Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: SIGSTOP and SIGKILL
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting SIGSTOP and SIGKILL Post 302498160 by DC Slick on Sunday 20th of February 2011 02:15:08 AM
Old 02-20-2011
Ok found the caveat: If any of my conditions have an exit 0, the terminal prompt doesn't come back. I can still type commands successfully but i have to manually issue a ^C interrupt to the terminal if I want the prompt back. I've tried adding kill -s $SIGSSTOP $! to my script to no avail. Any ideas?
 

4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Why SIGKILL will occur?

Hi Gurus, I am executing my Datastage jobs on UNIX operating System. While running the jobs i am getting the following error: main_program: Unexpected termination by Unix signal 9(SIGKILL) Can any one please let me know what are the possible situations where this SIGKILL will arrise? ... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: choppas
9 Replies

2. Programming

How to implement SIGKILL and SIGTERM and print a message?

Hello, I am running a webserver that uses sockets, forks, and children. The parent process listens for connections and the child processes the information. I am trying to figure out why the code I have below SIGTERM, and SIGKILL never fire. I was messing around with the printfs and doesnt... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: norelco55
11 Replies

3. Solaris

SIGQUIT and SIGKILL message

Dear All, I have machine with SunOS 5.10 Generic_138888-01 sun4v sparc SUNW,SPARC-Enterprise-T5120. Yesterday there is something at dmesg command : May 25 18:09:02 cacao_launcher: Timeout occured on heartbeat channel, cleanup engaged May 25 18:09:07 cacao_launcher: watchdog : warning,... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: mbah_jiman
0 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to detect SIGTERM,SIGKILL signal in UNIX

Dear All We have JBOSS server running on Linux we need to track Graceful Shutdown(SIGTERM) and Forceful Shutdown(SIGKILL) timestamp and write it into one file, I am new to UNIX Signal processing if is it possible how to detect it? We generally do $kill PID For Graceful... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: mnmonu
5 Replies
killall(8)						      System Manager's Manual							killall(8)

NAME
killall - Terminates all processes started by the user, except the calling process SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/killall [- | [-]signal_name | -signal_number] /usr/sbin/killall -l FLAGS
The hyphen character (without an argument) sends a SIGTERM signal initially and then sends a SIGKILL signal to all processes that survive for 30 seconds after receipt of the first signal. This gives processes that catch the SIGTERM signal an opportunity to clean up. A signal name, optionally preceded by a hyphen, sends the specified signal to processes. The hyphen character (with a signal number argument) sends the specified signal, either a name, stripped of the SIG prefix (such as KILL), or a number (such as 9). For information about signal names and numbers, see the signal() system call. In the System V habitat, the optional signal number does not have to be preceded with a hyphen (-). Lists signal names in numerical order (as given in the /usr/include/signal.h file), stripped of the common SIG prefix. DESCRIPTION
This command provides a convenient means of killing all processes created by the shell that you control. When started by the superuser, the killall command kills all processes that can be terminated, except those processes that started it, the kernel processes, and processes 0 and 1 (init). Security Configuration This command is modified in all security configurations of the system. EXAMPLES
To stop all background processes that have started, enter: killall This sends all background processes signal 9 (the kill signal, also called SIGKILL). To stop all background processes, giving them a chance to clean up, enter: killall - This sends signal 15 (SIGTERM), waits 30 seconds, and then sends signal 9 (SIGKILL). To send a specific signal to the background processes, enter: killall -2 This sends signal 2 (SIGINT) to the background processes. To list the signal names in numerical order, stripped of the SIG prefix, enter: killall -l This displays a list of signals, which may vary from system to system. FILES
Specifies the command path RELATED INFORMATION
Calls: kill(2), sigaction(2), signal(2) delim off killall(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:51 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy