killall(ADM)
killall --
kill all active processes
Syntax
/etc/killall
[ -c [ -n ] | -v ]
[ -p PID[,PID ...] ]
[ -t timeout ]
[ signal ]
Description
The killall command is used by /etc/rc0 during
shutdown to kill active processes so that all mounted
filesystems can be unmounted cleanly. By default, all processes
are killed except:
-
the killall process and its parent
-
system processes such as sched and vhand
-
the init process (PID 1)
-
zombie processes
If specified, signal is sent to the
processes to be killed. The default signal is 9
(SIGKILL).
killall accepts the following options:
-c-
Print the number of processes that were specified to be killed
but which are still active when killall exits.
This number is written to the standard output.
This option is intended for use by shutdown scripts to
determine if any of the specified processes remain alive.
-n-
Do not send any signal to the specified processes.
This option is used with the -c option to determine
if any of the specified processes are still active.
-p PID[,PID ...]-
Send a signal only to those processes with the specified process
IDs.
-t timeout-
Wait for timeout seconds for all killed processes to
die. The default action of killall is to send a
signal and exit immediately.
-v-
Print statistics on the standard output about processes
being killed, unkillable processes, and processes which
will not die.
killall should be used in shutdown scripts as a
replacement for a
kill(C)
followed by a
sleep(C).
Exit values
killall exits with a value of 0 if successful; it exits
with a value of 255 if the time-out expires. Other exit values
correspond to errno values defined in
/usr/include/sys/errno.h.
Examples
Test whether processes with PIDs
10, 20, and 30 still exist:
nprocs=`/etc/killall -c -n -p 10,20,30`
[ $nprocs != 0 ] && echo "$nprocs processes are still alive"
Send signal 15 (SIGTERM) to
processes with PIDs 10, 20, and 30;
wait for up to ten seconds for them to exit:
killall -t 10 -p 10,20,30 15
The following script sends SIGTERM to allow processes to
die gracefully over a ten second period. If the processes are
still active, SIGKILL is sent and killall
waits for a further ten
seconds:
nprocs=`/etc/killall -c -p $pid -t 10 15`
if [ $nprocs != 0 ]
then # processes still active, try using SIGKILL instead
nprocs=`/etc/killall -c -p $pid -t 10`
[ $nprocs != 0 ] && echo "$nprocs processes are still alive"
fi
Authorization
Only root can run killall.
See also
kill(C),
ps(C),
rc0(ADM),
shutdown(ADM),
signal(S),
sleep(C)
Standards conformance
killall is conformant with
AT&T SVID Issue 2.
killall includes extended functionality provided by The
Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003