Root Repo Termux -
pkg list-repositories You should see an entry like: root https://packages.termux.org/apt/termux-root root stable Try installing tcpdump , a classic network diagnostic tool.
| Package | Command | What it does (with root) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | tcpdump | su -c tcpdump | Capture network packets for debugging or security analysis. | | nmap | su -c nmap -sS | Perform stealth SYN scans on your local network. | | fstrim | su -c fstrim -v /data | Tell SSD/eMMC storage to garbage-collect unused blocks. | | iw | su -c iw dev wlan0 scan | Scan Wi-Fi channels (replaces deprecated iwconfig ). | | msmtp | su -c msmtp | Send system alerts via email as root. | | htop | su -c htop | View all processes, including system daemons. | | openssh (root use) | su -c ssh | SSH as root (disable password auth for security!). | Running commands as root is like giving someone the keys to your entire kingdom. Follow these rules: 1. Never Run su -c Unnecessarily Bad: su -c ls (just use ls normally). Good: Only use su -c for commands that truly need root. 2. Avoid su -c "bash" (Interactive Root Shell) If you type su -c bash , you’ll drop into a persistent root shell. One wrong rm -rf /* and your device is a brick. If you need multiple root commands, use: root repo termux
su -c "tcpdump -i wlan0 -c 10" Termux will ask for root permission (via Magisk/SuperSU). Grant it, and you’ll see raw packet data. Congratulations—you’ve just used the root repo! Once root-repo is active, explore these powerful tools: pkg list-repositories You should see an entry like:
Now go forth—and may your packets be captured and your storage trimmed. Have a cool root-repo project? Found another essential package I missed? Drop a comment below or ping me on the Termux subreddit. | | fstrim | su -c fstrim -v
pkg update hangs after adding root-repo. Solution: The GPG key might be outdated. Run:
su -c tcpdump says permission denied . Solution: Check Magisk → Superuser. Is Termux listed? If yes, long-press and revoke, then re-grant. If no, you may need to install a su binary. Try pkg install tsu (a wrapper script).