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kill (2)

KILL(2)                    Linux Programmer's Manual                   KILL(2)



NAME
       kill - send signal to a process

SYNOPSIS
       #include<sys/types.h>
       #include<signal.h>

       intkill(pid_t pid,int sig);

DESCRIPTION
       The  kill  system  call  can  be used to send any signal to any process
       group or process.

       If pid is positive, then signal sig is sent to pid.

       If pid equals 0, then sig is sent to every process in the process group
       of the current process.

       If  pid equals -1, then sig is sent to every process except for process
       1 (init), but see below.

       If pid is less than -1, then sig is sent to every process in  the  pro-
       cess group -pid.

       If  sig  is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still per-
       formed.

RETURNVALUE
       On success, zero is returned.  On error, -1 is returned, and  errno  is
       set appropriately.

ERRORS
       EINVAL An invalid signal was specified.

       ESRCH  The  pid or process group does not exist.  Note that an existing
              process might be a zombie, a  process  which  already  committed
              termination, but has not yet been wait()ed for.

       EPERM  The  process  does not have permission to send the signal to any
              of the receiving processes.  For a process to have permission to
              send  a  signal  to  process pid it must either have root privi-
              leges, or the real or effective user ID of the  sending  process
              must  equal  the real or saved set-user-ID of the receiving pro-
              cess.  In the case of SIGCONT it suffices when the  sending  and
              receiving processes belong to the same session.

NOTES
       It is impossible to send a signal to task number one, the init process,
       for which it has not installed a  signal  handler.   This  is  done  to
       assure the system is not brought down accidentally.

       POSIX  1003.1-2001 requires that kill(-1,sig) send sig to all processes
       that the current process may send signals to, except possibly for  some
       implementation-defined  system  processes.   Linux  allows a process to
       signal itself, but on Linux the call kill(-1,sig) does not  signal  the
       current process.

LINUXHISTORY
       Across  different  kernel  versions, Linux has enforced different rules
       for the permissions required for an unprivileged process to send a sig-
       nal  to  another  process.   In kernels 1.0 to 1.2.2, a signal could be
       sent if the effective user  ID  of  the  sender  matched  that  of  the
       receiver,  or  the  real  user  ID  of  the  sender matched that of the
       receiver.  From kernel 1.2.3 until 1.3.77, a signal could  be  sent  if
       the  effective  user ID of the sender matched either the real or effec-
       tive user ID of the receiver.  The  current  rules,  which  conform  to
       POSIX 1003.1-2001, were adopted in kernel 1.3.78.

CONFORMINGTO
       SVr4, SVID, POSIX.1, X/OPEN, BSD 4.3, POSIX 1003.1-2001

SEEALSO
       _exit(2), killpg(2), signal(2), tkill(2), exit(3), signal(7)



Linux 2.5.0                       2001-12-18                           KILL(2)

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accessinbpollsigaction
acctinb_pprctlsigaltstack
adjtimexinlpreadsigblock
afs_syscallinl_pprofsiggetmask
alarminsbpselectsigmask
alloc_hugepagesinslptracesignal
arch_prctlinswpwritesigpause
bdflushintroquotactlsigpending
bindinwreadsigprocmask
breakinw_preaddirsigqueue
brkioctlreadlinksigreturn
cacheflushioctl_listreadvsigsetmask
capgetiopermrebootsigsuspend
capsetioplrecvsigtimedwait
chdiripcrecvfromsigvec
chmodkillrecvmsgsigwaitinfo
chownkillpgrenamesocket
chrootlchownrmdirsocketcall
clonelinksbrksocketpair
closelistensched_get_priority_maxssetmask
connectllseeksched_get_priority_minstat
creatlocksched_getaffinitystatfs
duplseeksched_getparamstime
dup2lstatsched_getschedulerstty
execvemadvisesched_rr_get_intervalswapoff
exitmincoresched_setaffinityswapon
fchdirmkdirsched_setparamsymlink
fchmodmknodsched_setschedulersync
fchownmlocksched_yieldsyscall
fcntlmlockallselectsyscalls
fdatasyncmmapselect_tutsysctl
flockmmap2semctlsysfs
forkmodify_ldtsemgetsysinfo
free_hugepagesmountsemopsyslog
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fstatfsmpxsendfiletimes
fsyncmremapsendmsgtkill
ftruncatemsgctlsendtotruncate
futexmsggetsetcontextumask
getcontextmsgopsetdomainnameumount
getdentsmsgrcvsetegidumount2
getdomainnamemsgsndseteuiduname
getdtablesizemsyncsetfsgidundocumented
getegidmunlocksetfsuidunimplemented
geteuidmunlockallsetgidunlink
getgidmunmapsetgroupsuselib
getgroupsnanosleepsethostidustat
gethostidnfsservctlsethostnameutime
gethostnamenicesetitimerutimes
getitimerobsoletesetpgidvfork
getpagesizeoldfstatsetpgrpvhangup
getpeernameoldlstatsetpriorityvm86
getpgidoldoldunamesetregidwait
getpgrpoldstatsetresgidwait3
getpidoldunamesetresuidwait4
getppidopensetreuidwaitpid
getpriorityoutbsetrlimitwrite
getresgidoutb_psetsidwritev
getresuidoutlsetsockopt 
getrlimitoutl_psettimeofday 
getrusageoutsbsetuid 
getsidoutslsetup 


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