The Android file system can be corrupted. However, in a properly configured system, the bootloader, kernel, and system are read-only, and thus, should never be corrupted. The writable system partitions (data/ and cache/) are susceptible to corruption. But, usually, devices can be booted into a "recovery" or a "factory reset" mode which will allow these partitions to be reformatted. Many "rooted" devices leave the system/ partition writable, which as you now realize is not only a security issue but a reliability issue. If you corrupt your system partition, the only sure fix is to reload the system externally.
On Oct 1, 2:26 am, Lay <lightai...@gmail.com> wrote: > Dear Android experts, > > Recently, my Ubuntu filesystem got corrupted because it was improperly > shut down. Android is also based on Linux. Why is it Android > filesystem never gets corrupted? How did the Android people do it? I > am really puzzled because both OS are based on Linux. > > Thank you. -- unsubscribe: android-porting+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com website: http://groups.google.com/group/android-porting