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Commands

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The key combination consists of Alt, SysRq and another key, which controls the command issued (as shown in the table below). Some keyboards may not provide a separate SysRq key. In this case, a separate "PrintScrn" key should be present. Under graphical environments (such as GNOME or KDE) 'Alt'+'PrintScrn/SysRq'+key combination generally only leads to a screenshot being dumped. To avoid this Print Screen feature the magic SysRq combination should include the Ctrl, becoming 'Ctrl'+'Alt'+'SysRq'+key. For the same purposes the AltGr key, if present, can be used in place of the Alt key. On some laptops SysRq is accessible only by pressing 'Fn'. In this case the combination is a bit trickier: hold 'Alt', hold 'Fn', hold 'SysRq', release 'Fn', press key.

Action QWERTY Dvorak AZERTY Colemak
Set the console log level, which controls the types of kernel messages that are output to the console 0 through 9 0 through 9 0 through 9
(without using shift)
0 through 9
Immediately reboot the system, without unmounting or syncing filesystems b x b b
Perform a system crash. A crashdump will be taken if it is configured. c j c c
Display all currently held Locks (CONFIG_LOCKDEP kernel option is required) d e d s
Send the SIGTERM signal to all processes except init (PID 1) e . e f
Call oom_kill, which kills a process to alleviate an OOM condition f u f t
When using Kernel Mode Setting, provides emergency support for switching back to the kernel's framebuffer console[1] If the in-kernel debugger 'kdb' is present, enter the debugger. g i g d
Output a terse help document to the console
Any key which is not bound to a command should also perform this action
h d h h
Send the SIGKILL signal to all processes except init i c i u
Forcibly "Just thaw it" - filesystems frozen by the FIFREEZE ioctl. j h j n
Kill all processes on the current virtual console (Can be used to kill X and svgalib programs, see below)
This was originally designed to imitate a secure attention key
k t k e
Shows a stack backtrace for all active CPUs. l n l i
Output current memory information to the console m m , m
Reset the nice level of all high-priority and real-time tasks n b n k
Shut off the system o r o y
Output the current registers and flags to the console p l p ;
Display all active high-resolution timers and clock sources. q ' a q
Switch the keyboard from raw mode, the mode used by programs such as X11 and svgalib, to XLATE mode r p r p
Sync all mounted filesystems s o s r
Output a list of current tasks and their information to the console t y t g
Remount all mounted filesystems in read-only mode u g u l
Forcefully restores framebuffer console, except for ARM processors, where this key causes ETM buffer dump v k v v
Display list of blocked (D state) tasks w , z w
Used by xmon interface on PPC/PowerPC platforms. x q x x
Show global CPU registers (SPARC-64 specific) y f y j
Dump the ftrace buffer z ; w z

Uses

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A common use of the magic SysRq key is to perform a safe reboot of a Linux computer which has otherwise locked up. This can prevent a fsck being required on reboot and gives some programs a chance to save emergency backups of unsaved work. The QWERTY mnemonic: "Reboot Even If System Utterly Broken" or simply the word "BUSIER" read backwards, are often used to remember the following Sysrq-keys sequence:

unRaw      (take control of keyboard back from X),
 tErminate (send SIGTERM to all processes, allowing them to terminate gracefully),
 kIll      (send SIGKILL to all processes, forcing them to terminate immediately),
  Sync     (flush data to disk),
  Unmount  (remount all filesystems read-only),
reBoot.
  1. Hold down the Alt and SysRq (Print Screen) keys.
  2. While holding those down, type the following keys in order, several seconds apart: REISUB
  3. Computer should reboot.

In practice, each command may require a few seconds to complete, especially if feedback is unavailable from the screen due to a freeze or display corruption.

When magic SysRq keys are used to kill a frozen graphical program, the program has no chance to restore text mode. This can make everything unreadable. The commands textmode (part of SVGAlib) and reset can restore text mode and make the console readable again.

On distributions that do not include a textmode executable, the key command 'Ctrl'+'Alt'+'F1' may sometimes to force a return to a text console. (Use 'F1', 'F2', 'F3', ..., 'F(n)', where 'n' is the highest number of text consoles set up by the distribution. 'Ctrl'+'Alt'+ 'F(n+1)' would normally be used to reenter GUI mode on a system on which the X server has not crashed.)

Table of the Russian alphabet

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The Russian alphabet is as follows:

Letter IPA
Аа /a/
Бб /b/ or /bʲ/
Вв /v/ or /vʲ/
Гг /ɡ/ or /gʲ/
Дд /d/ or /dʲ/
Ее /je/, / ʲe/ or /e/
Ёё /jo/ or / ʲo/
Жж /ʐ/
Зз /z/ or /zʲ/
Ии /i/, / ʲi/, or /ɨ/
Йй /j/
Кк /k/ or /kʲ/
Лл /ɫ/ or /lʲ/
Мм /m/ or /mʲ/
Нн /n/ or /nʲ/
Оо /o/
Пп /p/ or /pʲ/
Рр /r/ or /rʲ/
Сс /s/ or /sʲ/
Тт /t/ or /tʲ/
Уу /u/
Фф /f/ or /fʲ/
Хх /x/ or /xʲ/
Цц /ts/
Чч //
Шш /ʂ/
Щщ /ɕɕ/
Ъъ
Ыы [ɨ]
Ьь / ʲ/
Ээ /e/
Юю /ju/ or / ʲu/
Яя /ja/ or / ʲa/
Letters eliminated in 1917–18
Letter IPA
Іі /i/, / ʲi/, or /j/
Ѳѳ /f/ or /fʲ/
Ѣѣ /e/ or / ʲe/
Ѵѵ /i/ or / ʲi/
Letters eliminated before 1750
Letter IPA
Ѕѕ /z/ or /zʲ/
Ѯѯ /ks/ or /ksʲ/
Ѱѱ /ps/ or /psʲ/
Ѡѡ /o/
Ѫѫ /u/, /ju/ or / ʲu/
Ѧѧ /ja/ or / ʲa/
Ѭѭ /ju/ or / ʲu/
Ѩѩ /ja/ or / ʲa/
Letter IPA

Consonant letters represent both "soft" (palatalized, represented in the IPA with a ʲ) and "hard" consonant phonemes. If consonant letters are followed by vowel letters, the soft/hard quality of the consonant depends on whether the vowel is meant to follow "hard" consonants а, о, э, у, ы or "soft" consonants я, ё, е, ю, и; see below. A soft sign indicates Ь palatalization of the preceding consonant without adding a vowel. However, in modern Russian six consonant phonemes do not have phonemically distinct "soft" and "hard" variants (except in foreign proper names) and do not change "softness" in the presence of other letters: /ʐ/, /ʂ/ and /ts/ are always hard; /j/, /ɕː/ and /tɕ/ are always soft. See Russian phonology for details.

^† An alternate form of the letter El (Л л) closely resembles the Greek letter for lambda (Λ λ).

Frequency

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The frequency of characters in a corpus of written Russian was found to be as follows:[2]

Letter Frequency Other information
О 11.07% The most frequently used letter in the Russian alphabet.
Е 8.50% Foreign words sometimes use Е rather than Э, even if it is pronounced e instead of ye. In addition, Ё is often replaced by Е. This makes Е even more common. For more information, see Vowels.
А 7.50%
И 7.09%
Н 6.70% The most common consonant in the Russian alphabet.
Т 5.97%
С 4.97%
Л 4.96%
В 4.33%
Р 4.33%
К 3.30%
М 3.10%
Д 3.09%
П 2.47%
Ы 2.36%
У 2.22%
Б 2.01%
Я 1.96%
Ь 1.84%
Г 1.72%
З 1.48%
Ч 1.40%
Й 1.21%
Ж 1.01%
Х 0.95%
Ш 0.72%
Ю 0.47%
Ц 0.39%
Э 0.36% Foreign words sometimes use E rather than Э, even if it is pronounced e instead of ye. This makes Э even less common. For more information, see Vowels.
Щ 0.30%
Ф 0.21% The least common consonant in the Russian alphabet.
Ё 0.20% In written Russian, Ё is often replaced by E. For more information, see Vowels.
Ъ 0.02% Ъ used to be a very common letter in the Russian alphabet. This is because before the 1918 reform, any word ending with a non-palatalized consonant was written with a final Ъ - e.g., pre-1918 вотъ vs. post-reform вот. The reform eliminated the use of Ъ in this context, leaving it the least common letter in the Russian alphabet. For more information, see Non-vocalized letters.
  1. ^ DRM: i915: add mode setting support
  2. ^ Stefan Trost Media, Character Frequency: Russian. "Basis of this list were some Russian texts with together 1.351.370 characters (210.844 words), 1.086.255 characters were used for the counting. The texts consist of a good mix of different literary genres."

Overview table - Persian

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IPA Contextual forms
Final Medial Initial Isolated
[ʔ] ء
ـأ أ
ـئ ـئـ ئـ ئ
ـؤ ؤ
[ɒ] ـا ا
[b] ـب ـبـ بـ ب
[p] ـپ ـپـ پـ پ
[t] ـت ـتـ تـ ت
[s] ـث ـثـ ثـ ث
[d͡ʒ] ـج ـجـ جـ ج
[t͡ʃ] ـچ ـچـ چـ چ
[h] ـح ـحـ حـ ح
[x] ـخ ـخـ خـ خ
[d] ـد د
[z] ـذ ذ
[ɾ] ـر ر
[z] ـز ز
[ʒ] ـژ ژ
[s] ـس ـسـ سـ س
[ʃ] ـش ـشـ شـ ش
[s] ـص ـصـ صـ ص
[z] ـض ـضـ ضـ ض
[t] ـط ـطـ طـ ط
[z] ـظ ـظـ ظـ ظ
[ʔ] ـع ـعـ عـ ع
[ɣ] ـغ ـغـ غـ غ
[f] ـف ـفـ فـ ف
[ɣ] ـق ـقـ قـ ق
[k] ـک ـکـ کـ ک
[ɡ] ـگ ـگـ گـ گ
[l] ـل ـلـ لـ ل
[m] ـم ـمـ مـ م
[n] ـن ـنـ نـ ن
[v] / [uː] / [o] / [ow] / ([w] / [aw] / [oː] in Dari) ـو و
[h] ـه ـهـ هـ ه
[j] / [i] / [ɒː] / ([aj] / [eː] in Dari) ـی ـیـ یـ ی

Bengali

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Consonants
IPA Bengali
b
bʱ
d
dʱ
ɖ
ɖʱ
জ, য
ʱ
ɡ
ɡʱ
ɦ হ, ঃ
k
kʰ
l
m
n ন, ণ, ঞ
ŋ ঙ, ং
p
pʰ
r
ɽ ড়, ঢ়
s
ʃ শ, ষ, স
t ত, ৎ
tʰ
ʈ
ʈʰ
ʰ
Vowels
IPA Bengali
a আ, পা
ɛ অ্যা, প্যা, এ, পে
e এ, পে
i ই, পি, ঈ, পী
o ও, পো, অ, প
ɔ অ, প
u উ, পু, ঊ, পূ
 ̃
Semivowels
য়
য়
Suprasegmentals
IPA
ˈ stress
(placed before stressed syllable)
ː doubled consonant