The AT&T Samsung Galaxy Note 4 currently has temp root, but no permanent root. I am not 100% sure I understand the difference.
From what I gather, temp root is lost if the phone is rebooted in a typical fashion:
- Battery drains to the point the phone shuts off
- Pull the battery, let the electricity discharge, put the battery back in, and boot the phone normally
- Tell the phone to reboot (for example by holding the power button and using that menu)
However, I remember reading (sorry lost the links) that a "soft" reboot will not force you to lose root. I'm not clear on what a soft reboot is. The description I read said something about the software rebooting but not the kernal. Finding information on this is troublesome since the terms "reboot" and "reset" have become intermingled by nontechnical users.
For example, Technopedia describes one thing, while another site talks about hard vs soft reset. Both were results for the search term what is a soft reboot
.
There's a link on XDA Developers where a user is asking the difference between a soft reset and a reboot: http ://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=620337
Over on Android Central, there's a thread where the people who reply get their vocabulary mixed up: http ://forums.androidcentral.com/htc-evo-4g/15765-soft-reboot.html
What are the differences between a permanent root from a user functionality perspective? What kinds of apps do not work, or don't work well, with temp root?
What is a soft reboot? What are the benefits?