The jailbreak, which is named Home Depot, was first released several weeks ago with support for a smattering of devices on various firmwares, and we wrote a piece about its launch at the time. The updated version is labelled Release Candidate 1, indicating its increasing compatibility and proximity to a final iteration.
Update: RC 1 had an issue that would cause Cydia to fail to install. All users please download RC 2 instead.
General details
This jailbreak supports all 32-bit devices. Do not ask about 64-bit, it is not planned.
This jailbreak supports iOS 9.1-9.3.4 inclusive. Do not ask about iOS 9.3.5, iOS 10.x, or any other firmware, it is not planned.
This jailbreak is semi-tethered, requiring re-activation on each reboot, just like Yalu102, Yalu1011, and Pangu 9.2-9.3.3. An untether is not planned.
The tool must be side-loaded using Cydia Impactor, and re-installed every week (free developer account) or year (paid developer account), just like Yalu102, Yalu1011, and Pangu 9.2-9.3.3.
It includes working Cydia, Cydia Substrate, and all the other expected features of a full jailbreak.
If you'd like to try out the tool, it can be downloaded from the Home Depot website, and side-loaded with Cydia Impactor from Mac, Windows, or Linux. If you need a guide on how to use Impactor, feel free to follow our guide for Yalu, the process will be the same.
On the tool's official site can be found the changelog about what's new in Home Depot RC 1
As you can see, many of the changes revolve around the tool's bundled mixtape player, making it more user-friendly and stable. However, a couple of jailbreak-related changes of great importance have also made their way in.
The re-extraction of Cydia in the absence of the "/.installed_home_depot" file should prevent a few unwanted restores, and the improved reliability on the iPod touch 5 is also welcome.
Of course, for most the biggest improvement is in the supported devices list, which now spans every 32-bit device on every iOS version from iOS 9.1-9.3.4 inclusive. This is an impressive support list, and something which was patchy in the original betas due to missing offsets. I myself was forced to restore an iPhone 5c due to issues at this time (though I should add that my iPad 2 running a Home Depot beta version has been as solid as a rock).
Now however, your device should not encounter these issues no matter the model or firmware version, so now would seem a good time to try out the tool if you've been holding out thus far.
Do you have any 32-bit devices on iOS 9.1-9.3.4 which have been awaiting a jailbreak? Are you already using Home Depot?
Source: HomeDepot