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Alternatively , if you were only expanding the system, you can restore your old data, but note that the repartitioning might require a clean flash of the ROM to work properly. Select Reboot -> System . Troubleshooting
Simply put, this is a flashable recovery script (created by the developer zardmi3 ) that re-allocates the internal eMMC storage of the 16GB Mi Pad 1. It steals space from the oversized /cache and gives it to the /system and /data partitions.
Turn off the tablet. Hold Volume Up + Power until the Mi logo appears, then release the Power button while holding Volume Up to enter recovery mode.
Without rebooting, return to the install menu and flash the .
Specifically, if you own the variant, you have likely run into the dreaded "Insufficient storage" error while trying to install even basic apps. Why? Because Xiaomi allocated only about 1.2GB to the /system partition and a ridiculously tiny ~500MB to /cache , while the /data partition took the rest.
The script will execute via the recovery terminal, unmounting your internal drive, changing the block sizes, and formatting the new layout. Step 4: Format Data to Fix File System Errors
Alternatively , if you were only expanding the system, you can restore your old data, but note that the repartitioning might require a clean flash of the ROM to work properly. Select Reboot -> System . Troubleshooting
Simply put, this is a flashable recovery script (created by the developer zardmi3 ) that re-allocates the internal eMMC storage of the 16GB Mi Pad 1. It steals space from the oversized /cache and gives it to the /system and /data partitions.
Turn off the tablet. Hold Volume Up + Power until the Mi logo appears, then release the Power button while holding Volume Up to enter recovery mode.
Without rebooting, return to the install menu and flash the .
Specifically, if you own the variant, you have likely run into the dreaded "Insufficient storage" error while trying to install even basic apps. Why? Because Xiaomi allocated only about 1.2GB to the /system partition and a ridiculously tiny ~500MB to /cache , while the /data partition took the rest.
The script will execute via the recovery terminal, unmounting your internal drive, changing the block sizes, and formatting the new layout. Step 4: Format Data to Fix File System Errors