nandpart | Windows application to resize the Nintendo Switch USER
kandi X-RAY | nandpart Summary
kandi X-RAY | nandpart Summary
nandpart is a Python library. nandpart has no bugs, it has no vulnerabilities, it has a Strong Copyleft License and it has low support. However nandpart build file is not available. You can download it from GitHub.
Windows application to resize the Nintendo Switch USER partition when a larger system NAND is installed.
Windows application to resize the Nintendo Switch USER partition when a larger system NAND is installed.
Support
Quality
Security
License
Reuse
Support
nandpart has a low active ecosystem.
It has 11 star(s) with 4 fork(s). There are 2 watchers for this library.
It had no major release in the last 6 months.
nandpart has no issues reported. There are no pull requests.
It has a neutral sentiment in the developer community.
The latest version of nandpart is current.
Quality
nandpart has 0 bugs and 0 code smells.
Security
nandpart has no vulnerabilities reported, and its dependent libraries have no vulnerabilities reported.
nandpart code analysis shows 0 unresolved vulnerabilities.
There are 0 security hotspots that need review.
License
nandpart is licensed under the GPL-2.0 License. This license is Strong Copyleft.
Strong Copyleft licenses enforce sharing, and you can use them when creating open source projects.
Reuse
nandpart releases are not available. You will need to build from source code and install.
nandpart has no build file. You will be need to create the build yourself to build the component from source.
Installation instructions are available. Examples and code snippets are not available.
It has 426 lines of code, 79 functions and 1 files.
It has medium code complexity. Code complexity directly impacts maintainability of the code.
Top functions reviewed by kandi - BETA
kandi has reviewed nandpart and discovered the below as its top functions. This is intended to give you an instant insight into nandpart implemented functionality, and help decide if they suit your requirements.
- Called when a file is selected
- Refreshes the table
- Write bytes to file
- Read size bytes from the file
- Return a human readable size string
- Open the file
- Close the file
- Set CRC of the packet
- Return the header
- Set the CRC of the partition entries
- Quit the app
- Print data
- Prints the partition information
- Returns the size of the file
- Prints the image
- Called when src is selected
Get all kandi verified functions for this library.
nandpart Key Features
No Key Features are available at this moment for nandpart.
nandpart Examples and Code Snippets
No Code Snippets are available at this moment for nandpart.
Community Discussions
No Community Discussions are available at this moment for nandpart.Refer to stack overflow page for discussions.
Community Discussions, Code Snippets contain sources that include Stack Exchange Network
Vulnerabilities
No vulnerabilities reported
Install nandpart
pip3 install pyqt5 wmi.
Ensure you have your biskeys, if you do not, lookup a tutorial on how to get them. Use Hekate to take a backup of boot0 and boot1. Download memloader from https://switchtools.sshnuke.net/, copy everything inside of the "sample" directory to your SD root. Reboot your switch and launch the memloader RCM payload (leave USB cable connected). Use NxNandManager (https://github.com/eliboa/NxNandManager) to take a full nand backup to your PC. Turn off your switch, disassemble it, and install the new upgraded NAND. Boot into Hekate, and restore boot0 and boot1. The first time you try it, it should fail, take note of the directory it is trying to restore the backups from, and move your boot0 and boot1 backups into that directory, then restore again. Power off the switch, launch the memloader payload (leave USB cable connected). Use win32diskimager to flash your 32GB NAND backup to your switch. Use hacdiskmount to mount your user partition using your BIS keys (either use the backup image you took earlier which is faster, or mount the actual switch). Copy all of the files from the user partition to a safe place on your PC, then unmount and close hacdiskmount. Launch NANDPart, select your switch from the dropdown, verify the partitions look correct, then click "resize". Launch hacdiskmount and mount your USER partition using your BIS keys and actual switch. Bring up a windows command prompt with admin rights, and run "fat32format.exe X:" where X: is the drive of your mounted user partition. Copy all of your backed up user partition files back to the switch's newly created user partition. Reboot into CFW and ensure everything is working correctly.
Ensure you have your biskeys, if you do not, lookup a tutorial on how to get them.
Use Hekate to take a backup of boot0 and boot1.
Download memloader from https://switchtools.sshnuke.net/, copy everything inside of the "sample" directory to your SD root.
Reboot your switch and launch the memloader RCM payload (leave USB cable connected).
Use NxNandManager (https://github.com/eliboa/NxNandManager) to take a full nand backup to your PC.
Turn off your switch, disassemble it, and install the new upgraded NAND.
Boot into Hekate, and restore boot0 and boot1. The first time you try it, it should fail, take note of the directory it is trying to restore the backups from, and move your boot0 and boot1 backups into that directory, then restore again.
Power off the switch, launch the memloader payload (leave USB cable connected).
Use win32diskimager to flash your 32GB NAND backup to your switch.
Use hacdiskmount to mount your user partition using your BIS keys (either use the backup image you took earlier which is faster, or mount the actual switch).
Copy all of the files from the user partition to a safe place on your PC, then unmount and close hacdiskmount.
Launch NANDPart, select your switch from the dropdown, verify the partitions look correct, then click "resize".
Launch hacdiskmount and mount your USER partition using your BIS keys and actual switch.
Bring up a windows command prompt with admin rights, and run "fat32format.exe X:" where X: is the drive of your mounted user partition.
Copy all of your backed up user partition files back to the switch's newly created user partition.
Reboot into CFW and ensure everything is working correctly.
Ensure you have your biskeys, if you do not, lookup a tutorial on how to get them. Use Hekate to take a backup of boot0 and boot1. Download memloader from https://switchtools.sshnuke.net/, copy everything inside of the "sample" directory to your SD root. Reboot your switch and launch the memloader RCM payload (leave USB cable connected). Use NxNandManager (https://github.com/eliboa/NxNandManager) to take a full nand backup to your PC. Turn off your switch, disassemble it, and install the new upgraded NAND. Boot into Hekate, and restore boot0 and boot1. The first time you try it, it should fail, take note of the directory it is trying to restore the backups from, and move your boot0 and boot1 backups into that directory, then restore again. Power off the switch, launch the memloader payload (leave USB cable connected). Use win32diskimager to flash your 32GB NAND backup to your switch. Use hacdiskmount to mount your user partition using your BIS keys (either use the backup image you took earlier which is faster, or mount the actual switch). Copy all of the files from the user partition to a safe place on your PC, then unmount and close hacdiskmount. Launch NANDPart, select your switch from the dropdown, verify the partitions look correct, then click "resize". Launch hacdiskmount and mount your USER partition using your BIS keys and actual switch. Bring up a windows command prompt with admin rights, and run "fat32format.exe X:" where X: is the drive of your mounted user partition. Copy all of your backed up user partition files back to the switch's newly created user partition. Reboot into CFW and ensure everything is working correctly.
Ensure you have your biskeys, if you do not, lookup a tutorial on how to get them.
Use Hekate to take a backup of boot0 and boot1.
Download memloader from https://switchtools.sshnuke.net/, copy everything inside of the "sample" directory to your SD root.
Reboot your switch and launch the memloader RCM payload (leave USB cable connected).
Use NxNandManager (https://github.com/eliboa/NxNandManager) to take a full nand backup to your PC.
Turn off your switch, disassemble it, and install the new upgraded NAND.
Boot into Hekate, and restore boot0 and boot1. The first time you try it, it should fail, take note of the directory it is trying to restore the backups from, and move your boot0 and boot1 backups into that directory, then restore again.
Power off the switch, launch the memloader payload (leave USB cable connected).
Use win32diskimager to flash your 32GB NAND backup to your switch.
Use hacdiskmount to mount your user partition using your BIS keys (either use the backup image you took earlier which is faster, or mount the actual switch).
Copy all of the files from the user partition to a safe place on your PC, then unmount and close hacdiskmount.
Launch NANDPart, select your switch from the dropdown, verify the partitions look correct, then click "resize".
Launch hacdiskmount and mount your USER partition using your BIS keys and actual switch.
Bring up a windows command prompt with admin rights, and run "fat32format.exe X:" where X: is the drive of your mounted user partition.
Copy all of your backed up user partition files back to the switch's newly created user partition.
Reboot into CFW and ensure everything is working correctly.
Support
For any new features, suggestions and bugs create an issue on GitHub.
If you have any questions check and ask questions on community page Stack Overflow .
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