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How to install android-hacker/VirtualXposed. Official installation instructions. Project installation guide. Framework or library installation. Build installation instructions. How to setup and install from GitHub. Installation steps and setup instructions. Official docs and installation instructions GitHub.

android-hacker/VirtualXposed Installation Guide

How to install android-hacker/VirtualXposed. Official project installation instructions and setup guide.

Automated Install (Recommended)

Quick installation instructions for android-hacker/VirtualXposed. This is the fastest way to complete project installation and setup.

Install via curl

curl -fsSL https://hexmos.com/ipm-install | bash && 
ipm i android-hacker/VirtualXposed
or

Install via npx

npx @hexmos/ipm i android-hacker/VirtualXposed

Prerequisites

Python

package_manager

Version: 3.8+

VirtualXposed

build_tool

Version: 0.8.7

Vagrant

system_tool

Version: 2.0.0

Docker

build_tool

Version: 20.10.2

AWS

system_tool

Resource Hooks

knowledge

Basic Linux CLI skill

Manual Installation Methods

Manual installation instructions. How to install from GitHub source.

Clone an installed app from your original system.

Clone an installed app from your original system.

Install via an APK file.

Install via an external file chooser.

Post Installation Steps

  • Run the VirtualXposed server: `sudo systemctl start virtualxposed`
  • Verify the server is running: `sudo systemctl status virtualxposed`
  • Check the server logs: `sudo journalctl -u virtualxposed`
  • Access the VirtualXposed UI: `http://localhost:8080` (or the appropriate URL)
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • If you have a database, run migrations: `sudo -u postgres pg_dump -U postgres > database.sql`
  • If you have a database, connect to it: `psql -U postgres -d database`
  • Check the VirtualXposed server status: `sudo systemctl status virtualxposed`
  • Verify the server is running: `sudo systemctl status virtualxposed`