I don’t know if you’re asking because of my recent post on fdroid@lemmy.ml, but if you’re worried that someone might put a virus or some kind of remote hack into your device, you have nothing to worry about or shouldn’t, as I said in a response to the post, unless you are connected to dubious or public WiFi where anyone can run adb, no one can do anything to you and I say this because at least on my device, my device only activates debugger mode if it is connected specifically to a network that I, the user, identify as safe, otherwise it cannot be activated.
Short Answer: No, you have nothing to worry about, just don’t tell your phone that any public network is trusty unless you’re connected to a VPN.
That’s true, but it’s also important to clarify that if I understand it correctly, using Shizuku or wireless debugger mode is specifically dangerous on unknown networks, like public WiFi networks, where anyone could connect to your device with adb, but in case of use from a secure network such as your home (unless some device has been infected by some type of remote control virus) you can use it without problem.
I understand that most people will not mind leaving it on and their phone will automatically connect to any WiFi network, but in my case my device asks me every time I start the wireless debugger mode that if the network I'm connected is a secure network, and it only works if it's connected to this network.
"Recommended" means that you can delete it without harming your device in any way, so you are free to delete any of the apps that have the "Recommended" label :). However, if you have any doubts you can click on the app you want to remove and it will usually have a description saying why it is recommended to remove it.
As I said, I am not an expert on the subject, my mentality comes from the fact that my concept of partitions was that they were overwritten, like making a scratch on a DVD and the content could not be read because of that.
It is incredible that it does all that in a matter of seconds, I mean, it moves so much data without problem in jusr seconds, although in fact that is something curious that I have noticed in Linux. If I move something to the same storage even if it is in a different partition, it makes it instantaneous.
I’m using ext4 and the contents of the HDD are basically virtual machines, and I was able to access most of them (who use dynamic virtual hard drives) and they seem to work without problem, so I assumed that nothing got corrupted.
Actually I was surprised because a long ago I tried to do the same with BFTRS and all my data get corrupted that time.
And it’s interesting, thanks for the info. I didn’t know that it worked like that.
I used to do exactly that a long time ago with Syncthing and it was as simple as you say, but it always broke something, but after a while it was literally impossible to do and after some research on Joplin's Github issues I found out that due to a change Google made in the Android storage system it was no longer possible and "they were investigating how to fix it".
In the end I got tired of waiting and pay a cheap Nextcloud hosting to sync with webdav and that's it.
In all my years of pirating on Linux is the first time I've heard of this tool, could you give a brief description of it? Their Github isn't entirely clear and his website is completely in Russian.
I’ll look into it and if I find anything I’ll answer you here.