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kill Cheatsheet

kill Cheatsheet

Basic Syntax

Core kill command forms.

Command Description
kill PID Send SIGTERM (graceful stop) to a process
kill -9 PID Force kill a process (SIGKILL)
kill -1 PID Reload process config (SIGHUP)
kill -l List all available signal names and numbers
kill -0 PID Check if a PID exists without sending a signal

Signal Reference

Signals most commonly used with kill, killall, and pkill.

Signal Number Description
SIGHUP 1 Reload config — most daemons reload settings without restarting
SIGINT 2 Interrupt process — equivalent to pressing Ctrl+C
SIGQUIT 3 Quit and write a core dump for debugging
SIGKILL 9 Force kill — cannot be caught or ignored; always terminates immediately
SIGTERM 15 Graceful stop — default signal; process can clean up before exiting
SIGUSR1 10 User-defined signal 1 — meaning depends on the application
SIGUSR2 12 User-defined signal 2 — meaning depends on the application
SIGCONT 18 Resume a process that was suspended with SIGSTOP
SIGSTOP 19 Suspend process — cannot be caught or ignored
SIGTSTP 20 Terminal stop — equivalent to pressing Ctrl+Z

Kill by PID

Send signals to one or more specific processes.

Command Description
kill 1234 Gracefully stop PID 1234
kill -9 1234 5678 Force kill multiple PIDs at once
kill -HUP 1234 Reload config for PID 1234
kill -STOP 1234 Suspend PID 1234
kill -CONT 1234 Resume suspended PID 1234
kill -9 $(pidof firefox) Force kill all PIDs for a process by name

killall: Kill by Name

Send signals to all processes matching an exact name.

Command Description
killall process_name Send SIGTERM to all matching processes
killall -9 process_name Force kill all matching processes
killall -HUP nginx Reload all nginx processes
killall -u username process_name Kill matching processes owned by a user
killall -v process_name Kill and report which processes were signaled
killall -r "pattern" Match process names with a regex pattern

Background Jobs

Kill jobs running in the current shell session.

Command Description
jobs List background jobs and their job numbers
kill %1 Send SIGTERM to background job number 1
kill -9 %1 Force kill background job number 1
kill %+ Kill the most recently started background job
kill %% Kill the current (most recent) background job

Troubleshooting

Quick fixes for common kill issues.

Issue Check
Process does not stop after SIGTERM Wait a moment, then escalate to kill -9 PID
No such process error PID has already exited; verify with ps -p PID
Operation not permitted Process belongs to another user — use sudo kill PID
SIGKILL has no effect Process is in uninterruptible sleep (D state in ps); only a reboot can free it
Not sure which PID to kill Find it first with pidof name, pgrep name, or ps aux | grep name

Related Guides

Guide Description
kill Command in Linux Full guide to kill options, signals, and examples
How to Kill a Process in Linux Practical walkthrough for finding and stopping processes
pkill Command in Linux Kill processes by name and pattern
pgrep Command in Linux Find process PIDs before signaling
ps Command in Linux Inspect the running process list
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