![]() In case your Android device isn't rooted, you still can use Terminal Emulator in order to execute some basic (user) commands such as blkid, cat, cd, clear, cp, du, grep, id, ln, ls, ping, sleep, uptime et cetera. If you want to add extra commands to your rooted Android system, install BusyBox. Notice how Terminal Emulator's shell interface now shows you by default. In order to disconnect from the uid 0 (exit superuser status), press Volume - and D, or type exit and hit EnterĪlternatively, if you want to always start Terminal Emulator as root, then start Terminal Emulator, go to Preferences, scroll down to the SHELL section, tap the Command line option and modify the command so it becomes this: /system/xbin/su -c "/system/bin/sh -"Īfter you change the command, exit Terminal Emulator (close the application) and start it again. If you want to enter the shell and become root (superuser uid 0) so you can execute commands without uid restrictions, start the Terminal Emulator app and just execute this command: su. If all the 4 conditions above are satisfied, then: Your Android device has Terminal Emulator installed.The shell binary is located at /system/bin/sh and.The su binary is located at /system/xbin/su. ![]() Some even offer additional features, such as an entire development environment ( Terminal IDE), or access to remote servers ( JuiceSSH). I'd say all terminal apps available for Android should support the above.
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