Keyboard shortcuts: Difference between revisions

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See [[Keyboard configuration in Xorg#Frequently used XKB options]] for some common shortcuts, that are disabled by default.
See [[Keyboard configuration in Xorg#Frequently used XKB options]] for some common shortcuts, that are disabled by default.
See [[Keyboard configuration in Xorg#Keybinding]] for defining custom keybindings.


=== Key binding for X-selection-paste ===
=== Key binding for X-selection-paste ===

Revision as of 10:14, 5 September 2018

This article provides a list of (not commonly known) default keyboard shortcuts and provides information about user customization.

Standard shortcuts

Kernel

There are several low level shortcuts that are implemented in the kernel which can be used for debugging and recovering from an unresponsive system. Whenever possible, it is recommended that you use these shortcuts instead of doing a hard shutdown (holding down the power button to completely power off the system).

To use these, they must first be activated with either sysctl kernel.sysrq=1 or echo "1" > /proc/sys/kernel/sysrq. If you wish to have it enabled during boot, edit /etc/sysctl.d/99-sysctl.conf and insert the text kernel.sysrq = 1. If you want to make sure it will be enabled even before the partitions are mounted and in the initrd, then add sysrq_always_enabled=1 to your kernel parameters.

A common idiom to remember this is "Reboot Even If System Utterly Broken" (also referred to as "REISUB"). Alternatively, think of it as "BUSIER" backwards.

Keyboard Shortcut Description
Alt+SysRq+r Unraw Take control of keyboard back from X.
Alt+SysRq+e Terminate Send SIGTERM to all processes, allowing them to terminate gracefully.
Alt+SysRq+i Kill Send SIGKILL to all processes, forcing them to terminate immediately.
Alt+SysRq+s Sync Flush data to disk.
Alt+SysRq+u Unmount Unmount and remount all filesystems read-only.
Alt+SysRq+b Reboot Reboot
Tip:
  • If you are using a display manager and after Alt+SysRq+e you are presented with the login screen (or full desktop if autologin is enabled), it is most likely caused by Restart=always directive in the relevant service file. If necessary, edit the unit, however this should not prevent the "REISUB" sequence from working.
  • If all the above combinations work except Alt+SysRq+b, try using the contralateral Alt key.
  • On laptops that use Fn key to differentiate SysRq from PrtScrn, it may not actually be necessary to use the Fn key (i.e., Alt+PrtSc+letter could work).
  • On Lenovo laptops SysRq is often configured as Fn+S. To use it press and hold Alt then press Fn+s, release Fn and s still holding Alt followed by the keys above.
  • You may need to press Ctrl along with Alt. So for example, full key shortcut would be Ctrl+Alt+SysRq+b.

See Wikipedia:Magic SysRq key for more details.

Terminal

Virtual console

See Wikipedia:Virtual console

Keyboard Shortcut Description
Ctrl+Alt+Del Reboots Computer (specified by the symlink /usr/lib/systemd/system/ctrl-alt-del.target)
Alt+F1, F2, F3, ... Switch to n-th virtual console
Alt+ ← Switch to previous virtual console
Alt+ → Switch to next virtual console
Scroll Lock When Scroll Lock is activated, input/output is locked
Shift+PgUp/PgDown Scrolls console buffer up/down
Ctrl+c Kills current task
Ctrl+d Inserts an EOF
Ctrl+z Pauses current Task

Readline

Readline is a commonly used library for line-editing; it is used for example by Bash, FTP, and many more (see the details of readline package under "Required By" for more examples). Readline is also customizable, see examples on the readline page.

Keyboard Shortcut Description
Ctrl+l Clear the screen
Cursor Movement
Ctrl+b Move cursor one character to the left
Ctrl+f Move cursor one character to the right
Alt+b Move cursor one word to the left
Alt+f Move cursor one word to the right
Ctrl+a Move cursor to start of the line
Ctrl+e Move cursor to end of the line
Copy & Paste
Ctrl+u Cut everything from line start to cursor
Ctrl+k Cut everything from the cursor to end of the line
Alt+d Cut the current word after the cursor
Ctrl+w Cut the current word before the cursor
Ctrl+y Paste the previous cut text
Alt+y Paste the second latest cut text
Alt+Ctrl+y Paste the first argument of the previous command
Alt+./_ Paste the last argument of the previous command
History
Ctrl+p Move to the previous line
Ctrl+n Move to the next line
Ctrl+s Search
Ctrl+r Reverse search
Ctrl+j End search
Ctrl+g Abort search (restores original line)
Alt+r Restores all changes made to line
Completion
Tab Auto-complete a name
Alt+? List all possible completions
Alt+* Insert all possible completions

Xorg and Wayland

Keyboard Shortcut Description Notes
Ctrl+Alt+F1, F2, F3, ... Switch to n-th virtual console If it does not work, try Ctrl+Fn+Alt+F….
Shift+Insert
Mouse Button 2
Paste text from the PRIMARY buffer By default, Qt maps Shift+Insert to CLIPBOARD instead of the PRIMARY buffer (see e.g. [1]) and Ctrl+Shift+Insert is mapped to the PRIMARY buffer.

User customization

Readline

Readline has Emacs-like and vi-like editing modes which can be customized with escape sequences.

Xorg

See Keyboard configuration in Xorg#Frequently used XKB options for some common shortcuts, that are disabled by default.

See Keyboard configuration in Xorg#Keybinding for defining custom keybindings.

Key binding for X-selection-paste

This article or section is a candidate for moving to Clipboard.

Notes: Belongs there. (Discuss in Talk:Keyboard shortcuts)

The factual accuracy of this article or section is disputed.

Reason: The shortcuts presented here are mixed up or outdated: F12 in Firefox toggles the developer tools [2] and Shift+Insert pastes the PRIMARY buffer. (Discuss in Talk:Keyboard shortcuts)

This article or section needs expansion.

Reason: Why the 100ms delay? (Discuss in Talk:Keyboard shortcuts)

Users who prefer to work rather with the keyboard than the mouse may benefit from a key binding to the paste operation of the middle mouse button. This is especially useful in a keyboard-centered environment. A workflow example is:

  1. In Firefox, select a string you want to google for (with the mouse).
  2. Hit Ctrl+k to enter the "search engine" field.
  3. Hit F12 to paste the buffer, instead of moving the mouse pointer to the field and center-click to paste.
Note: Shift+Insert has a similar yet different functionality, see #Xorg: Shift+Insert inserts the clipboard buffer, not the x-selection-paste buffer. In some applications, these two buffers are mirrored.

The method suggested here uses three packages available in the official repositories:

  • xsel to give access to the x-selection-buffer content.
  • Xbindkeys to bind a key-stroke to an action.
  • xvkbdAUR to pass the buffer string to the application by emulating keyboard input.

This example binds the x-selection-paste operation to the F12 key:

.xbindkeysrc
"xvkbd -no-jump-pointer -xsendevent -text "\D1`xsel`" 2>/dev/null"
    F12

The "\D1" code prefixes a 100 ms pause to inserting the selection buffer (see the xvkbd home page).

Note: Depending on your X configuration, you may need to drop the -xsendevent argument to xvkbd.

The key codes for keys other than F12 can be determined using xbindkeys -k.

References:

XMonad Window Manager

In the xmonad window manager there is a built-in function to paste the x-selection-buffer content. In order to bind that function to a key-stroke (here Insert key) the following configuration can be used:

xmonad.hs
import XMonad.Util.Paste
...
  -- X-selection-paste buffer
  , ((0,                     xK_Insert), pasteSelection) ]

Tips and tricks

See also