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Linux/Documentation/admin-guide/sysrq.rst

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Diff markup

Differences between /Documentation/admin-guide/sysrq.rst (Version linux-6.11.5) and /Documentation/admin-guide/sysrq.rst (Version linux-6.9.12)


  1 Linux Magic System Request Key Hacks                1 Linux Magic System Request Key Hacks
  2 ====================================                2 ====================================
  3                                                     3 
  4 Documentation for sysrq.c                           4 Documentation for sysrq.c
  5                                                     5 
  6 What is the magic SysRq key?                        6 What is the magic SysRq key?
  7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                        7 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  8                                                     8 
  9 It is a 'magical' key combo you can hit which       9 It is a 'magical' key combo you can hit which the kernel will respond to
 10 regardless of whatever else it is doing, unles     10 regardless of whatever else it is doing, unless it is completely locked up.
 11                                                    11 
 12 How do I enable the magic SysRq key?               12 How do I enable the magic SysRq key?
 13 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~               13 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 14                                                    14 
 15 You need to say "yes" to 'Magic SysRq key (CON     15 You need to say "yes" to 'Magic SysRq key (CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ)' when
 16 configuring the kernel. When running a kernel      16 configuring the kernel. When running a kernel with SysRq compiled in,
 17 /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq controls the functions      17 /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq controls the functions allowed to be invoked via
 18 the SysRq key. The default value in this file      18 the SysRq key. The default value in this file is set by the
 19 CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ_DEFAULT_ENABLE config symbo     19 CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ_DEFAULT_ENABLE config symbol, which itself defaults
 20 to 1. Here is the list of possible values in /     20 to 1. Here is the list of possible values in /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq:
 21                                                    21 
 22    -  0 - disable sysrq completely                 22    -  0 - disable sysrq completely
 23    -  1 - enable all functions of sysrq            23    -  1 - enable all functions of sysrq
 24    - >1 - bitmask of allowed sysrq functions (     24    - >1 - bitmask of allowed sysrq functions (see below for detailed function
 25      description)::                                25      description)::
 26                                                    26 
 27           2 =   0x2 - enable control of consol     27           2 =   0x2 - enable control of console logging level
 28           4 =   0x4 - enable control of keyboa     28           4 =   0x4 - enable control of keyboard (SAK, unraw)
 29           8 =   0x8 - enable debugging dumps o     29           8 =   0x8 - enable debugging dumps of processes etc.
 30          16 =  0x10 - enable sync command          30          16 =  0x10 - enable sync command
 31          32 =  0x20 - enable remount read-only     31          32 =  0x20 - enable remount read-only
 32          64 =  0x40 - enable signalling of pro     32          64 =  0x40 - enable signalling of processes (term, kill, oom-kill)
 33         128 =  0x80 - allow reboot/poweroff        33         128 =  0x80 - allow reboot/poweroff
 34         256 = 0x100 - allow nicing of all RT t     34         256 = 0x100 - allow nicing of all RT tasks
 35                                                    35 
 36 You can set the value in the file by the follo     36 You can set the value in the file by the following command::
 37                                                    37 
 38     echo "number" >/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq          38     echo "number" >/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq
 39                                                    39 
 40 The number may be written here either as decim     40 The number may be written here either as decimal or as hexadecimal
 41 with the 0x prefix. CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ_DEFAULT     41 with the 0x prefix. CONFIG_MAGIC_SYSRQ_DEFAULT_ENABLE must always be
 42 written in hexadecimal.                            42 written in hexadecimal.
 43                                                    43 
 44 Note that the value of ``/proc/sys/kernel/sysr     44 Note that the value of ``/proc/sys/kernel/sysrq`` influences only the invocation
 45 via a keyboard. Invocation of any operation vi     45 via a keyboard. Invocation of any operation via ``/proc/sysrq-trigger`` is
 46 always allowed (by a user with admin privilege     46 always allowed (by a user with admin privileges).
 47                                                    47 
 48 How do I use the magic SysRq key?                  48 How do I use the magic SysRq key?
 49 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                  49 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 50                                                    50 
 51 On x86                                             51 On x86
 52         You press the key combo :kbd:`ALT-SysR     52         You press the key combo :kbd:`ALT-SysRq-<command key>`.
 53                                                    53 
 54         .. note::                                  54         .. note::
 55            Some                                    55            Some
 56            keyboards may not have a key labele     56            keyboards may not have a key labeled 'SysRq'. The 'SysRq' key is
 57            also known as the 'Print Screen' ke     57            also known as the 'Print Screen' key. Also some keyboards cannot
 58            handle so many keys being pressed a     58            handle so many keys being pressed at the same time, so you might
 59            have better luck with press :kbd:`A     59            have better luck with press :kbd:`Alt`, press :kbd:`SysRq`,
 60            release :kbd:`SysRq`, press :kbd:`<     60            release :kbd:`SysRq`, press :kbd:`<command key>`, release everything.
 61                                                    61 
 62 On SPARC                                           62 On SPARC
 63         You press :kbd:`ALT-STOP-<command key>     63         You press :kbd:`ALT-STOP-<command key>`, I believe.
 64                                                    64 
 65 On the serial console (PC style standard seria     65 On the serial console (PC style standard serial ports only)
 66         You send a ``BREAK``, then within 5 se     66         You send a ``BREAK``, then within 5 seconds a command key. Sending
 67         ``BREAK`` twice is interpreted as a no     67         ``BREAK`` twice is interpreted as a normal BREAK.
 68                                                    68 
 69 On PowerPC                                         69 On PowerPC
 70         Press :kbd:`ALT - Print Screen` (or :k     70         Press :kbd:`ALT - Print Screen` (or :kbd:`F13`) - :kbd:`<command key>`.
 71         :kbd:`Print Screen` (or :kbd:`F13`) -      71         :kbd:`Print Screen` (or :kbd:`F13`) - :kbd:`<command key>` may suffice.
 72                                                    72 
 73 On other                                           73 On other
 74         If you know of the key combos for othe     74         If you know of the key combos for other architectures, please
 75         submit a patch to be included in this      75         submit a patch to be included in this section.
 76                                                    76 
 77 On all                                             77 On all
 78         Write a single character to /proc/sysr     78         Write a single character to /proc/sysrq-trigger.
 79         Only the first character is processed,     79         Only the first character is processed, the rest of the string is
 80         ignored. However, it is not recommende     80         ignored. However, it is not recommended to write any extra characters
 81         as the behavior is undefined and might     81         as the behavior is undefined and might change in the future versions.
 82         E.g.::                                     82         E.g.::
 83                                                    83 
 84                 echo t > /proc/sysrq-trigger       84                 echo t > /proc/sysrq-trigger
 85                                                    85 
 86         Alternatively, write multiple characte     86         Alternatively, write multiple characters prepended by underscore.
 87         This way, all characters will be proce     87         This way, all characters will be processed. E.g.::
 88                                                    88 
 89                 echo _reisub > /proc/sysrq-tri     89                 echo _reisub > /proc/sysrq-trigger
 90                                                    90 
 91 The :kbd:`<command key>` is case sensitive.        91 The :kbd:`<command key>` is case sensitive.
 92                                                    92 
 93 What are the 'command' keys?                       93 What are the 'command' keys?
 94 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                       94 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 95                                                    95 
 96 =========== ==================================     96 =========== ===================================================================
 97 Command     Function                               97 Command     Function
 98 =========== ==================================     98 =========== ===================================================================
 99 ``b``       Will immediately reboot the system     99 ``b``       Will immediately reboot the system without syncing or unmounting
100             your disks.                           100             your disks.
101                                                   101 
102 ``c``       Will perform a system crash and a     102 ``c``       Will perform a system crash and a crashdump will be taken
103             if configured.                        103             if configured.
104                                                   104 
105 ``d``       Shows all locks that are held.        105 ``d``       Shows all locks that are held.
106                                                   106 
107 ``e``       Send a SIGTERM to all processes, e    107 ``e``       Send a SIGTERM to all processes, except for init.
108                                                   108 
109 ``f``       Will call the oom killer to kill a    109 ``f``       Will call the oom killer to kill a memory hog process, but do not
110             panic if nothing can be killed.       110             panic if nothing can be killed.
111                                                   111 
112 ``g``       Used by kgdb (kernel debugger)        112 ``g``       Used by kgdb (kernel debugger)
113                                                   113 
114 ``h``       Will display help (actually any ot    114 ``h``       Will display help (actually any other key than those listed
115             here will display help. but ``h``     115             here will display help. but ``h`` is easy to remember :-)
116                                                   116 
117 ``i``       Send a SIGKILL to all processes, e    117 ``i``       Send a SIGKILL to all processes, except for init.
118                                                   118 
119 ``j``       Forcibly "Just thaw it" - filesyst    119 ``j``       Forcibly "Just thaw it" - filesystems frozen by the FIFREEZE ioctl.
120                                                   120 
121 ``k``       Secure Access Key (SAK) Kills all     121 ``k``       Secure Access Key (SAK) Kills all programs on the current virtual
122             console. NOTE: See important comme    122             console. NOTE: See important comments below in SAK section.
123                                                   123 
124 ``l``       Shows a stack backtrace for all ac    124 ``l``       Shows a stack backtrace for all active CPUs.
125                                                   125 
126 ``m``       Will dump current memory info to y    126 ``m``       Will dump current memory info to your console.
127                                                   127 
128 ``n``       Used to make RT tasks nice-able       128 ``n``       Used to make RT tasks nice-able
129                                                   129 
130 ``o``       Will shut your system off (if conf    130 ``o``       Will shut your system off (if configured and supported).
131                                                   131 
132 ``p``       Will dump the current registers an    132 ``p``       Will dump the current registers and flags to your console.
133                                                   133 
134 ``q``       Will dump per CPU lists of all arm    134 ``q``       Will dump per CPU lists of all armed hrtimers (but NOT regular
135             timer_list timers) and detailed in    135             timer_list timers) and detailed information about all
136             clockevent devices.                   136             clockevent devices.
137                                                   137 
138 ``r``       Turns off keyboard raw mode and se    138 ``r``       Turns off keyboard raw mode and sets it to XLATE.
139                                                   139 
140 ``s``       Will attempt to sync all mounted f    140 ``s``       Will attempt to sync all mounted filesystems.
141                                                   141 
142 ``t``       Will dump a list of current tasks     142 ``t``       Will dump a list of current tasks and their information to your
143             console.                              143             console.
144                                                   144 
145 ``u``       Will attempt to remount all mounte    145 ``u``       Will attempt to remount all mounted filesystems read-only.
146                                                   146 
147 ``v``       Forcefully restores framebuffer co    147 ``v``       Forcefully restores framebuffer console
148 ``v``       Causes ETM buffer dump [ARM-specif    148 ``v``       Causes ETM buffer dump [ARM-specific]
149                                                   149 
150 ``w``       Dumps tasks that are in uninterrup    150 ``w``       Dumps tasks that are in uninterruptible (blocked) state.
151                                                   151 
152 ``x``       Used by xmon interface on ppc/powe    152 ``x``       Used by xmon interface on ppc/powerpc platforms.
153             Show global PMU Registers on sparc    153             Show global PMU Registers on sparc64.
154             Dump all TLB entries on MIPS.         154             Dump all TLB entries on MIPS.
155                                                   155 
156 ``y``       Show global CPU Registers [SPARC-6    156 ``y``       Show global CPU Registers [SPARC-64 specific]
157                                                   157 
158 ``z``       Dump the ftrace buffer                158 ``z``       Dump the ftrace buffer
159                                                   159 
160 ``0``-``9`` Sets the console log level, contro    160 ``0``-``9`` Sets the console log level, controlling which kernel messages
161             will be printed to your console. (    161             will be printed to your console. (``0``, for example would make
162             it so that only emergency messages    162             it so that only emergency messages like PANICs or OOPSes would
163             make it to your console.)             163             make it to your console.)
164                                                << 
165 ``R``       Replay the kernel log messages on  << 
166 =========== ==================================    164 =========== ===================================================================
167                                                   165 
168 Okay, so what can I use them for?                 166 Okay, so what can I use them for?
169 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~                 167 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
170                                                   168 
171 Well, unraw(r) is very handy when your X serve    169 Well, unraw(r) is very handy when your X server or a svgalib program crashes.
172                                                   170 
173 sak(k) (Secure Access Key) is useful when you     171 sak(k) (Secure Access Key) is useful when you want to be sure there is no
174 trojan program running at console which could     172 trojan program running at console which could grab your password
175 when you would try to login. It will kill all     173 when you would try to login. It will kill all programs on given console,
176 thus letting you make sure that the login prom    174 thus letting you make sure that the login prompt you see is actually
177 the one from init, not some trojan program.       175 the one from init, not some trojan program.
178                                                   176 
179 .. important::                                    177 .. important::
180                                                   178 
181    In its true form it is not a true SAK like     179    In its true form it is not a true SAK like the one in a
182    c2 compliant system, and it should not be m    180    c2 compliant system, and it should not be mistaken as
183    such.                                          181    such.
184                                                   182 
185 It seems others find it useful as (System Atte    183 It seems others find it useful as (System Attention Key) which is
186 useful when you want to exit a program that wi    184 useful when you want to exit a program that will not let you switch consoles.
187 (For example, X or a svgalib program.)            185 (For example, X or a svgalib program.)
188                                                   186 
189 ``reboot(b)`` is good when you're unable to sh    187 ``reboot(b)`` is good when you're unable to shut down, it is an equivalent
190 of pressing the "reset" button.                   188 of pressing the "reset" button.
191                                                   189 
192 ``crash(c)`` can be used to manually trigger a    190 ``crash(c)`` can be used to manually trigger a crashdump when the system is hung.
193 Note that this just triggers a crash if there     191 Note that this just triggers a crash if there is no dump mechanism available.
194                                                   192 
195 ``sync(s)`` is handy before yanking removable     193 ``sync(s)`` is handy before yanking removable medium or after using a rescue
196 shell that provides no graceful shutdown -- it    194 shell that provides no graceful shutdown -- it will ensure your data is
197 safely written to the disk. Note that the sync    195 safely written to the disk. Note that the sync hasn't taken place until you see
198 the "OK" and "Done" appear on the screen.         196 the "OK" and "Done" appear on the screen.
199                                                   197 
200 ``umount(u)`` can be used to mark filesystems     198 ``umount(u)`` can be used to mark filesystems as properly unmounted. From the
201 running system's point of view, they will be r    199 running system's point of view, they will be remounted read-only. The remount
202 isn't complete until you see the "OK" and "Don    200 isn't complete until you see the "OK" and "Done" message appear on the screen.
203                                                   201 
204 The loglevels ``0``-``9`` are useful when your    202 The loglevels ``0``-``9`` are useful when your console is being flooded with
205 kernel messages you do not want to see. Select    203 kernel messages you do not want to see. Selecting ``0`` will prevent all but
206 the most urgent kernel messages from reaching     204 the most urgent kernel messages from reaching your console. (They will
207 still be logged if syslogd/klogd are alive, th    205 still be logged if syslogd/klogd are alive, though.)
208                                                   206 
209 ``term(e)`` and ``kill(i)`` are useful if you     207 ``term(e)`` and ``kill(i)`` are useful if you have some sort of runaway process
210 you are unable to kill any other way, especial    208 you are unable to kill any other way, especially if it's spawning other
211 processes.                                        209 processes.
212                                                   210 
213 "just thaw ``it(j)``" is useful if your system    211 "just thaw ``it(j)``" is useful if your system becomes unresponsive due to a
214 frozen (probably root) filesystem via the FIFR    212 frozen (probably root) filesystem via the FIFREEZE ioctl.
215                                                << 
216 ``Replay logs(R)`` is useful to view the kerne << 
217 or you are not able to use dmesg command to vi << 
218 User may have to press the key combination mul << 
219 busy. If it is completely locked up, then mess << 
220 messages depend on current console loglevel, w << 
221 sysrq[0-9] (see above).                        << 
222                                                   213 
223 Sometimes SysRq seems to get 'stuck' after usi    214 Sometimes SysRq seems to get 'stuck' after using it, what can I do?
224 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~    215 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
225                                                   216 
226 When this happens, try tapping shift, alt and     217 When this happens, try tapping shift, alt and control on both sides of the
227 keyboard, and hitting an invalid sysrq sequenc    218 keyboard, and hitting an invalid sysrq sequence again. (i.e., something like
228 :kbd:`alt-sysrq-z`).                              219 :kbd:`alt-sysrq-z`).
229                                                   220 
230 Switching to another virtual console (:kbd:`AL    221 Switching to another virtual console (:kbd:`ALT+Fn`) and then back again
231 should also help.                                 222 should also help.
232                                                   223 
233 I hit SysRq, but nothing seems to happen, what    224 I hit SysRq, but nothing seems to happen, what's wrong?
234 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~    225 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
235                                                   226 
236 There are some keyboards that produce a differ    227 There are some keyboards that produce a different keycode for SysRq than the
237 pre-defined value of 99                           228 pre-defined value of 99
238 (see ``KEY_SYSRQ`` in ``include/uapi/linux/inp    229 (see ``KEY_SYSRQ`` in ``include/uapi/linux/input-event-codes.h``), or
239 which don't have a SysRq key at all. In these     230 which don't have a SysRq key at all. In these cases, run ``showkey -s`` to find
240 an appropriate scancode sequence, and use ``se    231 an appropriate scancode sequence, and use ``setkeycodes <sequence> 99`` to map
241 this sequence to the usual SysRq code (e.g., `    232 this sequence to the usual SysRq code (e.g., ``setkeycodes e05b 99``). It's
242 probably best to put this command in a boot sc    233 probably best to put this command in a boot script. Oh, and by the way, you
243 exit ``showkey`` by not typing anything for te    234 exit ``showkey`` by not typing anything for ten seconds.
244                                                   235 
245 I want to add SysRQ key events to a module, ho    236 I want to add SysRQ key events to a module, how does it work?
246 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~    237 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
247                                                   238 
248 In order to register a basic function with the    239 In order to register a basic function with the table, you must first include
249 the header ``include/linux/sysrq.h``, this wil    240 the header ``include/linux/sysrq.h``, this will define everything else you need.
250 Next, you must create a ``sysrq_key_op`` struc    241 Next, you must create a ``sysrq_key_op`` struct, and populate it with A) the key
251 handler function you will use, B) a help_msg s    242 handler function you will use, B) a help_msg string, that will print when SysRQ
252 prints help, and C) an action_msg string, that    243 prints help, and C) an action_msg string, that will print right before your
253 handler is called. Your handler must conform t    244 handler is called. Your handler must conform to the prototype in 'sysrq.h'.
254                                                   245 
255 After the ``sysrq_key_op`` is created, you can    246 After the ``sysrq_key_op`` is created, you can call the kernel function
256 ``register_sysrq_key(int key, const struct sys    247 ``register_sysrq_key(int key, const struct sysrq_key_op *op_p);`` this will
257 register the operation pointed to by ``op_p``     248 register the operation pointed to by ``op_p`` at table key 'key',
258 if that slot in the table is blank. At module     249 if that slot in the table is blank. At module unload time, you must call
259 the function ``unregister_sysrq_key(int key, c    250 the function ``unregister_sysrq_key(int key, const struct sysrq_key_op *op_p)``,
260 which will remove the key op pointed to by 'op    251 which will remove the key op pointed to by 'op_p' from the key 'key', if and
261 only if it is currently registered in that slo    252 only if it is currently registered in that slot. This is in case the slot has
262 been overwritten since you registered it.         253 been overwritten since you registered it.
263                                                   254 
264 The Magic SysRQ system works by registering ke    255 The Magic SysRQ system works by registering key operations against a key op
265 lookup table, which is defined in 'drivers/tty    256 lookup table, which is defined in 'drivers/tty/sysrq.c'. This key table has
266 a number of operations registered into it at c    257 a number of operations registered into it at compile time, but is mutable,
267 and 2 functions are exported for interface to     258 and 2 functions are exported for interface to it::
268                                                   259 
269         register_sysrq_key and unregister_sysr    260         register_sysrq_key and unregister_sysrq_key.
270                                                   261 
271 Of course, never ever leave an invalid pointer    262 Of course, never ever leave an invalid pointer in the table. I.e., when
272 your module that called register_sysrq_key() e    263 your module that called register_sysrq_key() exits, it must call
273 unregister_sysrq_key() to clean up the sysrq k    264 unregister_sysrq_key() to clean up the sysrq key table entry that it used.
274 Null pointers in the table are always safe. :)    265 Null pointers in the table are always safe. :)
275                                                   266 
276 If for some reason you feel the need to call t    267 If for some reason you feel the need to call the handle_sysrq function from
277 within a function called by handle_sysrq, you     268 within a function called by handle_sysrq, you must be aware that you are in
278 a lock (you are also in an interrupt handler,     269 a lock (you are also in an interrupt handler, which means don't sleep!), so
279 you must call ``__handle_sysrq_nolock`` instea    270 you must call ``__handle_sysrq_nolock`` instead.
280                                                   271 
281 When I hit a SysRq key combination only the he    272 When I hit a SysRq key combination only the header appears on the console?
282 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~    273 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
283                                                   274 
284 Sysrq output is subject to the same console lo    275 Sysrq output is subject to the same console loglevel control as all
285 other console output.  This means that if the     276 other console output.  This means that if the kernel was booted 'quiet'
286 as is common on distro kernels the output may     277 as is common on distro kernels the output may not appear on the actual
287 console, even though it will appear in the dme    278 console, even though it will appear in the dmesg buffer, and be accessible
288 via the dmesg command and to the consumers of     279 via the dmesg command and to the consumers of ``/proc/kmsg``.  As a specific
289 exception the header line from the sysrq comma    280 exception the header line from the sysrq command is passed to all console
290 consumers as if the current loglevel was maxim    281 consumers as if the current loglevel was maximum.  If only the header
291 is emitted it is almost certain that the kerne    282 is emitted it is almost certain that the kernel loglevel is too low.
292 Should you require the output on the console c    283 Should you require the output on the console channel then you will need
293 to temporarily up the console loglevel using :    284 to temporarily up the console loglevel using :kbd:`alt-sysrq-8` or::
294                                                   285 
295     echo 8 > /proc/sysrq-trigger                  286     echo 8 > /proc/sysrq-trigger
296                                                   287 
297 Remember to return the loglevel to normal afte    288 Remember to return the loglevel to normal after triggering the sysrq
298 command you are interested in.                    289 command you are interested in.
299                                                   290 
300 I have more questions, who can I ask?             291 I have more questions, who can I ask?
301 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~             292 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
302                                                   293 
303 Just ask them on the linux-kernel mailing list    294 Just ask them on the linux-kernel mailing list:
304         linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org              295         linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org
305                                                   296 
306 Credits                                           297 Credits
307 ~~~~~~~                                           298 ~~~~~~~
308                                                   299 
309 - Written by Mydraal <vulpyne@vulpyne.net>         300 - Written by Mydraal <vulpyne@vulpyne.net>
310 - Updated by Adam Sulmicki <adam@cfar.umd.edu>     301 - Updated by Adam Sulmicki <adam@cfar.umd.edu>
311 - Updated by Jeremy M. Dolan <jmd@turbogeek.org    302 - Updated by Jeremy M. Dolan <jmd@turbogeek.org> 2001/01/28 10:15:59
312 - Added to by Crutcher Dunnavant <crutcher+kern    303 - Added to by Crutcher Dunnavant <crutcher+kernel@datastacks.com>
                                                      

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