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How can I enable Ctrl+Alt+Backspace?



The Next CEO of Stack OverflowHow do I enable Ctrl-Alt-Backspace to kill the X server?How to kill X server using a key combination?ctrl + alt + backspace does not workCAPS LOCK to CONTROL remap is reset after screen lockHow to restart X server with the old key combination (ctrl -alt - backspace) in 14.04Preseed values for keyboard-configurationWhat is the equivalent of 'Control-Alt-Delete'?Restart Only GUI Session Or Restart Only Operating System?How do you protect Ubuntu login?How to set keyboard combination to kill the X server?How do I disable Ctrl+Alt+Left/Right?How can I *disable* Ctrl+Alt+Backspace?Ubuntu Gnome: Can't make changing keyboard layout to crtl+shiftHow to restart X server with the old key combination (ctrl -alt - backspace) in 14.04Ubuntu standard keyboard shortcuts work only in English layoutHow to enable ALT Gr key as ALT R for Emacs on Ubuntu 16.04?Ctrl + Alt + Delete doesn't bring up Log out screenctrl+alt+l still logging out after disabling in Ubuntu Keyboard ShortcutsDisable the “restart” option in Ctrl Alt Delete menuUbuntu 18.04.1 not recognizing Ctrl + Alt










52















Ctrl+Alt+ can usually be set to restart X, however I can't find the option to allow this (it is disabled by default).



I have looked in System->Preferences->Keyboard and System->Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts but I can't find an option to enable it.



Where can I change this setting?










share|improve this question
























  • How can I do it in 14.04? I can't see a Layouts tab.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Aug 9 '15 at 2:01











  • TL;DR: sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration

    – Ulysse BN
    Mar 12 '17 at 17:45















52















Ctrl+Alt+ can usually be set to restart X, however I can't find the option to allow this (it is disabled by default).



I have looked in System->Preferences->Keyboard and System->Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts but I can't find an option to enable it.



Where can I change this setting?










share|improve this question
























  • How can I do it in 14.04? I can't see a Layouts tab.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Aug 9 '15 at 2:01











  • TL;DR: sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration

    – Ulysse BN
    Mar 12 '17 at 17:45













52












52








52


20






Ctrl+Alt+ can usually be set to restart X, however I can't find the option to allow this (it is disabled by default).



I have looked in System->Preferences->Keyboard and System->Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts but I can't find an option to enable it.



Where can I change this setting?










share|improve this question
















Ctrl+Alt+ can usually be set to restart X, however I can't find the option to allow this (it is disabled by default).



I have looked in System->Preferences->Keyboard and System->Preferences->Keyboard Shortcuts but I can't find an option to enable it.



Where can I change this setting?







keyboard shortcut-keys






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Oct 29 '13 at 17:09









Jorge Castro

37.1k106422617




37.1k106422617










asked Oct 31 '10 at 21:03









dv3500eadv3500ea

29.1k1290144




29.1k1290144












  • How can I do it in 14.04? I can't see a Layouts tab.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Aug 9 '15 at 2:01











  • TL;DR: sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration

    – Ulysse BN
    Mar 12 '17 at 17:45

















  • How can I do it in 14.04? I can't see a Layouts tab.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Aug 9 '15 at 2:01











  • TL;DR: sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration

    – Ulysse BN
    Mar 12 '17 at 17:45
















How can I do it in 14.04? I can't see a Layouts tab.

– Nickolai Leschov
Aug 9 '15 at 2:01





How can I do it in 14.04? I can't see a Layouts tab.

– Nickolai Leschov
Aug 9 '15 at 2:01













TL;DR: sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration

– Ulysse BN
Mar 12 '17 at 17:45





TL;DR: sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration

– Ulysse BN
Mar 12 '17 at 17:45










8 Answers
8






active

oldest

votes


















35














For Unity (13.04 to 17.04):



You want: System->Preferences->Keyboard



Then click the Layouts tab, the Options button, and expand Key sequence to kill the X server, before finally selecting the checkbox.



Screenshot



To enable it via the command line install dontzap Install dontzap



sudo apt-get install dontzap


And in a terminal



sudo dontzap --enable


To disable the shortcut:



sudo dontzap --disable





share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

    – Stefan Lasiewski
    Nov 19 '11 at 16:59











  • For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

    – nutty about natty
    Jul 9 '13 at 9:20











  • ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

    – nutty about natty
    Jul 9 '13 at 9:23












  • The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

    – sdaau
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:23


















50














This was tested on 13.10+, type the following on the terminal:



sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration


enter image description here



You will see the keyboard configuration. Press ENTER 5 times to skip all keyboard related options except for the Kill X part. When you get to the Kill X option which looks like this:



enter image description here



Select YES and press enter. Wait a bit while everything configures and after that you should have the ability to CTRL+ALT+BCKSPC right on the current session. After saving any work you have pending, try it yourself.



Perfect to solve any visual issues or annoying apps.






share|improve this answer


















  • 4





    This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

    – Rmano
    May 12 '14 at 15:45






  • 4





    this solution deserves upvote!

    – Antony
    Sep 12 '14 at 20:19






  • 1





    Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

    – zvezda
    Feb 17 '16 at 3:26






  • 6





    Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

    – Angsuman Chakraborty
    Nov 17 '16 at 10:40











  • For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

    – Ruslan
    May 25 '17 at 7:12


















19














For 13.10 and newer:



If you are looking for a solution which is independent of Gnome/KDE/Fluxbox or any Desktop Environment or Window Manager, try the following X Window System command. I need this because my Unity desktop is not loading (but X works fine), therefore there is no logout button.



From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/DontZap#Using_the_command_line




Using the command line



You can type the following command to enable Zapping immediately.



setxkbmap -option terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp



If you're happy with the new
behaviour you can add that command to your ~/.xinitrc in order to make
the change permanent.




Also, according to the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx), this has replaced the old DontZap feature from older versions of the X Window System.




In addition, the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace option is now configured as an X
keymap (XKB) option, replacing the X server "DontZap" option and
allowing per-user configuration of this setting.




This is explained further in the Xorg X11R7.5 Release Notes which, among other details, say:




Users who wish to have this functionality available by default may

enable it via the XKB configuration option “terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp”.







share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 23 '13 at 12:41











  • @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

    – Aibara
    Dec 26 '13 at 21:38


















16














You can also use dconf-editor. This option will make the setting persistent across sessions.



sudo apt-get install dconf-editor


After starting the dconf-editor, navigate to org >> gnome >> desktop >> input-sources



Add the options that you need in xkb-options. The option strings are surrounded by single quotes and separated by commas. Be careful not to delete the brackets on the ends.



To enable ctrl+alt+backspace to kill the X-session, add 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp'



You can use this method to enter most of the traditional xkb options that are no longer available in System Settings >> Text Entry. The exceptions are the settings for switching the keyboard layouts, which currently do not work because of a bug.



For a list of the options and the syntax, use man 7 xkeyboard-config in a terminal.



To run the commands equivalent to using dconf-editor from a terminal, you use



gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "['terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"


Note the single quotes around the value, the square brackets around that, the double quotes around the whole thing. In other words, just like in dconf-editor.



Note that this will delete your other settings in xkb-options, if you have any.



You can get the existing settings with



gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options


If you don't change these values very often, it might be simplest to combine existing settings with the new one by hand and the run gsettings set.



It can also be done all at once on the command line. I've put it in a short script here to make it easier to read.



#!/bin/bash
options=$(echo $(gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options)|sed 's/]//g')", 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "$options"


The 2nd line gets the current values and concatenates the terminate... option. The sed command strips the right square bracket from the current values.



Note that while the argument string to the gsettings get command in the terminal needs double quotes around the value



"['val', 'val2']"


the argument string when run in a script should not have the double quotes.



['val', 'val2']





share|improve this answer

























  • Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 13:39











  • It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:01












  • It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:31











  • let us continue this discussion in chat

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:35











  • @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

    – chaskes
    Dec 27 '13 at 18:09


















9














It was changed to Alt+Prt Scr+k.



I can't remember exactly when it was but it was supposed to stop accidental usage.



The idea being those who know they need it will be able to find the new key combination easily enough.



And I think someone at the time suggested it would be easier to remember as it is alternative screen kill. I am not sure that is the case.



The functionality is still there but under a different key combination.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

    – 8128
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:20






  • 1





    Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

    – dv3500ea
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:44






  • 14





    -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

    – htorque
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:58






  • 5





    Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

    – Richard Holloway
    Oct 31 '10 at 22:17


















8














(This is for Gnome Ubuntu, but I suppose it is the same for Unity --- please someone confirm this).



You should install gnome-tweak-tool (if not installed already) and run it. You will find the option you are looking for under "Typing":



g-t-t typing



If you feel more confortable with dconf-editor (or you do not want to install gnome-tweak-tool), you can open dconf-editor, navigate to org.gnome.desktop.input-sources, and then add the word "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" to the xkb-options property.



dconf-editor xkb properties



Note that the other properties in the list will be probably different for your keyboard.






share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

    – TrailRider
    May 7 '14 at 23:02



















2














You can still get back Ctrl+ Alt+Backspace shortcut to restart X by opening a terminal and copy paste the following:



sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration





share|improve this answer

























  • This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

    – alanaktion
    Feb 5 '15 at 3:38


















0














This didn't appear to change anything at all and didn't activate the key combination.



In Kubuntu (KDE, plasma-framework version 5.23 on Kubuntu 16.04 Xenial) I found the option under K > System Settings > Input Devices > Keyboard > Advanced. Open the menu item "key sequence to kill X server" and check the only option "Ctrl + Alt + Backspace", apply.



Using strace I can see that this adds a line to /home/$USER/.config/kxkbrc which reads: Options=terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp.



The setxkbmap rule did work though and places a line reading terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp = +terminate(ctrl_alt_bksp) in the /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/evdev file.






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    8 Answers
    8






    active

    oldest

    votes








    8 Answers
    8






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    35














    For Unity (13.04 to 17.04):



    You want: System->Preferences->Keyboard



    Then click the Layouts tab, the Options button, and expand Key sequence to kill the X server, before finally selecting the checkbox.



    Screenshot



    To enable it via the command line install dontzap Install dontzap



    sudo apt-get install dontzap


    And in a terminal



    sudo dontzap --enable


    To disable the shortcut:



    sudo dontzap --disable





    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

      – Stefan Lasiewski
      Nov 19 '11 at 16:59











    • For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:20











    • ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:23












    • The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

      – sdaau
      Dec 6 '17 at 22:23















    35














    For Unity (13.04 to 17.04):



    You want: System->Preferences->Keyboard



    Then click the Layouts tab, the Options button, and expand Key sequence to kill the X server, before finally selecting the checkbox.



    Screenshot



    To enable it via the command line install dontzap Install dontzap



    sudo apt-get install dontzap


    And in a terminal



    sudo dontzap --enable


    To disable the shortcut:



    sudo dontzap --disable





    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

      – Stefan Lasiewski
      Nov 19 '11 at 16:59











    • For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:20











    • ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:23












    • The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

      – sdaau
      Dec 6 '17 at 22:23













    35












    35








    35







    For Unity (13.04 to 17.04):



    You want: System->Preferences->Keyboard



    Then click the Layouts tab, the Options button, and expand Key sequence to kill the X server, before finally selecting the checkbox.



    Screenshot



    To enable it via the command line install dontzap Install dontzap



    sudo apt-get install dontzap


    And in a terminal



    sudo dontzap --enable


    To disable the shortcut:



    sudo dontzap --disable





    share|improve this answer















    For Unity (13.04 to 17.04):



    You want: System->Preferences->Keyboard



    Then click the Layouts tab, the Options button, and expand Key sequence to kill the X server, before finally selecting the checkbox.



    Screenshot



    To enable it via the command line install dontzap Install dontzap



    sudo apt-get install dontzap


    And in a terminal



    sudo dontzap --enable


    To disable the shortcut:



    sudo dontzap --disable






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 37 mins ago









    Pablo Bianchi

    3,03521536




    3,03521536










    answered Oct 31 '10 at 21:07









    81288128

    24.9k21101138




    24.9k21101138







    • 1





      The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

      – Stefan Lasiewski
      Nov 19 '11 at 16:59











    • For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:20











    • ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:23












    • The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

      – sdaau
      Dec 6 '17 at 22:23












    • 1





      The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

      – Stefan Lasiewski
      Nov 19 '11 at 16:59











    • For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:20











    • ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

      – nutty about natty
      Jul 9 '13 at 9:23












    • The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

      – sdaau
      Dec 6 '17 at 22:23







    1




    1





    The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

    – Stefan Lasiewski
    Nov 19 '11 at 16:59





    The dontzap package is not included in Ubuntu 11.10.

    – Stefan Lasiewski
    Nov 19 '11 at 16:59













    For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

    – nutty about natty
    Jul 9 '13 at 9:20





    For me, it appears to be disabled in System->Preferences->Keyboard but in fact it's still active, destructive and "out there". dontzap doesn't seem to be "active" (as in actively developed) either, and it seems counterintuitive to have to install it in order to disable this key-combo. Any other ways to really and fully disable it?

    – nutty about natty
    Jul 9 '13 at 9:20













    ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

    – nutty about natty
    Jul 9 '13 at 9:23






    ps: I think this is a bug. Some time ago, I enabled it cuz I thought it was kinda cool - not knowing that it was a one-way-street (no disabling functionality built-in). pps: I'm on precise.

    – nutty about natty
    Jul 9 '13 at 9:23














    The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

    – sdaau
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:23





    The System->Preferences->Keyboard works also for Ubuntu 14.04 with MATE desktop.

    – sdaau
    Dec 6 '17 at 22:23













    50














    This was tested on 13.10+, type the following on the terminal:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration


    enter image description here



    You will see the keyboard configuration. Press ENTER 5 times to skip all keyboard related options except for the Kill X part. When you get to the Kill X option which looks like this:



    enter image description here



    Select YES and press enter. Wait a bit while everything configures and after that you should have the ability to CTRL+ALT+BCKSPC right on the current session. After saving any work you have pending, try it yourself.



    Perfect to solve any visual issues or annoying apps.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 4





      This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

      – Rmano
      May 12 '14 at 15:45






    • 4





      this solution deserves upvote!

      – Antony
      Sep 12 '14 at 20:19






    • 1





      Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

      – zvezda
      Feb 17 '16 at 3:26






    • 6





      Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

      – Angsuman Chakraborty
      Nov 17 '16 at 10:40











    • For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

      – Ruslan
      May 25 '17 at 7:12















    50














    This was tested on 13.10+, type the following on the terminal:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration


    enter image description here



    You will see the keyboard configuration. Press ENTER 5 times to skip all keyboard related options except for the Kill X part. When you get to the Kill X option which looks like this:



    enter image description here



    Select YES and press enter. Wait a bit while everything configures and after that you should have the ability to CTRL+ALT+BCKSPC right on the current session. After saving any work you have pending, try it yourself.



    Perfect to solve any visual issues or annoying apps.






    share|improve this answer


















    • 4





      This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

      – Rmano
      May 12 '14 at 15:45






    • 4





      this solution deserves upvote!

      – Antony
      Sep 12 '14 at 20:19






    • 1





      Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

      – zvezda
      Feb 17 '16 at 3:26






    • 6





      Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

      – Angsuman Chakraborty
      Nov 17 '16 at 10:40











    • For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

      – Ruslan
      May 25 '17 at 7:12













    50












    50








    50







    This was tested on 13.10+, type the following on the terminal:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration


    enter image description here



    You will see the keyboard configuration. Press ENTER 5 times to skip all keyboard related options except for the Kill X part. When you get to the Kill X option which looks like this:



    enter image description here



    Select YES and press enter. Wait a bit while everything configures and after that you should have the ability to CTRL+ALT+BCKSPC right on the current session. After saving any work you have pending, try it yourself.



    Perfect to solve any visual issues or annoying apps.






    share|improve this answer













    This was tested on 13.10+, type the following on the terminal:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration


    enter image description here



    You will see the keyboard configuration. Press ENTER 5 times to skip all keyboard related options except for the Kill X part. When you get to the Kill X option which looks like this:



    enter image description here



    Select YES and press enter. Wait a bit while everything configures and after that you should have the ability to CTRL+ALT+BCKSPC right on the current session. After saving any work you have pending, try it yourself.



    Perfect to solve any visual issues or annoying apps.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 11 '14 at 15:24









    Luis AlvaradoLuis Alvarado

    147k139486655




    147k139486655







    • 4





      This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

      – Rmano
      May 12 '14 at 15:45






    • 4





      this solution deserves upvote!

      – Antony
      Sep 12 '14 at 20:19






    • 1





      Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

      – zvezda
      Feb 17 '16 at 3:26






    • 6





      Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

      – Angsuman Chakraborty
      Nov 17 '16 at 10:40











    • For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

      – Ruslan
      May 25 '17 at 7:12












    • 4





      This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

      – Rmano
      May 12 '14 at 15:45






    • 4





      this solution deserves upvote!

      – Antony
      Sep 12 '14 at 20:19






    • 1





      Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

      – zvezda
      Feb 17 '16 at 3:26






    • 6





      Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

      – Angsuman Chakraborty
      Nov 17 '16 at 10:40











    • For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

      – Ruslan
      May 25 '17 at 7:12







    4




    4





    This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

    – Rmano
    May 12 '14 at 15:45





    This is probably the only solution here (short of using the control panel, I mean) that maintain the setting across keyboard layout switch.

    – Rmano
    May 12 '14 at 15:45




    4




    4





    this solution deserves upvote!

    – Antony
    Sep 12 '14 at 20:19





    this solution deserves upvote!

    – Antony
    Sep 12 '14 at 20:19




    1




    1





    Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

    – zvezda
    Feb 17 '16 at 3:26





    Works on Ubuntu 14.04 LTS.

    – zvezda
    Feb 17 '16 at 3:26




    6




    6





    Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

    – Angsuman Chakraborty
    Nov 17 '16 at 10:40





    Works on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS

    – Angsuman Chakraborty
    Nov 17 '16 at 10:40













    For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

    – Ruslan
    May 25 '17 at 7:12





    For some reason I had to reboot to make this take effect with KDM on Kubuntu 14.04 (despite I tried doing sudo stop kdm; sudo start kdm until I rebooted). After reboot it does work as expected.

    – Ruslan
    May 25 '17 at 7:12











    19














    For 13.10 and newer:



    If you are looking for a solution which is independent of Gnome/KDE/Fluxbox or any Desktop Environment or Window Manager, try the following X Window System command. I need this because my Unity desktop is not loading (but X works fine), therefore there is no logout button.



    From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/DontZap#Using_the_command_line




    Using the command line



    You can type the following command to enable Zapping immediately.



    setxkbmap -option terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp



    If you're happy with the new
    behaviour you can add that command to your ~/.xinitrc in order to make
    the change permanent.




    Also, according to the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx), this has replaced the old DontZap feature from older versions of the X Window System.




    In addition, the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace option is now configured as an X
    keymap (XKB) option, replacing the X server "DontZap" option and
    allowing per-user configuration of this setting.




    This is explained further in the Xorg X11R7.5 Release Notes which, among other details, say:




    Users who wish to have this functionality available by default may

    enable it via the XKB configuration option “terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp”.







    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 23 '13 at 12:41











    • @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

      – Aibara
      Dec 26 '13 at 21:38















    19














    For 13.10 and newer:



    If you are looking for a solution which is independent of Gnome/KDE/Fluxbox or any Desktop Environment or Window Manager, try the following X Window System command. I need this because my Unity desktop is not loading (but X works fine), therefore there is no logout button.



    From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/DontZap#Using_the_command_line




    Using the command line



    You can type the following command to enable Zapping immediately.



    setxkbmap -option terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp



    If you're happy with the new
    behaviour you can add that command to your ~/.xinitrc in order to make
    the change permanent.




    Also, according to the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx), this has replaced the old DontZap feature from older versions of the X Window System.




    In addition, the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace option is now configured as an X
    keymap (XKB) option, replacing the X server "DontZap" option and
    allowing per-user configuration of this setting.




    This is explained further in the Xorg X11R7.5 Release Notes which, among other details, say:




    Users who wish to have this functionality available by default may

    enable it via the XKB configuration option “terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp”.







    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 23 '13 at 12:41











    • @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

      – Aibara
      Dec 26 '13 at 21:38













    19












    19








    19







    For 13.10 and newer:



    If you are looking for a solution which is independent of Gnome/KDE/Fluxbox or any Desktop Environment or Window Manager, try the following X Window System command. I need this because my Unity desktop is not loading (but X works fine), therefore there is no logout button.



    From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/DontZap#Using_the_command_line




    Using the command line



    You can type the following command to enable Zapping immediately.



    setxkbmap -option terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp



    If you're happy with the new
    behaviour you can add that command to your ~/.xinitrc in order to make
    the change permanent.




    Also, according to the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx), this has replaced the old DontZap feature from older versions of the X Window System.




    In addition, the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace option is now configured as an X
    keymap (XKB) option, replacing the X server "DontZap" option and
    allowing per-user configuration of this setting.




    This is explained further in the Xorg X11R7.5 Release Notes which, among other details, say:




    Users who wish to have this functionality available by default may

    enable it via the XKB configuration option “terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp”.







    share|improve this answer















    For 13.10 and newer:



    If you are looking for a solution which is independent of Gnome/KDE/Fluxbox or any Desktop Environment or Window Manager, try the following X Window System command. I need this because my Unity desktop is not loading (but X works fine), therefore there is no logout button.



    From https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/Config/DontZap#Using_the_command_line




    Using the command line



    You can type the following command to enable Zapping immediately.



    setxkbmap -option terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp



    If you're happy with the new
    behaviour you can add that command to your ~/.xinitrc in order to make
    the change permanent.




    Also, according to the Ubuntu 10.04 LTS (Lucid Lynx), this has replaced the old DontZap feature from older versions of the X Window System.




    In addition, the Ctrl+Alt+Backspace option is now configured as an X
    keymap (XKB) option, replacing the X server "DontZap" option and
    allowing per-user configuration of this setting.




    This is explained further in the Xorg X11R7.5 Release Notes which, among other details, say:




    Users who wish to have this functionality available by default may

    enable it via the XKB configuration option “terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp”.








    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Jun 29 '18 at 19:14









    Codito ergo sum

    1,5043825




    1,5043825










    answered Nov 21 '11 at 18:52









    Stefan LasiewskiStefan Lasiewski

    2,47252032




    2,47252032







    • 2





      @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 23 '13 at 12:41











    • @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

      – Aibara
      Dec 26 '13 at 21:38












    • 2





      @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 23 '13 at 12:41











    • @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

      – Aibara
      Dec 26 '13 at 21:38







    2




    2





    @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 23 '13 at 12:41





    @Jorge Castro @Stefan Lasiewski Thanks for your advice. One-time option with setxkbmap works, but adding it to ~/.xinitrc on 13.10 doesn't do anything. Probably, ~/.xinitrc isn't used anymore on the latest Ubuntu? How do I enable Zapping permanently, then?

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 23 '13 at 12:41













    @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

    – Aibara
    Dec 26 '13 at 21:38





    @Nickolai Leschov. I had the same problem. In 13.10, try the method using the dconf-editor described in the answer by chaskes.

    – Aibara
    Dec 26 '13 at 21:38











    16














    You can also use dconf-editor. This option will make the setting persistent across sessions.



    sudo apt-get install dconf-editor


    After starting the dconf-editor, navigate to org >> gnome >> desktop >> input-sources



    Add the options that you need in xkb-options. The option strings are surrounded by single quotes and separated by commas. Be careful not to delete the brackets on the ends.



    To enable ctrl+alt+backspace to kill the X-session, add 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp'



    You can use this method to enter most of the traditional xkb options that are no longer available in System Settings >> Text Entry. The exceptions are the settings for switching the keyboard layouts, which currently do not work because of a bug.



    For a list of the options and the syntax, use man 7 xkeyboard-config in a terminal.



    To run the commands equivalent to using dconf-editor from a terminal, you use



    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "['terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"


    Note the single quotes around the value, the square brackets around that, the double quotes around the whole thing. In other words, just like in dconf-editor.



    Note that this will delete your other settings in xkb-options, if you have any.



    You can get the existing settings with



    gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options


    If you don't change these values very often, it might be simplest to combine existing settings with the new one by hand and the run gsettings set.



    It can also be done all at once on the command line. I've put it in a short script here to make it easier to read.



    #!/bin/bash
    options=$(echo $(gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options)|sed 's/]//g')", 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"
    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "$options"


    The 2nd line gets the current values and concatenates the terminate... option. The sed command strips the right square bracket from the current values.



    Note that while the argument string to the gsettings get command in the terminal needs double quotes around the value



    "['val', 'val2']"


    the argument string when run in a script should not have the double quotes.



    ['val', 'val2']





    share|improve this answer

























    • Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 13:39











    • It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:01












    • It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:31











    • let us continue this discussion in chat

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:35











    • @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

      – chaskes
      Dec 27 '13 at 18:09















    16














    You can also use dconf-editor. This option will make the setting persistent across sessions.



    sudo apt-get install dconf-editor


    After starting the dconf-editor, navigate to org >> gnome >> desktop >> input-sources



    Add the options that you need in xkb-options. The option strings are surrounded by single quotes and separated by commas. Be careful not to delete the brackets on the ends.



    To enable ctrl+alt+backspace to kill the X-session, add 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp'



    You can use this method to enter most of the traditional xkb options that are no longer available in System Settings >> Text Entry. The exceptions are the settings for switching the keyboard layouts, which currently do not work because of a bug.



    For a list of the options and the syntax, use man 7 xkeyboard-config in a terminal.



    To run the commands equivalent to using dconf-editor from a terminal, you use



    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "['terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"


    Note the single quotes around the value, the square brackets around that, the double quotes around the whole thing. In other words, just like in dconf-editor.



    Note that this will delete your other settings in xkb-options, if you have any.



    You can get the existing settings with



    gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options


    If you don't change these values very often, it might be simplest to combine existing settings with the new one by hand and the run gsettings set.



    It can also be done all at once on the command line. I've put it in a short script here to make it easier to read.



    #!/bin/bash
    options=$(echo $(gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options)|sed 's/]//g')", 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"
    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "$options"


    The 2nd line gets the current values and concatenates the terminate... option. The sed command strips the right square bracket from the current values.



    Note that while the argument string to the gsettings get command in the terminal needs double quotes around the value



    "['val', 'val2']"


    the argument string when run in a script should not have the double quotes.



    ['val', 'val2']





    share|improve this answer

























    • Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 13:39











    • It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:01












    • It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:31











    • let us continue this discussion in chat

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:35











    • @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

      – chaskes
      Dec 27 '13 at 18:09













    16












    16








    16







    You can also use dconf-editor. This option will make the setting persistent across sessions.



    sudo apt-get install dconf-editor


    After starting the dconf-editor, navigate to org >> gnome >> desktop >> input-sources



    Add the options that you need in xkb-options. The option strings are surrounded by single quotes and separated by commas. Be careful not to delete the brackets on the ends.



    To enable ctrl+alt+backspace to kill the X-session, add 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp'



    You can use this method to enter most of the traditional xkb options that are no longer available in System Settings >> Text Entry. The exceptions are the settings for switching the keyboard layouts, which currently do not work because of a bug.



    For a list of the options and the syntax, use man 7 xkeyboard-config in a terminal.



    To run the commands equivalent to using dconf-editor from a terminal, you use



    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "['terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"


    Note the single quotes around the value, the square brackets around that, the double quotes around the whole thing. In other words, just like in dconf-editor.



    Note that this will delete your other settings in xkb-options, if you have any.



    You can get the existing settings with



    gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options


    If you don't change these values very often, it might be simplest to combine existing settings with the new one by hand and the run gsettings set.



    It can also be done all at once on the command line. I've put it in a short script here to make it easier to read.



    #!/bin/bash
    options=$(echo $(gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options)|sed 's/]//g')", 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"
    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "$options"


    The 2nd line gets the current values and concatenates the terminate... option. The sed command strips the right square bracket from the current values.



    Note that while the argument string to the gsettings get command in the terminal needs double quotes around the value



    "['val', 'val2']"


    the argument string when run in a script should not have the double quotes.



    ['val', 'val2']





    share|improve this answer















    You can also use dconf-editor. This option will make the setting persistent across sessions.



    sudo apt-get install dconf-editor


    After starting the dconf-editor, navigate to org >> gnome >> desktop >> input-sources



    Add the options that you need in xkb-options. The option strings are surrounded by single quotes and separated by commas. Be careful not to delete the brackets on the ends.



    To enable ctrl+alt+backspace to kill the X-session, add 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp'



    You can use this method to enter most of the traditional xkb options that are no longer available in System Settings >> Text Entry. The exceptions are the settings for switching the keyboard layouts, which currently do not work because of a bug.



    For a list of the options and the syntax, use man 7 xkeyboard-config in a terminal.



    To run the commands equivalent to using dconf-editor from a terminal, you use



    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "['terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"


    Note the single quotes around the value, the square brackets around that, the double quotes around the whole thing. In other words, just like in dconf-editor.



    Note that this will delete your other settings in xkb-options, if you have any.



    You can get the existing settings with



    gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options


    If you don't change these values very often, it might be simplest to combine existing settings with the new one by hand and the run gsettings set.



    It can also be done all at once on the command line. I've put it in a short script here to make it easier to read.



    #!/bin/bash
    options=$(echo $(gsettings get org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options)|sed 's/]//g')", 'terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp']"
    gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.input-sources xkb-options "$options"


    The 2nd line gets the current values and concatenates the terminate... option. The sed command strips the right square bracket from the current values.



    Note that while the argument string to the gsettings get command in the terminal needs double quotes around the value



    "['val', 'val2']"


    the argument string when run in a script should not have the double quotes.



    ['val', 'val2']






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Dec 27 '13 at 18:37

























    answered Oct 29 '13 at 17:27









    chaskeschaskes

    13.3k74359




    13.3k74359












    • Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 13:39











    • It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:01












    • It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:31











    • let us continue this discussion in chat

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:35











    • @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

      – chaskes
      Dec 27 '13 at 18:09

















    • Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 13:39











    • It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:01












    • It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:31











    • let us continue this discussion in chat

      – Nickolai Leschov
      Dec 27 '13 at 15:35











    • @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

      – chaskes
      Dec 27 '13 at 18:09
















    Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 13:39





    Thanks for the solution. Is there a way to issue this as a command on a command-line?

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 13:39













    It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:01






    It's not the same thing. The solution by Lasiewski only works one time, until reboot. He doesn't know a way tho make it permanent.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:01














    It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:31





    It doesn't work. source ~/.profile makes it work, but logout/login resets it.

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:31













    let us continue this discussion in chat

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:35





    let us continue this discussion in chat

    – Nickolai Leschov
    Dec 27 '13 at 15:35













    @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

    – chaskes
    Dec 27 '13 at 18:09





    @NickolaiLeschov I added a new command line solution

    – chaskes
    Dec 27 '13 at 18:09











    9














    It was changed to Alt+Prt Scr+k.



    I can't remember exactly when it was but it was supposed to stop accidental usage.



    The idea being those who know they need it will be able to find the new key combination easily enough.



    And I think someone at the time suggested it would be easier to remember as it is alternative screen kill. I am not sure that is the case.



    The functionality is still there but under a different key combination.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

      – 8128
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:20






    • 1





      Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

      – dv3500ea
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:44






    • 14





      -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

      – htorque
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:58






    • 5





      Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

      – Richard Holloway
      Oct 31 '10 at 22:17















    9














    It was changed to Alt+Prt Scr+k.



    I can't remember exactly when it was but it was supposed to stop accidental usage.



    The idea being those who know they need it will be able to find the new key combination easily enough.



    And I think someone at the time suggested it would be easier to remember as it is alternative screen kill. I am not sure that is the case.



    The functionality is still there but under a different key combination.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 2





      Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

      – 8128
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:20






    • 1





      Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

      – dv3500ea
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:44






    • 14





      -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

      – htorque
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:58






    • 5





      Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

      – Richard Holloway
      Oct 31 '10 at 22:17













    9












    9








    9







    It was changed to Alt+Prt Scr+k.



    I can't remember exactly when it was but it was supposed to stop accidental usage.



    The idea being those who know they need it will be able to find the new key combination easily enough.



    And I think someone at the time suggested it would be easier to remember as it is alternative screen kill. I am not sure that is the case.



    The functionality is still there but under a different key combination.






    share|improve this answer















    It was changed to Alt+Prt Scr+k.



    I can't remember exactly when it was but it was supposed to stop accidental usage.



    The idea being those who know they need it will be able to find the new key combination easily enough.



    And I think someone at the time suggested it would be easier to remember as it is alternative screen kill. I am not sure that is the case.



    The functionality is still there but under a different key combination.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Feb 18 '11 at 8:40









    8128

    24.9k21101138




    24.9k21101138










    answered Oct 31 '10 at 21:18









    Richard HollowayRichard Holloway

    21k54252




    21k54252







    • 2





      Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

      – 8128
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:20






    • 1





      Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

      – dv3500ea
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:44






    • 14





      -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

      – htorque
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:58






    • 5





      Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

      – Richard Holloway
      Oct 31 '10 at 22:17












    • 2





      Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

      – 8128
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:20






    • 1





      Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

      – dv3500ea
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:44






    • 14





      -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

      – htorque
      Oct 31 '10 at 21:58






    • 5





      Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

      – Richard Holloway
      Oct 31 '10 at 22:17







    2




    2





    Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

    – 8128
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:20





    Just to mention "Alt + Prt Scr" is marked on most keyboards as "SysRq" (System request) to help you easily remember this.

    – 8128
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:20




    1




    1





    Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

    – dv3500ea
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:44





    Thanks for your answer. As it happens, this doesn't work on my laptop. Both prt sc and sys rq need fn to be pressed and cause gnome-screenshot to open; many times if I hold it down for too long.

    – dv3500ea
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:44




    14




    14





    -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

    – htorque
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:58





    -1. Alt + PrtScr + k or (SysRq + k) is a magic SysRq key combination that kills all processes on the current virtual console. It can be used to kill the X server, however it isn't the replacement for Ctrl + Alt + Bksp. In Ubuntu 9.04 Ctrl + Alt + Bksp got disabled (not removed) by default and could be enabled by setting a X server flag ('DontZap'), and as of Ubuntu 9.10 it's like described by fluteflute.

    – htorque
    Oct 31 '10 at 21:58




    5




    5





    Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

    – Richard Holloway
    Oct 31 '10 at 22:17





    Found the release notes. The Ubuntu answer to this question is on this page wiki.ubuntu.com/LucidLynx/ReleaseNotes about half way down.

    – Richard Holloway
    Oct 31 '10 at 22:17











    8














    (This is for Gnome Ubuntu, but I suppose it is the same for Unity --- please someone confirm this).



    You should install gnome-tweak-tool (if not installed already) and run it. You will find the option you are looking for under "Typing":



    g-t-t typing



    If you feel more confortable with dconf-editor (or you do not want to install gnome-tweak-tool), you can open dconf-editor, navigate to org.gnome.desktop.input-sources, and then add the word "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" to the xkb-options property.



    dconf-editor xkb properties



    Note that the other properties in the list will be probably different for your keyboard.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

      – TrailRider
      May 7 '14 at 23:02
















    8














    (This is for Gnome Ubuntu, but I suppose it is the same for Unity --- please someone confirm this).



    You should install gnome-tweak-tool (if not installed already) and run it. You will find the option you are looking for under "Typing":



    g-t-t typing



    If you feel more confortable with dconf-editor (or you do not want to install gnome-tweak-tool), you can open dconf-editor, navigate to org.gnome.desktop.input-sources, and then add the word "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" to the xkb-options property.



    dconf-editor xkb properties



    Note that the other properties in the list will be probably different for your keyboard.






    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

      – TrailRider
      May 7 '14 at 23:02














    8












    8








    8







    (This is for Gnome Ubuntu, but I suppose it is the same for Unity --- please someone confirm this).



    You should install gnome-tweak-tool (if not installed already) and run it. You will find the option you are looking for under "Typing":



    g-t-t typing



    If you feel more confortable with dconf-editor (or you do not want to install gnome-tweak-tool), you can open dconf-editor, navigate to org.gnome.desktop.input-sources, and then add the word "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" to the xkb-options property.



    dconf-editor xkb properties



    Note that the other properties in the list will be probably different for your keyboard.






    share|improve this answer















    (This is for Gnome Ubuntu, but I suppose it is the same for Unity --- please someone confirm this).



    You should install gnome-tweak-tool (if not installed already) and run it. You will find the option you are looking for under "Typing":



    g-t-t typing



    If you feel more confortable with dconf-editor (or you do not want to install gnome-tweak-tool), you can open dconf-editor, navigate to org.gnome.desktop.input-sources, and then add the word "terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp" to the xkb-options property.



    dconf-editor xkb properties



    Note that the other properties in the list will be probably different for your keyboard.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited May 7 '14 at 22:14

























    answered May 7 '14 at 21:59









    RmanoRmano

    25.5k881147




    25.5k881147







    • 1





      Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

      – TrailRider
      May 7 '14 at 23:02













    • 1





      Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

      – TrailRider
      May 7 '14 at 23:02








    1




    1





    Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

    – TrailRider
    May 7 '14 at 23:02






    Thank you....Gnome Tweak does work in Unity, however, it is very hard to see as the white background that should be behind the right box with the list and menu options is transparent so it shows whatever is behind it(setting a white background would be a workaround but it is still usable....) The Dconf editor works as well and might be the better choice for readability but is a bit harder to use.....

    – TrailRider
    May 7 '14 at 23:02












    2














    You can still get back Ctrl+ Alt+Backspace shortcut to restart X by opening a terminal and copy paste the following:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration





    share|improve this answer

























    • This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

      – alanaktion
      Feb 5 '15 at 3:38















    2














    You can still get back Ctrl+ Alt+Backspace shortcut to restart X by opening a terminal and copy paste the following:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration





    share|improve this answer

























    • This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

      – alanaktion
      Feb 5 '15 at 3:38













    2












    2








    2







    You can still get back Ctrl+ Alt+Backspace shortcut to restart X by opening a terminal and copy paste the following:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration





    share|improve this answer















    You can still get back Ctrl+ Alt+Backspace shortcut to restart X by opening a terminal and copy paste the following:



    sudo dpkg-reconfigure keyboard-configuration






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited May 12 '14 at 15:14









    Seth

    35k27112166




    35k27112166










    answered May 7 '14 at 21:51









    Mr_ChmodMr_Chmod

    129112




    129112












    • This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

      – alanaktion
      Feb 5 '15 at 3:38

















    • This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

      – alanaktion
      Feb 5 '15 at 3:38
















    This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

    – alanaktion
    Feb 5 '15 at 3:38





    This answer was already given by Luis Alvarado above, including more detailed instructions.

    – alanaktion
    Feb 5 '15 at 3:38











    0














    This didn't appear to change anything at all and didn't activate the key combination.



    In Kubuntu (KDE, plasma-framework version 5.23 on Kubuntu 16.04 Xenial) I found the option under K > System Settings > Input Devices > Keyboard > Advanced. Open the menu item "key sequence to kill X server" and check the only option "Ctrl + Alt + Backspace", apply.



    Using strace I can see that this adds a line to /home/$USER/.config/kxkbrc which reads: Options=terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp.



    The setxkbmap rule did work though and places a line reading terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp = +terminate(ctrl_alt_bksp) in the /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/evdev file.






    share|improve this answer





























      0














      This didn't appear to change anything at all and didn't activate the key combination.



      In Kubuntu (KDE, plasma-framework version 5.23 on Kubuntu 16.04 Xenial) I found the option under K > System Settings > Input Devices > Keyboard > Advanced. Open the menu item "key sequence to kill X server" and check the only option "Ctrl + Alt + Backspace", apply.



      Using strace I can see that this adds a line to /home/$USER/.config/kxkbrc which reads: Options=terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp.



      The setxkbmap rule did work though and places a line reading terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp = +terminate(ctrl_alt_bksp) in the /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/evdev file.






      share|improve this answer



























        0












        0








        0







        This didn't appear to change anything at all and didn't activate the key combination.



        In Kubuntu (KDE, plasma-framework version 5.23 on Kubuntu 16.04 Xenial) I found the option under K > System Settings > Input Devices > Keyboard > Advanced. Open the menu item "key sequence to kill X server" and check the only option "Ctrl + Alt + Backspace", apply.



        Using strace I can see that this adds a line to /home/$USER/.config/kxkbrc which reads: Options=terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp.



        The setxkbmap rule did work though and places a line reading terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp = +terminate(ctrl_alt_bksp) in the /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/evdev file.






        share|improve this answer















        This didn't appear to change anything at all and didn't activate the key combination.



        In Kubuntu (KDE, plasma-framework version 5.23 on Kubuntu 16.04 Xenial) I found the option under K > System Settings > Input Devices > Keyboard > Advanced. Open the menu item "key sequence to kill X server" and check the only option "Ctrl + Alt + Backspace", apply.



        Using strace I can see that this adds a line to /home/$USER/.config/kxkbrc which reads: Options=terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp.



        The setxkbmap rule did work though and places a line reading terminate:ctrl_alt_bksp = +terminate(ctrl_alt_bksp) in the /usr/share/X11/xkb/rules/evdev file.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Aug 4 '16 at 21:38

























        answered Aug 4 '16 at 20:57









        pbhjpbhj

        1,368923




        1,368923



























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