment variables. This is less secure since any process running as the same user can see the environment variable values.
export PASSPHRASE_AVB="the AVB passphrase" export PASSPHRASE_OTA="the OTA passphrase" avbroot patch \ --passphrase-avb-env-var PASSPHRASE_AVB \ --passphrase-ota-env-var PASSPHRASE_OTA \ <...>
-
Use unencrypted private keys. This is not recommended, but can be done by:
openssl pkcs8 -in avb.key -topk8 -nocrypt -out avb.unencrypted.key openssl pkcs8 -in ota.key -topk8 -nocrypt -out ota.unencrypted.key
To extract all images contained within the OTA's payload.bin
, run:
python avbroot.py \
extract \
--input /path/to/ota.zip \
--directory extracted \
--all
-
avbroot relies on AOSP's avbtool and OTA utilities. These are collections of applications that aren't meant to be used as libraries, but avbroot shoehorns them in anyway. These tools are not called via CLI because avbroot requires more control over the operations being performed than what is provided via the CLI interfaces. This "integration" is incredibly hacky and will likely require changes whenever the submodules are updated to point to newer AOSP commits.
-
AVB has two methods of handling signature verification:
- An image can have an unsigned vbmeta footer, which causes the image's hash to be embedded in the (signed) root
vbmeta
image via vbmeta hash descriptors. - An image can have a signed vbmeta footer, which causes a public key for verification to be embedded in the root
vbmeta
image via vbmeta chainload descriptors. This is meant for out-of-band updates where signed images can be updated without also updating the rootvbmeta
image.
avbroot preserves whether an image uses a chainload or hash descriptor. If a boot image was previously signed, then it will be signed with the AVB key during patching. This preserves the state of the AVB rollback indices, which makes it possible to flip between the original and patched images without a factory reset while debugging avbroot (with the bootloader unlocked).
- An image can have an unsigned vbmeta footer, which causes the image's hash to be embedded in the (signed) root
Contributions are welcome! However, I'm unlikely to accept changes for supporting devices that behave significantly differently from Pixel devices.
avbroot is licensed under GPLv3. Please see LICENSE
for the full license text.