77

I want to kill python interpeter - The intention is that all the python files that are running in this moment will stop (without any informantion about this files). obviously the processes should be closed.

Any idea as delete files in python or destroy the interpeter is ok :D (I am working with virtual machine). I need it from the terminal because i write c code and i use linux commands... Hope for help

9 Answers 9

140
pkill -9 python

should kill any running python process.

7
  • 1
    if the process name changed ?(from python to other name) Aug 25, 2013 at 13:22
  • 2
    You can also be more selective per Python script with: stackoverflow.com/a/34239260/895245 Jun 14, 2017 at 8:35
  • 2
    really handy when using multiprocessing
    – Jia Gao
    Feb 20, 2019 at 16:54
  • 1
    -9 sets the signal to SIGKILL Others include: SIGHUP -1 Hangup. SIGINT -2 Interrupt from keyboard. SIGKILL -9 Kill signal. SIGTERM-15 Termination signal. SIGSTOP -17, -19, -23 Stop the process.
    – MrBlenny
    May 6, 2021 at 3:51
  • 1
    @lorenzo-barrachi : this should be explained better, whether only current user processes are killed, or any one other than root user?
    – aspiring1
    Apr 30, 2022 at 0:13
43

There's a rather crude way of doing this, but be careful because first, this relies on python interpreter process identifying themselves as python, and second, it has the concomitant effect of also killing any other processes identified by that name.

In short, you can kill all python interpreters by typing this into your shell (make sure you read the caveats above!):

ps aux | grep python | grep -v "grep python" | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9

To break this down, this is how it works. The first bit, ps aux | grep python | grep -v "grep python", gets the list of all processes calling themselves python, with the grep -v making sure that the grep command you just ran isn't also included in the output. Next, we use awk to get the second column of the output, which has the process ID's. Finally, these processes are all (rather unceremoniously) killed by supplying each of them with kill -9.

1
  • 4
    You could change the third pipe section to grep -v "grep" to ignore any greps in the ps aux output. This makes the command more generic so one can change the second pipe section without worrying about changing the third. ps aux | grep "python -u" | grep -v "grep" | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9 Jul 6, 2015 at 13:07
25

pkill with script path

pkill -9 -f path/to/my_script.py

is a short and selective method that is more likely to only kill the interpreter running a given script.

See also: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/31107/linux-kill-process-based-on-arguments

20

You can try the killall command:

killall python

10

pgrep -f <your process name> | xargs kill -9

This will kill the your process service. In my case it is

pgrep -f python | xargs kill -9

7

pgrep -f youAppFile.py | xargs kill -9

pgrep returns the PID of the specific file will only kill the specific application.

1

If you want to show the name of processes and kill them by the command of the kill, I recommended using this script to kill all python3 running process and set your ram memory free :

ps auxww | grep 'python3' | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9
1

I have seen the pkill command as the top answer. While that is all great, I still try to tread carefully (since, I might be risking my machine whilst killing processes) and follow the below approach:

First list all the python processes using:

$ ps -ef | grep python

Just to have a look at what root user processes were running beforehand and to cross-check later, if they are still running (after I'm done! :D)

then using pgrep as :

$ pgrep -u <username> python -d ' ' #this gets me all the python processes running for user username

# eg output:
11265 11457 11722 11723 11724 11725

And finally, I kill these processes by using the kill command after cross-checking with the output of ps -ef| ...

kill -9 PID1 PID2 PID3 ... 

# example 
kill -9 11265 11457 11722 11723 11724 11725

Also, we can cross check the root PIDs by using :

pgrep -u root python -d ' '

and verifying with the output from ps -ef| ...

0

to kill python script while using ubuntu 20.04.2 intead of Ctrl + C just push together

Ctrl + D

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.