Sponsored Content
Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Need a script to kill processes with PPID of 1 Post 69238 by lbaysdon on Wednesday 13th of April 2005 11:01:38 AM
Old 04-13-2005
Need a script to kill processes with PPID of 1

Hi,
I have been trying to come up with a script to run as a cron job to kill any processes that have PPID of 1. I have created a file that contains the PID and the PPID. How can I read this file and then execute a kill on any PID where PPID is 1. The file looks like this:

4904 1
4455 1
6561 6560
5678 1

I create the file using:
ps -ef|grep -v root|grep rp_h1|awk '{print $2 , $3}' > killog

Then I want to read the killog file and issue a kill -9 on each PID that has a PPID of 1. This seems like it should be simple, but I am not very good with script writing. Thanks in advance for your help!!!

Lori
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

script to kill rsh processes running for more than 10 minutes

Hi Friends, I need to write a script to kill some processes running for more than 10 minutes. Can I get some pointers on that. Thanks for ur help in Advance. Thanks&Regards, Amit (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: amitsayshii
1 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to kill rsh processes running for more than 10 minutes

Hi Friends, I need to write a script to kill some processes running for more than 10 minutes. Can I get some pointers on that. Thanks for ur help in Advance. Thanks&Regards, Amit (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: amitsayshii
1 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Script to kill rsh processes running for more than 10 mins

Hi Friends, I need to write a script to kill some processes running for more than 10 minutes. Can I get some pointers on that. Thanks for ur help in Advance. Thanks&Regards, Amit (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: amitsayshii
3 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

kill all processes

i have a very short file that has in it a line for a find command. now, when i run this script and I kill the script later, using the ps -ef | grep scriptname. i noticed kill -9 kills the script itself but does not kill the internal find command that it gave birth to. say theres a file... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Terrible
0 Replies

5. Solaris

kill processes

how to kill the processes of aperticular user? because i have nearly 25000 process are there for perticular user. i need to kill. Please provide the information? Regards, Rajesh (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: pmrajesh21
3 Replies

6. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

script to kill related processes

hi guys, can anyone help me out with the script to kill all the related process at once. i have something like below ps -fu UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD xyz 17398 1 2 Dec30 ? 00:31:20 ./psa_mux -simulate -client_ports 22000 xyz 17399 1 2... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: smithaph
2 Replies

7. Shell Programming and Scripting

Kill processes

for i in 'ps -f | grep textedit' do kill $i done I wrote this but it wont work. I am trying to find processes and kill them. Any help would be welcome. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: hawaiifiver
1 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

need to kill a number of processes with name "XYZ" at a time using shell script

Hi, when i grep for the process "XYZ" , there will be some good number of processes with that name, i want to kill all the these processes at a time using shell script? Any help needed for this action. Thanks Regards, Anil (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: anilmanepu
6 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

script to kill tail processes

my unix machine is currently shared by many teams, because of that lots of processess are running and bad part is taht when I do psu ...i can see all tail processes as well , meaning ppl who have viewed files with tail and have forgotten to close it. command prompt >> psu tail -n 0 -f... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mitsyjohn
2 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

kill multiple processes by name

Want to kill multiple processes by name. for the example below, I want to kill all 'proxy-stagerd_copy' processes. I tried this but didn't work: >> ps -ef|grep proxy_copy root 991 986 0 14:45:34 ? 0:04 proxy-stagerd root 1003 991 0 14:45:49 ? 0:01... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: catalinawinemxr
2 Replies
empty(1)						      General Commands Manual							  empty(1)

NAME
empty - run processes under pseudo-terminal sessions SYNOPSIS
empty -f [-i fifo1 -o fifo2] [-p file.pid] [-L file.log] command [command args] empty -w [-Sv] [-t n] [-i fifo2 -o fifo1] key1 [answer1] ... [keyX answerX] empty -s [-Sc] -o fifo1 [request] empty -r [-b size] [-t n] [-i fifo2] empty -l empty -k [pid] [signal] empty -h DESCRIPTION
empty is an utility that provides a simple interface to execute and/or interact with processes under pseudo-terminal sessions. This tool is definitely useful in programming of shell scripts which are used to communicate with interactive programs like telnet or ftp. In some cases empty can be a substitution for TCL/expect or other similar programming tools. There are several common forms of command lines for empty. But the first execution of empty is usually a start in the daemon mode to fork a new command (process) under PTY-session. This can be done with -f key. An interface for the input and output data channels of the forked process is performed by two fifo files which names may be specified with -i and -o keys. These files are automatically created/deleted any time you start/exit empty daemon, so you must not create them manually. If you did not specify these fifo files in the command line, empty names them by itself basing on its PID and PID of forked PTY process. At this point any application can easily communicate with forked process by writing data to the input fifo and reading answers from the output fifo, see EXAMPLES section for the details. To simplify this operations, empty offers an interface to just send any data (use -s key), or even to watch the output fifo for multiple keyphrases and reply to the input fifo with one of the responses (see -w key). Note! Input fifo for empty -f ... is usually an output fifo for empty -w and empty -s forms. And output fifo of empty -f ... is an input fifo for empty -w ... If something goes wrong the forked process may be killed by the standard kill command, or using -k key of empty. See -p option to save PID of empty daemon process. The following options are available: -f fork, spawn, start or execute a new process specified by the command and its arguments. If you omit fifo files, empty with its job control algorithm will create them under /tmp directory using this templates: empty.PPID.PID.in and empty.PPID.PID.out, here PPID is usually your shell system process ID and PID is system process ID of empty-daemon. -s send data (request) to the forked process. If fifo file was not specified with -o key, empty will try to find an automatically created fifo file it in /tmp directory. Instead of command line you can send your request or data directly to standard input (stdin) of empty -w watch for one or more keyphrases and if specified send the appropriated response to the input fifo. If response is not set, empty waits for the proper keyphrase then exits. With -w key empty returns the number of matched keyphrase-response pair, or 255 if fails to find this match (see -t key for details of possible exit on timeout). -r read from output FIFO one line (default) or one block of data (if -b size was specified). If -t n key was placed, exit on time- out. -l list automatically created jobs by your shell. NB! Your custom jobs, which fifo files you specified with -i and -o keys, are not displayed. So if you did not specify fifo files with -i and -o keys all operations are done under the job marked current -k send signal to the process with pid. If you did not specify pid, empty tries to find it within the list of automatically cre- ated jobs. If signal is omitted the default SIGTERM is used. -h print short help message and exit -i fifo1 a fifo file, which is used as input for a forked process. -o fifo2 a fifo file, which is used as output for a forked process. -L file.log This option allows to log the whole empty session to a file. Marks >>> and <<< show the directions of data flow. --logfile-mode=mode This option allows to choose the mode of the log file created with the -L option. The default mode is 0600. -p file.pid Save PID of empty daemon process to a file -t n If input FIFO is empty, wait for n seconds (default is 10) to receive the keyphrase then exit on timeout with 255 code. -c force empty to use stdin for data or requests. -S Strip the last character from the input. Works with -s and -w keys -v kvazi verbose mode. Show all contents of received buffer. EXAMPLES
Start a new PTY-session with telnet to localhost: empty -f -i in.fifo -o out.fifo -p empty.pid -L empty.log telnet localhost Interact with telnet: empty -w -i out.fifo -o in.fifo ogin 'my_user ' empty -w -i out.fifo -o in.fifo assword 'my_password ' Send commands to telnet with empty: empty -s -o in.fifo who empty -s -o in.fifo "ls -la / " The same using STDIN: echo who | empty -s -o in.fifo echo "ls -la /" | empty -s -o in.fifo Just cat output from telnet: cat out.fifo Read one line from out.fifo: empty -r -i out.fifo Send commands to telnet with ordinary echo: echo "who am i" > in.fifo echo "uname -a" > in.fifo Kill a process with PID 1234: empty -k 1234 or kill 1234 Telnet session with automatically created jobs: empty -f telnet localhost Interact with telnet using job control: empty -w ogin 'my_user ' empty -w assword 'my_password ' List automatically created jobs: empty -l PPID PID TYPE FILENAME 479 706 in /tmp/empty.479.706.in 479 706 out /tmp/empty.479.706.out 479 711 in /tmp/empty.479.711.in 479 711 out /tmp/empty.479.711.out 479 711 current SECURITY
It is considered insecure to send a password in the command line like this: empty -w assword 'my_password ' or like this: empty -s 'my_password ' The reason is that the command line arguments are visible to the system while empty is running. Any local user can see them with ps(1), sometimes they are visible even remotely with finger(1). Also your server may have some monitoring tools which may store the output from ps(1) in their logs. There are also other, more complicated ways to compromise this information. Generally, you should take command line arguments as (possibly) visible to every one unless you really know what you're doing. empty with '-s' flag runs quickly in most cases, but still it can hang for a number of reasons (like fifo overloading), and even if it runs quick you still cannot be sure that no one will see its command line arguments even in this short time. empty with '-w' flag is even worse because it must wait for the keyphrase. A better way to send the password to the supervised program is to read it from file: empty -s [common options] <./password-file or from a pipe: get-password-of-user "$user" |empty -s [common options] You should still make sure that you do not send any password via command line while creating this file, and certainly you should set some safe permissions to this file AND its directory (with the parent directories) before reading the password from the file OR writing the password to it. Another possible way is to use your shell's builtin (but see below): echo "$password" |empty -s [common options] Many shells like bash(1), csh(1) and FreeBSD's sh(1) do not call external echo(1) command but use their own builtin echo command. Since no external command is started (the shell itself does all that echo(1) must do), nothing is shown in the process list. It is beyond this man- ual page to discuss the way to make sure that your shell uses the builtin command. RETURN VALUES
If any error occurs empty usually exits with code 255. Otherwise zero or some positive value (see -w key) is returned. SEE ALSO
expect(1), chat(8) AUTHOR
empty was made by Mikhail E. Zakharov. This software was based on the basic idea of pty version 4.0 Copyright (c) 1992, Daniel J. Bernstein but no code was ported from pty4. SECURITY section of this manual page was contributed by Sergey Redin. March, 05 2006 empty(1)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 04:00 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy