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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Killing a stubborn process... Post 14132 by auswipe on Monday 28th of January 2002 04:12:11 PM
Old 01-28-2002
Bummer, dude.

Quote:
Originally posted by Kelam_Magnus
Try this.

Do a ps -aef|grep (your PID#)

# ps -aef |grep 13647

# ps -aef |grep (parent PID#) To find the process that possibly spawned your process "gzip -c".

If it has a parent PID. a process that spawned this process, then you should try to kill that process.

Keep trying to find the parent in this manner until you find the true parent. Then you should be able to kill this PID as well.
Using the -j option of ps under OpenBSD, I was able to identify the PPID.

The PPID? It is 1.

Yeah. I think I am gonna let the gzip -c sit for a while until I absolutely have to reboot the machine (probably sometime in March). It isn't using any more memory and isn't using any CPU so it is really not a problem.

Thanks for the responses!

I wonder what job spawned the gzip with the -c option. I took a look at my cronjob entries and they do not use the -c option. I use gzip --best for my scripts. I need to do some more investigating. There doesn't seem to be any problem with the system over-all.

Weird.
 

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GZEXE(1)						    BSD General Commands Manual 						  GZEXE(1)

NAME
gzexe -- create auto-decompressing executables SYNOPSIS
gzexe [-d] file ... DESCRIPTION
The gzexe utility uses gzip(1) to compress executables, producing executables that decompress on-the-fly when executed. This saves disk space, at the cost of slower execution times. The original executables are saved by copying each of them to a file with the same name with a '~' suffix appended. After verifying that the compressed executables work as expected, the backup files can be removed. The options are as follows: -d Decompress executables previously compressed by gzexe. The gzexe program refuses to compress non-regular or non-executable files, files with a setuid or setgid bit set, files that are already com- pressed using gzexe or programs it needs to perform on-the-fly decompression: sh(1), mktemp(1), rm(1), echo(1), tail(1), gzip(1), and chmod(1). SEE ALSO
gzip(1) CAVEATS
The gzexe utility replaces files by overwriting them with the generated compressed executable. To be able to do this, it is required that the original files are writable. BSD
July 30, 2003 BSD
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