I was playing a game, alt-tabbing froze my system so I waited a bit and then rebooted by using the button on the case, since I couldn’t do differently.
It now throws an error when mounting a drive: error mounting /dev/sdb1 at /media/user/local disk 1: unknown error when mounting (udisks-error-quark, 0)
This drive doesn’t have anything I was using on it, since it’s a media storage drive. I booted up Windows on my second drive and it can see and access this one without problems. How to fix?
Tip for when you need to use the power button and do a force shutdown. Try the following first Alt+SysRq r>e>i>s>u>b
https://blog.kember.net/posts/2008-04-reisub-the-gentle-linux-restart/
Raising Elephants Is So Utterly Boring
I always preferred BUSIER backwards. It’s shorter and alliterative., but whatever helps you remember.
Annoyingly sysrq is disabled on a lot of distributions by default now, so you often have to manually enable it for this to work
It is? I never noticed it being disabled honestly.
At least arch and opensuse do, I haven’t used anything else much lately
Those are exactly the ones i never noticed sysrq being disabled. I use the resisub quite often on tumblweed. and used to on arch.
Seems correct: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Keyboard_shortcuts#Kernel_(SysRq)
SystemD defined default it looks like.
I’ve always just dropped down into a different virtual terminal with CTRL+ALT+F#, killed the bad process and/or just rebooted from there. Is that not a thing anymore? I haven’t had to do it in so long because of improved stability and not using the DE on my server much, so maybe I’m out of the loop.
Sometimes it’s not possible if everything crashed.
That’s very useful, I’ll try it next time, thanks for the tip!