Rebooting The Magic SysRq Way


[Cory Wright] shares a tip on how to reboot a system with a failed hard drive remotely. The magic SysRq key is a linux kernel feature that lets you perform a number of interesting operations. If you’re working on a remote system where the disk has failed, you won’t have access to the reboot or shutdown commands. You can issue keystrokes to the magic SysRq device in /proc though, so you can send a hard reboot directly to the kernel with no disk access required.

The Wikipedia entry includes a handy tip on how to properly restart a otherwise frozen machine. It should save you from having to fsck the next time around.

[photo: Joshua Davis]

6 thoughts on “Rebooting The Magic SysRq Way

  1. I used to follow this blog rather regularly, but its taken a turn for the worst. I thought the point was to showcase a different hack/project, not simply to copy lifehacker/slashdot?

  2. I have to say I agree with some of the other posters. I think you should go back to the old receipe, and have a single quality hack every day. And try to avoid software hacks and news at an absolute minimum.

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