No. It was very helpful.
It shows that your zombie's PID is 19693. It will remain a zombie until its parent wait()s for it or dies. Its parent's PID is 2564.
Code:
ps -ef|grep [2]564
will show you ps output that contains the description of the parent process, other children of that process, and possibly some other processes that have 2564 somewhere in their ps output. You want the one where 2564 appears in the 2nd column of the output.
that helps a lot!!! thanks. thats what i was looking for: what to do. 2 steps here. got it. thanks both of you.
oh and i dont think i should kill the parent y/n?
looks important
Okay, I'm working within ansi C and Sun Solaris 7. I have a problem with zombies. I'm currently using the kill command to return the status of a process. How do I check for Zombie PIDs or the right function to return its PID from within a C program? (1 Reply)
Hi All
I need help, how can i kill zombies instead of rebooting the system.
Regards
System: sna Tue Apr 5 17:50:23 2005
Load averages: 0.05, 0.15, 0.22
168 processes: 157 sleeping, 5 running, 6 zombies
Cpu states:
CPU LOAD USER NICE... (5 Replies)
i'm writing small http proxy server (accept client -> connect to remote proxy server -> recv client's request -> send to remote proxy server -> get responce from remote proxy server -> send answer to client -> close connection to client and to remote proxy server) and having problems with fork().... (2 Replies)
I had a problem deleting a zombie process. It refused to be killed.
I even tried kill -9 process# but it refused.
Any other way of killing it? (7 Replies)
what are the precautions to be taken care for avoiding zombie process ? (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: Gopi Krishna P
8 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
american-english-large
american-english-large(5) Users' Manual american-english-large(5)NAME
american-english-large - a list of English words
DESCRIPTION
/usr/share/dict/american-english-large is an ASCII file which contains an alphabetic list of words, one per line.
FILES
There may be any number of word lists in /usr/share/dict/. /etc/dictionaries-common/words is a symbolic link to the currently-chosen
/usr/share/dict/<language> file. /usr/share/dict/words is a symbolic link to /etc/dictionaries-common/words, and is the name by which
other software should refer to the system word list. See select-default-wordlist(8) for more information, and/or to change the currently-
chosen word list.
The directory /usr/share/dict can contain word lists for many languages, with name of the language in English, e.g., /usr/share/dict/french
and /usr/share/dict/danish contain respectively lists of French and Danish words if they exist. Such lists should be coded using the ISO
8859-1 character set encoding.
SEE ALSO ispell(1), select-default-wordlist(8), and the Filesystem Hierarchy Standard.
HISTORY
The words lists are not specific, and may be generated from any number of sources.
The system word list used to be /usr/dict/words. For compatibility, software should check that location if /usr/share/dict/words does not
exist.
AUTHOR
Word lists are collected and maintained by various authors. The Debian English word lists are built from the SCOWL (Spell- Checker Ori-
ented Word Lists) package, whose upstream editor is Kevin Atkinson <kevina@users.sourceforge.net>.
Debian 16 June 2003 american-english-large(5)