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1Linux Magic System Request Key Hacks 2Documentation for sysrq.c 3Last update: 2007-AUG-04 4 5* What is the magic SysRq key? 6~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7It is a 'magical' key combo you can hit which the kernel will respond to 8regardless of whatever else it is doing, unless it is completely locked up. 9 10* How do I enable the magic SysRq key? 11~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 12You need to say "yes" to 'Magic SysRq key (CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ)' when 13configuring the kernel. When running a kernel with SysRq compiled in, 14/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq controls the functions allowed to be invoked via 15the SysRq key. By default the file contains 1 which means that every 16possible SysRq request is allowed (in older versions SysRq was disabled 17by default, and you were required to specifically enable it at run-time 18but this is not the case any more). Here is the list of possible values 19in /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq: 20 0 - disable sysrq completely 21 1 - enable all functions of sysrq 22 >1 - bitmask of allowed sysrq functions (see below for detailed function 23 description): 24 2 - enable control of console logging level 25 4 - enable control of keyboard (SAK, unraw) 26 8 - enable debugging dumps of processes etc. 27 16 - enable sync command 28 32 - enable remount read-only 29 64 - enable signalling of processes (term, kill, oom-kill) 30 128 - allow reboot/poweroff 31 256 - allow nicing of all RT tasks 32 33You can set the value in the file by the following command: 34 echo "number" >/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq 35 36Note that the value of /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq influences only the invocation 37via a keyboard. Invocation of any operation via /proc/sysrq-trigger is always 38allowed (by a user with admin privileges). 39 40* How do I use the magic SysRq key? 41~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 42On x86 - You press the key combo 'ALT-SysRq-<command key>'. Note - Some 43 keyboards may not have a key labeled 'SysRq'. The 'SysRq' key is 44 also known as the 'Print Screen' key. Also some keyboards cannot 45 handle so many keys being pressed at the same time, so you might 46 have better luck with "press Alt", "press SysRq", "release SysRq", 47 "press <command key>", release everything. 48 49On SPARC - You press 'ALT-STOP-<command key>', I believe. 50 51On the serial console (PC style standard serial ports only) - 52 You send a BREAK, then within 5 seconds a command key. Sending 53 BREAK twice is interpreted as a normal BREAK. 54 55On PowerPC - Press 'ALT - Print Screen (or F13) - <command key>, 56 Print Screen (or F13) - <command key> may suffice. 57 58On other - If you know of the key combos for other architectures, please 59 let me know so I can add them to this section. 60 61On all - write a character to /proc/sysrq-trigger. e.g.: 62 63 echo t > /proc/sysrq-trigger 64 65* What are the 'command' keys? 66~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 67'b' - Will immediately reboot the system without syncing or unmounting 68 your disks. 69 70'c' - Will perform a kexec reboot in order to take a crashdump. 71 72'd' - Shows all locks that are held. 73 74'e' - Send a SIGTERM to all processes, except for init. 75 76'f' - Will call oom_kill to kill a memory hog process. 77 78'g' - Used by kgdb on ppc and sh platforms. 79 80'h' - Will display help (actually any other key than those listed 81 here will display help. but 'h' is easy to remember :-) 82 83'i' - Send a SIGKILL to all processes, except for init. 84 85'k' - Secure Access Key (SAK) Kills all programs on the current virtual 86 console. NOTE: See important comments below in SAK section. 87 88'l' - Shows a stack backtrace for all active CPUs. 89 90'm' - Will dump current memory info to your console. 91 92'n' - Used to make RT tasks nice-able 93 94'o' - Will shut your system off (if configured and supported). 95 96'p' - Will dump the current registers and flags to your console. 97 98'q' - Will dump a list of all running timers. 99 100'r' - Turns off keyboard raw mode and sets it to XLATE. 101 102's' - Will attempt to sync all mounted filesystems. 103 104't' - Will dump a list of current tasks and their information to your 105 console. 106 107'u' - Will attempt to remount all mounted filesystems read-only. 108 109'v' - Dumps Voyager SMP processor info to your console. 110 111'w' - Dumps tasks that are in uninterruptable (blocked) state. 112 113'x' - Used by xmon interface on ppc/powerpc platforms. 114 115'0'-'9' - Sets the console log level, controlling which kernel messages 116 will be printed to your console. ('0', for example would make 117 it so that only emergency messages like PANICs or OOPSes would 118 make it to your console.) 119 120* Okay, so what can I use them for? 121~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 122Well, un'R'aw is very handy when your X server or a svgalib program crashes. 123 124sa'K' (Secure Access Key) is useful when you want to be sure there is no 125trojan program running at console which could grab your password 126when you would try to login. It will kill all programs on given console, 127thus letting you make sure that the login prompt you see is actually 128the one from init, not some trojan program. 129IMPORTANT: In its true form it is not a true SAK like the one in a :IMPORTANT 130IMPORTANT: c2 compliant system, and it should not be mistaken as :IMPORTANT 131IMPORTANT: such. :IMPORTANT 132 It seems others find it useful as (System Attention Key) which is 133useful when you want to exit a program that will not let you switch consoles. 134(For example, X or a svgalib program.) 135 136re'B'oot is good when you're unable to shut down. But you should also 'S'ync 137and 'U'mount first. 138 139'C'rashdump can be used to manually trigger a crashdump when the system is hung. 140The kernel needs to have been built with CONFIG_KEXEC enabled. 141 142'S'ync is great when your system is locked up, it allows you to sync your 143disks and will certainly lessen the chance of data loss and fscking. Note 144that the sync hasn't taken place until you see the "OK" and "Done" appear 145on the screen. (If the kernel is really in strife, you may not ever get the 146OK or Done message...) 147 148'U'mount is basically useful in the same ways as 'S'ync. I generally 'S'ync, 149'U'mount, then re'B'oot when my system locks. It's saved me many a fsck. 150Again, the unmount (remount read-only) hasn't taken place until you see the 151"OK" and "Done" message appear on the screen. 152 153The loglevels '0'-'9' are useful when your console is being flooded with 154kernel messages you do not want to see. Selecting '0' will prevent all but 155the most urgent kernel messages from reaching your console. (They will 156still be logged if syslogd/klogd are alive, though.) 157 158t'E'rm and k'I'll are useful if you have some sort of runaway process you 159are unable to kill any other way, especially if it's spawning other 160processes. 161 162* Sometimes SysRq seems to get 'stuck' after using it, what can I do? 163~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 164That happens to me, also. I've found that tapping shift, alt, and control 165on both sides of the keyboard, and hitting an invalid sysrq sequence again 166will fix the problem. (i.e., something like alt-sysrq-z). Switching to another 167virtual console (ALT+Fn) and then back again should also help. 168 169* I hit SysRq, but nothing seems to happen, what's wrong? 170~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 171There are some keyboards that send different scancodes for SysRq than the 172pre-defined 0x54. So if SysRq doesn't work out of the box for a certain 173keyboard, run 'showkey -s' to find out the proper scancode sequence. Then 174use 'setkeycodes <sequence> 84' to define this sequence to the usual SysRq 175code (84 is decimal for 0x54). It's probably best to put this command in a 176boot script. Oh, and by the way, you exit 'showkey' by not typing anything 177for ten seconds. 178 179* I want to add SysRQ key events to a module, how does it work? 180~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 181In order to register a basic function with the table, you must first include 182the header 'include/linux/sysrq.h', this will define everything else you need. 183Next, you must create a sysrq_key_op struct, and populate it with A) the key 184handler function you will use, B) a help_msg string, that will print when SysRQ 185prints help, and C) an action_msg string, that will print right before your 186handler is called. Your handler must conform to the prototype in 'sysrq.h'. 187 188After the sysrq_key_op is created, you can call the kernel function 189register_sysrq_key(int key, struct sysrq_key_op *op_p); this will 190register the operation pointed to by 'op_p' at table key 'key', 191if that slot in the table is blank. At module unload time, you must call 192the function unregister_sysrq_key(int key, struct sysrq_key_op *op_p), which 193will remove the key op pointed to by 'op_p' from the key 'key', if and only if 194it is currently registered in that slot. This is in case the slot has been 195overwritten since you registered it. 196 197The Magic SysRQ system works by registering key operations against a key op 198lookup table, which is defined in 'drivers/char/sysrq.c'. This key table has 199a number of operations registered into it at compile time, but is mutable, 200and 2 functions are exported for interface to it: 201 register_sysrq_key and unregister_sysrq_key. 202Of course, never ever leave an invalid pointer in the table. I.e., when 203your module that called register_sysrq_key() exits, it must call 204unregister_sysrq_key() to clean up the sysrq key table entry that it used. 205Null pointers in the table are always safe. :) 206 207If for some reason you feel the need to call the handle_sysrq function from 208within a function called by handle_sysrq, you must be aware that you are in 209a lock (you are also in an interrupt handler, which means don't sleep!), so 210you must call __handle_sysrq_nolock instead. 211 212* I have more questions, who can I ask? 213~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 214And I'll answer any questions about the registration system you got, also 215responding as soon as possible. 216 -Crutcher 217 218* Credits 219~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 220Written by Mydraal <vulpyne@vulpyne.net> 221Updated by Adam Sulmicki <adam@cfar.umd.edu> 222Updated by Jeremy M. Dolan <jmd@turbogeek.org> 2001/01/28 10:15:59 223Added to by Crutcher Dunnavant <crutcher+kernel@datastacks.com>