Yes, I wish you had quoted the entire text.
Data
The private app data in
/data/data/
or/data/user/*/
that stores your app preferences, login info, databases, etc. This is the most important part to restore apps potentially with their state preserved.Requirements:
⚠️ Root required for backup & restore
⚠️ Shizuku mode (ADB access) cannot read/write at these path
Nowhere in my instructions did I say that I used this feature (“backing up app data”) or that it should be used. You do not need root to backup SMS/MMS & call logs & APKs & external data (Android/data
) / expansion (Android/obb
) / media (Android/media
) of the apps installed… I have also stated many times that I use the in-app backup/export method for application data.
I does not require it. I don’t have root.
I use DivestOS which is based on LineageOS and these have SeedVault integrated in it as a backup solution, but since it doesn’t work well I’ll tell what I do (If your OS has Google’s backup solution, it works well to a certain extent, but there are times when it cannot restore things like call log/sms even though it backs them up).
Android/media
folder, which means I basically export Aegis’ backup file into /storage/emulated/0/Android/media/com.beemdevelopment.aegis/backups
, with this way, I can back up and restore the media
along with the APK of the application using Swift Backup. If you find this step unnecessary/complicated, you can create a folder called Backups
anywhere and put all your backup files there..thumbnails
folder unnecessarily). Also if you stashed all your backups/exports into some folder, it will also sync.When I take these backups, I can completely restore the phone to its previous state even after factory settings. Of course, for a cleaner start, sometimes I don’t sync some folders back or don’t reinstall some applications. To do this the way I want, I reinstall and restore data of the applications one by one.
“even”