Difference between revisions of "Kill"

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*<code>kill -9 56568</code> or <code>kill -KILL 56568</code> or <code>kill -s KILL 56568</code>
 
*<code>kill -9 56568</code> or <code>kill -KILL 56568</code> or <code>kill -s KILL 56568</code>
  
Send SIGTERM signal
+
Send [[SIGTERM]] signal
*<code>kill -15 56568</code> or <code>kill -TERM 56568</code> or <code>kill -s TERM 56568</code>
+
* <code>[[kill -15]] 56568</code> or <code>kill -TERM 56568</code> or <code>kill -s TERM 56568</code>
  
 
Kill al process that belongs to a user:
 
Kill al process that belongs to a user:

Revision as of 15:51, 26 April 2023

kill is a command that is used in Linux and other operating systems to send signals to running processes. kill commands allows to send SIGKILL (kill -9 PID) signal that cause the process to terminate immediately (kill).

Linux Examples

"Kill" a process (send SIGKILL signal)

  • kill -9 56568 or kill -KILL 56568 or kill -s KILL 56568

Send SIGTERM signal

  • kill -15 56568 or kill -TERM 56568 or kill -s TERM 56568

Kill al process that belongs to a user:

  • kill -9 `lsof -t -u USERNAME`
  • Suspend process: kill -SIGSTOP PID
  • Resume process: kill -SIGCONT PID

Jobs:

Related commands

See also

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