lpmake --metadata-size 65536 \ --super-name super \ --block-size 4096 \ --output super-empty.img Or download it from a trusted GSI repository.
You can create it using lpmake from Android’s liblp :
On modern Android devices with dynamic partitions (launched with Android 10), super is a physical partition that contains logical partitions like system , product , vendor , and odm . Resizing or corrupting any of those can leave super in an inconsistent state.
Here’s a draft for a blog post that’s technical, practical, and engaging—focused on the lesser-known fastboot wipe-super super-empty.img command. Fastboot’s Secret Weapon: Why fastboot wipe-super super-empty.img Saved My Bricked Android
When you supply super-empty.img , you’re providing an empty super image (a valid sparse image with no logical partitions). This forces the device to recreate the super partition from scratch.
fastboot wipe-super erases the super partition’s metadata—specifically the partition table inside super . It doesn’t zero out data, but it resets the dynamic partitioning layout.