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[www-rohieb-name.git] / blag / post / dell-latitude-e5500-and-magic-sysrq.mdwn
1 [[!meta title="Dell Latitude E5500 and Magic SysRq"]]
2 [[!meta date="2009-11-17"]]
3 [[!meta author="rohieb"]]
4 [[!meta license="CC-BY-SA 3.0"]]
5
6 At work I’m using the Dell Latidude E5500 notebook, running on Debian
7 testing. Today, I had some issues with Xorg which could not detect my
8 keyboard and mouse, so I tried to do the Magic SysRq tricks (you can
9 read about it at [Wikipedia][1]). Unfortunatley, to press `SysRq` (on
10 `F10`), I had to use the `Fn` key, so if I pressed e. g.
11 `Alt`+`Fn`+`SysRq`+`U`, the `U` was detected as `keypad 4` because of
12 the `Fn` key. Luckily, it works as intended if you release the `Fn` key
13 after having pressed `Fn`+`SysRq`, so to remount all mounted filesystems
14 in read-only mode, you would actually hold `Alt`, hold `Fn`, hold
15 `SysRq`, release `Fn`, press `U`.
16
17 Never thought notebook keyboards were so smart :-)
18
19 [1]: (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magic_SysRq)
20
21 [[!tag Debian howto Debian_testing Dell_Latitude Linux SysRq]]
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