04-13-2005
ummm...you are not going to be able to kill all processes with a PID of 1. Besides, why would you want to do that? See article
here
10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
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
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
hxcopy
HXCOPY(1) HTML-XML-utils HXCOPY(1)
NAME
hxcopy - copy an HTML file and update its relative links
SYNOPSIS
hxcopy [ -i old-URL ] [ -o new-URL ] [ file-or-URL [ file-or-URL ] ]
DESCRIPTION
The hxcopy command copies its first argument to its second argument, while updating relative links. The input is assumed to be HTML or
XHTML and may be slightly reformatted in the process.
If the second argument is omitted, hxcopy writes to standard output. In this case the option -o is required. If the first argument is also
omitted, hxcopy reads from standard input. In this case the option -i is required.
OPTIONS
The following options are supported:
-i old-URL
For the purposes of updating relative links, act as if old-URL is the location from which the input is copied. If this option is
omitted, the actual location of the first argument is used for calculating relative links.
-o new-URL
For the purposed of updating relative links, act as if new-URL is the location to which the input is copied. If this option is
omitted, the actual location of the second argument is used for calculating relative links.
ENVIRONMENT
To use a proxy to retrieve remote files, set the environment variables http_proxy and ftp_proxy. E.g., http_proxy="http://localhost:8080/"
BUGS
Unlike the last argument of cp(1), the last argument of hxcopy must be a file, not a directory.
The second argument must be a local file. Writing to a URL is not yet implemented. To work around this, replace hxcopy file.html
http://example.org/file.html by hxcopy -o http://example.org/file.html file.html tmp.html and then upload tmp.html to the given URL with
some other command, such as curl(1). The first argument, however, may be a URL. hxcopy will download the given file. (Currently only HTTP
is supported.)
EXAMPLE
Assume the HTML file foo.html contains a relative link to "../bar.html". Here are some examples of commands:
hxcopy foo.html bar/foo.html
The file foo.html is copied to ../bar/foo.html and the relative link to "../bar.html" becomes "../../bar.html".
hxcopy foo.html ../foo.html
The file foo.html is copied to ../foo.html and the relative link to "../bar.html" is rewritten as "bar.html".
hxcopy -i http://my.org/dir1/foo.html -o http://my.org/foo.html file1.html file2.html
The file file1.html is copied to file2.html and the relative link to "../bar.html" is rewritten as "bar.html". A command like this
may be useful to update files that are later uploaded to a server.
SEE ALSO
cp(1), curl(1), hxwls(1)
6.x 9 Dec 2008 HXCOPY(1)