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Operating Systems SCO Newbie: CTRL-C being cheerfully ignored Post 302326627 by dalek on Thursday 18th of June 2009 10:12:14 AM
Old 06-18-2009
Newbie: CTRL-C being cheerfully ignored

This is my first foray into SCO -- I just installed SCO 5.0.6a under VirtualBox. After installing and getting the NIC to talk to the outside world, I decided to test it by pinging another machine in my LAN. It seems to ping other machines fine. But, when I tried to stop the pinging by doing CRTL-C, it cheerfully ignored my request. The only way I found to make it stop was to ssh in and kill the command.

Could that be a SCO-vs-VBox issue or some setting I am not aware of? Right now TERM is setup to scoansi; I tried setting TERM to vt100 but got the same outcome.
 

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KILL(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   KILL(1)

NAME
kill -- terminate or signal a process SYNOPSIS
kill [-s signal_name] pid ... kill -l [exit_status] kill -signal_name pid ... kill -signal_number pid ... DESCRIPTION
The kill utility sends a signal to the processes specified by the pid operand(s). Only the super-user may send signals to other users' processes. The options are as follows: -s signal_name A symbolic signal name specifying the signal to be sent instead of the default TERM. -l [exit_status] If no operand is given, list the signal names; otherwise, write the signal name corresponding to exit_status. -signal_name A symbolic signal name specifying the signal to be sent instead of the default TERM. -signal_number A non-negative decimal integer, specifying the signal to be sent instead of the default TERM. The following pids have special meanings: -1 If superuser, broadcast the signal to all processes; otherwise broadcast to all processes belonging to the user. Some of the more commonly used signals: 1 HUP (hang up) 2 INT (interrupt) 3 QUIT (quit) 6 ABRT (abort) 9 KILL (non-catchable, non-ignorable kill) 14 ALRM (alarm clock) 15 TERM (software termination signal) Some shells may provide a builtin kill command which is similar or identical to this utility. Consult the builtin(1) manual page. SEE ALSO
builtin(1), csh(1), killall(1), ps(1), kill(2), sigaction(2) STANDARDS
The kill function is expected to be IEEE Std 1003.2 (``POSIX.2'') compatible. HISTORY
A kill command appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX. BUGS
A replacement for the command ``kill 0'' for csh(1) users should be provided. BSD
April 28, 1995 BSD
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