NAME
killall
—
kill processes by name
SYNOPSIS
killall |
[-delmsvz ] [-help ]
[-I ] [-j
jail] [-u
user] [-t
tty] [-c
procname]
[- SIGNAL]
[procname ...] |
DESCRIPTION
Thekillall
utility kills processes selected by name, as
opposed to the selection by PID as done by
kill(1). By default, it will send a TERM
signal
to all processes with a real UID identical to the caller of
killall
that match the name
procname. The super-user is allowed to kill any process.
The options are as follows:
-d
|-v
- Be more verbose about what will be done. For a single
-d
option, a list of the processes that will be sent the signal will be printed, or a message indicating that no matching processes have been found. -e
- Use the effective user ID instead of the (default) real user ID for
matching processes specified with the
-u
option. -help
- Give a help on the command usage and exit.
-I
- Request confirmation before attempting to signal each process.
-l
- List the names of the available signals and exit, like in kill(1).
-m
- Match the argument procname as a (case sensitive) regular expression against the names of processes found. CAUTION! This is dangerous, a single dot will match any process running under the real UID of the caller.
-s
- Show only what would be done, but do not send any signal.
-
SIGNAL- Send a different signal instead of the default
TERM
. The signal may be specified either as a name (with or without a leading “SIG
”), or numerically. -j
jail- Kill processes in the specified jail.
-u
user- Limit potentially matching processes to those belonging to the specified user.
-t
tty- Limit potentially matching processes to those running on the specified tty.
-c
procname- Limit potentially matching processes to those matching the specified procname.
-q
- Suppress error message if no processes are matched.
-z
- Do not skip zombies. This should not have any effect except to print a few error messages if there are zombie processes that match the specified pattern.
ALL PROCESSES
Sending a signal to all processes with the given UID is already
supported by kill(1). So use
kill(1) for this job (e.g. “kill -TERM
-1
” or as root “echo kill -TERM -1 |
su -m <user>
”).
IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
This FreeBSD implementation of
killall
has completely different semantics as
compared to the traditional UNIX System V behavior
of killall
. The latter will kill all processes that
the current user is able to kill, and is intended to be used by the system
shutdown process only.
EXIT STATUS
The killall
utility exits 0 if some
processes have been found and signalled successfully. Otherwise, a status of
1 will be returned.
DIAGNOSTICS
Diagnostic messages will only be printed if requested by
-d
options.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The killall
command appeared in
FreeBSD 2.1. It has been modeled after the
killall
command as available on other platforms.
AUTHORS
The killall
program was originally written
in Perl and was contributed by Wolfram Schneider,
this manual page has been written by Jörg
Wunsch. The current version of killall
was
rewritten in C by Peter Wemm using
sysctl(3).