| palera1n(1) | General Commands Manual | palera1n(1) |
palera1n — iOS
15.0-16.3.1 arm64 iOS/iPadOS jailbreaking tool
palera1n |
[-cCdDEfhIlLnpRsSvV] [-e
Boot arguments] [-k
Pongo image] [-o
overlay file] [-r
ramdisk file] [-K
KPF file] [-i
checkra1n file] |
palera1n jailbreaks any iOS/iPadOS device
with an arm64 (arm64e excluded) on iOS 15.0-16.3.1, utilizing the
checkm8 bootROM exploit.
palera1n is able to jailbreak the device
in fakefs-rootful mode, where / is writable, as well as rootless mode, where
/ cannot be written to.
Due to the nature of the checkm8 exploit,
palera1n is semi-tethered. That is, you must run the
palera1n tool after the device reboot in order to
enter the jailbroken state. However, it is not required for the device to
boot.
On A11 devices, that is, iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X, the passcode cannot be used.
On iOS 15, the passcode must be off while jailbroken.
On iOS 16, the passcode must be off since restore, and Reset All Contents and Settings from settings app counts as a restore. A backup may be used in this case.
In the remainder of this document, the term "iOS" and "iPadOS" will be used interchangably as the difference is negligible as far as the jailbreak is concerened.
As described above, arm64 iOS 15.0-16.3.1 devices are supported, here is an explicit list of supported devicecs:
Support for other arm64 Darwin devices, including Apple TV, HomePod and iBridge on Darwin 21 and above could be added, but they are currently unsupported.
arm64e devices will NEVER be supported.
--version--force-revert-f, --fakefs, this will
actually boot the device in rootless mode then delete the jailbreak files.
As a result, using the loader app to install the jailbreak environment is
not supported when this option is used together with
-f, --fakefs .-B,
--setup-fakefs-partial-c, --setup-fakefs
but the size of the created fakefs is smaller at the expense of having
unwritable parts in rarely-written paths. When jailbreaking 16 GB devices,
this option must be used when setting up fakefs for rootful, as they do
not have enough storage for full fakefs. This option currently does not
work on iOS 16.-c,
--setup-fakefs-f,
--fakefs, creates the new APFS volume required for
rootful. Will fail if one already exists.-d,
--demote-D,
--dfuhelper-e,
--boot-args boot
argumentspalera1n and cannot be
overriden. Additionally, the
wdt=-1
argument is used during fakefs setup.-E,
--enter-recovery-f,
--fakefs-h,
--help-i,
--checkra1n-file checkra1n
file-k,
--override-pongo pongo
file-K,
--override-kpf KPF file-l,
--rootless-l, --rootless and
-f, --fakefs is specified.
-L, --jbinit-log-to-file
Makes jbinit log to
/cores/jbinit.log
This file may be viewed from sandboxed applications while jailbroken.-n,
--exit-recovery-o,
--override-overlay overlay
file-p,
--pongo-shell-P,
--pongo-full-p, --pongo-shell but
default images and options have been uploaded and applied
respectively.-r,
--override-ramdisk ramdisk
file-R,
--reboot-device-s,
--safe-mode-S,
--no-colors-v,
--debug-logging-V,
--verbose-boot-I,
--device-infoTMPDIR-i,
--override-checkra1n option, files must be
executable from it as the built-in checkra1n file is extracted and
executed here. When not set, /tmp is used.To (re-)jailbreak in rootless mode:
palera1nTo setup fakefs for rootful mode:
palera1n -fcAfter the device has rebooted, follow the following example.
To re-jailbreak in rootful mode:
palera1n -fTo remove the jailbreak in rootful mode:
palera1n --force-revert
-fTo remove the jailbreak in rootless mode:
palera1n --force-revertTo verbose boot in rootful mode:
palera1n -VfTo create a partial fakefs with bind mounts:
palera1n -BfTo exit recovery mode:
palera1n -n-v is not a real XNU boot argument. It is
interpreted by iBoot. However, since XNU boot arguments are set in PongoOS,
which is ran after iBoot has ran, it does nothing. To verbose boot, use the
-V, --verbose-boot option
when jailbreaking.
Fakefs takes up around 5-10 GB of storage, and take up to 10 minutes to setup.
iOS 15.0 requires DER entitlements, and iOS 15.1 requires hash
agility in code signatures. As a result, binaries with the old code
signature format need to be resigned with a recent version of the Procursus
fork of ldid(1) before they can be ran on a device
jailbroken with palera1n .
When using rootful mode, the -f,
--fakefs flag must be specified at all times. It
does not matter whether you want to create fakefs, create partial fakefs,
rejailbreak or remove jailbreak.
The palera1n loader app will take up to 30 seconds to appear on the homescreen after the device has booted. If it does not appear, you can try using the shortcut:
https://www.icloud.com/shortcuts/8cd5f489c8854ee0ab9ee38f2e62f87d
to open it. After opening the loader app, press install to install a bootstrap as well as the Sileo package manager. You can install other package managers from settings of the loader app.
During the jailbreak process, a temporary filesystem is mounted on /cores as a place to stash jailbreak files needed during the boot process. No files are ever written onto the actual disk if you do not use the SSH server to write files or using the loader app to install additional jailbreak files.
-L is used, the log file of jbinit.palera1n may crash if the machine it is
running on:
- Has non-compliant USB devices
plugged inThe exploit may also work less reliably on some hosts, like AMD desktops, or some MediaTek devices.
-B,
--setup-fakefs-partial does not work on iOS 16.
palera1n injects a dylib into launchd to
allow the
launchctl
runstats command to be used on the device.
There was an option in palera1n to force
create the fakefs even when one already exists (which would overwrite the
existing fakefs), by setting the palerain_option_setup_rootful_forced flag
in palera1n flags. This option was removed because using
--force-revert and -c at the
same time has exactly the same effect.
The palera1n jailbreak was first written
by Nebula and Mineek on September 26, 2022, as a shell script. Tweak support
with DEVELOPMENT kernels are added on October 2, 2022. RELEASE kernel
support is added on November 14, 2022. iOS 16 Support is added on December
13, 2022. Later, the first attempt to rewrite palera1n into C begins on
January 01 2023. The palera1n utility described here
is the second attempt, which first started on January 16, 2023, using
checkra1n 1337 and the plush KPF.
| 20 March 2023 |