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Does it actually work?

Does it actually work?

Posted Apr 18, 2025 23:32 UTC (Fri) by Jandar (subscriber, #85683)
In reply to: Does it actually work? by mbunkus
Parent article: Three ways to rework the swap subsystem

> The only sane thing to do is to hard reboot & eat the file system damage & loss of data.

I use ALT+SysReq+{s,u,s,b} in that order with a few seconds between. That's my way out of the semi-regular freezes apparently caused by swapping. Every time I have to do this I cross my fingers and pray to the filesystem-gods to spare my home directory ;-)


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Does it actually work?

Posted Apr 24, 2025 16:00 UTC (Thu) by paulj (subscriber, #341) [Link] (1 responses)

SysRq is disabled by default now on some common distros. The point where you remember this is the point where you need it, but can no longer login to change this, of course.

Does it actually work?

Posted Apr 24, 2025 16:45 UTC (Thu) by farnz (subscriber, #17727) [Link]

Note, too, that SysRq's functions can be individually configured. On Fedora, the default setting is to allow sync, but nothing else; this is safe, since it's a function that the kernel will eventually do in the background, but not very powerful.


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