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PKILL(1)		FreeBSD	General	Commands Manual		      PKILL(1)

NAME
     pgrep, pkill -- find or signal processes by name

SYNOPSIS
     pgrep [-LSafilnoqvx] [-F pidfile] [-G gid]	[-M core] [-N system]
	   [-P ppid] [-U uid] [-c class] [-d delim] [-g	pgrp] [-j jail]
	   [-s sid] [-t	tty] [-u euid] pattern ...
     pkill [-signal] [-ILafilnovx] [-F pidfile]	[-G gid] [-M core] [-N system]
	   [-P ppid] [-U uid] [-c class] [-g pgrp] [-j jail] [-s sid] [-t tty]
	   [-u euid] pattern ...

DESCRIPTION
     The pgrep command searches	the process table on the running system	and
     prints the	process	IDs of all processes that match	the criteria given on
     the command line.

     The pkill command searches	the process table on the running system	and
     signals all processes that	match the criteria given on the	command	line.

     The following options are available:

     -F	pidfile	 Restrict matches to a process whose PID is stored in the
		 pidfile file.

     -G	gid	 Restrict matches to processes with a real group ID in the
		 comma-separated list gid.

     -I		 Request confirmation before attempting	to signal each
		 process.

     -L		 The pidfile file given	for the	-F option must be locked with
		 the flock(2) syscall or created with pidfile(3).

     -M	core	 Extract values	associated with	the name list from the speci-
		 fied core instead of the currently running system.

     -N	system	 Extract the name list from the	specified system instead of
		 the default, which is the kernel image	the system has booted
		 from.

     -P	ppid	 Restrict matches to processes with a parent process ID	in the
		 comma-separated list ppid.

     -S		 Search	also in	system processes (kernel threads).

     -U	uid	 Restrict matches to processes with a real user	ID in the
		 comma-separated list uid.

     -d	delim	 Specify a delimiter to	be printed between each	process	ID.
		 The default is	a newline.  This option	can only be used with
		 the pgrep command.

     -a		 Include process ancestors in the match	list.  By default, the
		 current pgrep or pkill	process	and all	of its ancestors are
		 excluded (unless -v is	used).

     -c	class	 Restrict matches to processes running with specified login
		 class class.

     -f		 Match against full argument lists.  The default is to match
		 against process names.

     -g	pgrp	 Restrict matches to processes with a process group ID in the
		 comma-separated list pgrp.  The value zero is taken to	mean
		 the process group ID of the running pgrep or pkill command.

     -i		 Ignore	case distinctions in both the process table and	the
		 supplied pattern.

     -j	jail	 Restrict matches to processes inside the specified jails.
		 The argument jail may be "any"	to match processes in any
		 jail, "none" to match processes not in	jail, or a comma-sepa-
		 rated list of jail IDs	or names.

     -l		 Long output.  For pgrep, print	the process name in addition
		 to the	process	ID for each matching process.  If used in con-
		 junction with -f, print the process ID	and the	full argument
		 list for each matching	process.  For pkill, display the kill
		 command used for each process killed.

     -n		 Select	only the newest	(most recently started)	of the match-
		 ing processes.

     -o		 Select	only the oldest	(least recently	started) of the	match-
		 ing processes.

     -q		 For pgrep, Do not write anything to standard output.

     -s	sid	 Restrict matches to processes with a session ID in the	comma-
		 separated list	sid.  The value	zero is	taken to mean the ses-
		 sion ID of the	running	pgrep or pkill command.

     -t	tty	 Restrict matches to processes associated with a terminal in
		 the comma-separated list tty.	Terminal names may be of the
		 form ttyxx or the shortened form xx.  A single	dash (`-')
		 matches processes not associated with a terminal.

     -u	euid	 Restrict matches to processes with an effective user ID in
		 the comma-separated list euid.

     -v		 Reverse the sense of the matching; display processes that do
		 not match the given criteria.

     -x		 Require an exact match	of the process name, or	argument list
		 if -f is given.  The default is to match any substring.

     -signal	 A non-negative	decimal	number or symbolic signal name speci-
		 fying the signal to be	sent instead of	the default TERM.
		 This option is	valid only when	given as the first argument to
		 pkill.

     If	any pattern operands are specified, they are used as extended regular
     expressions to match the command name or full argument list of each
     process.  If the -f option	is not specified, then the pattern will	at-
     tempt to match the	command	name.  However,	presently FreeBSD will only
     keep track	of the first 19	characters of the command name for each
     process.  Attempts	to match any characters	after the first	19 of a	com-
     mand name will quietly fail.

     Note that a running pgrep or pkill	process	will never consider itself nor
     system processes (kernel threads) as a potential match.

IMPLEMENTATION NOTES
     The Sun Solaris implementation utilised procfs to obtain process informa-
     tion.  This implementation	utilises kvm(3)	instead.  On a live system,
     kvm(3) uses kern.proc MIB to obtain the list of processes,	kernel memory
     through /dev/kmem is not accessed.

EXIT STATUS
     The pgrep and pkill utilities return one of the following values upon
     exit:

     0	     One or more processes were	matched.

     1	     No	processes were matched.

     2	     Invalid options were specified on the command line.

     3	     An	internal error occurred.

EXAMPLES
     Show the pid of the process holding the /tmp/.X0-lock pid file:

	   $ pgrep -F /tmp/.X0-lock
	   1211

     Show the pid and the name of the process including	kernel threads in the
     search:

	   $ pgrep -lS vnlru
	   37 vnlru

     Search for	processes including kernel threads that	match the extended
     regular expression	pattern:

	   $ pgrep -S 'crypto.*[2-3]'
	   20
	   19
	   6
	   5

     Show long output for firefox processes:

	   $ pgrep -l firefox
	   1312	firefox
	   1309	firefox
	   1288	firefox
	   1280	firefox
	   1279	firefox
	   1278	firefox
	   1277	firefox
	   1264	firefox

     Same as above but just showing the	pid of the most	recent process:

	   $ pgrep -n firefox
	   1312

     Look for vim processes.  Match against the	full argument list:

	   $ pgrep -f vim
	   44968
	   30790

     Same as above but matching	against	the `list' word	and showing the	full
     argument list:

	   $ pgrep -f -l list
	   30790 vim list.txt

     Send SIGSTOP signal to processes that are an exact	match:

	   $ pkill -SIGSTOP -f -x "vim list.txt"

     Without -f	names over 19 characters will silently fail:

	   $ vim this_is_a_very_long_file_name &
	   [1] 36689
	   $

	   [1]+	 Stopped		 vim this_is_a_very_long_file_name
	   $ pgrep "vim	this"
	   $

     Same as above using the -f	flag:

	   $ pgrep -f "vim this"
	   36689

     Find the top(1) command running in	any jail:

	   $ pgrep -j any top
	   34498

     Show all processes	running	in jail	ID 58:

	   $ pgrep -l -j58 '.*'
	   28397 pkg-static
	   28396 pkg-static
	   28255 sh
	   28254 make

COMPATIBILITY
     Historically the option "-j 0" means any jail, although in	other utili-
     ties such as ps(1)	jail ID	0 has the opposite meaning, not	in jail.
     Therefore "-j 0" is deprecated, and its use is discouraged	in favor of
     "-j any".

SEE ALSO
     kill(1), killall(1), ps(1), flock(2), kill(2), sigaction(2), kvm(3),
     pidfile(3), re_format(7)

HISTORY
     The pkill and pgrep utilities first appeared in NetBSD 1.6.  They are
     modelled after utilities of the same name that appeared in	Sun Solaris 7.
     They made their first appearance in FreeBSD 5.3.

AUTHORS
     Andrew Doran <ad@NetBSD.org>

FreeBSD	13.0			October	5, 2020			  FreeBSD 13.0

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | IMPLEMENTATION NOTES | EXIT STATUS | EXAMPLES | COMPATIBILITY | SEE ALSO | HISTORY | AUTHORS

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