Root permission has always been the object of many fans' hot pursuit. Root permission can be understood as a super administrator account, which has the permission to add, delete, modify, and check the entire Android device. In other words, users with Root permission will be able to fully control their mobile devices, freely debug the underlying protocols and functions, and improve the functions of mobile devices according to their own wishes.
Recently Chainfire released the latest SuperSU 2.27 Beta, which released the latest method to obtain Root permission on Android 5.0 system. It will skip the troublesome kernel modification process to obtain Root permission. Although it is still a beta version and the Root mode needs to be improved and optimized (it may cause some devices to restart indefinitely), it is no longer far away from the one click Root.
Since it is a beta version, Chainfire said that the users who try it will bear the consequences, such as unlimited restart or some system crashes. However, this can also help Chainfire get better error reports and launch a stable version as soon as possible.