86

Here is my thought:

First of all, I created a process by using subprocess.Popen

Second, after certain amount of time, I tried to kill it by Popen.kill()

import subprocess
import os, signal
import time

proc1 = subprocess.Popen("kvm -hda /path/xp.img", shell = True)
time.sleep(2.0)
print 'proc1 = ', proc1.pid
subprocess.Popen.kill(proc1)

However, "proc1" still exists after Popen.kill(). Could any experts tell me how to solve this issue? I appreciate your considerations.

Thanks to the comments from all experts, I did all you recommended, but result still remains the same.

proc1.kill() #it sill cannot kill the proc1

os.kill(proc1.pid, signal.SIGKILL) # either cannot kill the proc1

Thank you all the same.

And I am still waiting for your precious experience on solving this delicate issue.

5

4 Answers 4

55

In your code it should be

proc1.kill()

Both kill or terminate are methods of the Popen object. On macOS and Linux, kill sends the signal signal.SIGKILL to the process and terminate sends signal.SIGTERM. On Windows they both call Windows' TerminateProcess() function.

2
  • 26
    Thanks first. However, I tried this one, it still does not work...
    – user495511
    Nov 3, 2010 at 13:07
  • 5
    kill() and terminate() are different The kill method sends a SIGKILL signal, where the terminate method sends a SEGTERM signal. The difference is that the former it literally terminate the process where the latter it only stops the process. Apr 14, 2018 at 2:20
44

process.terminate() doesn't work when using shell=True. This answer will help you.

2
  • 5
    thank you very much, your answer ended my 3 hours debugging
    – tahayk
    Aug 30, 2017 at 11:05
  • 1
    works for Windows binaries....
    – 3kstc
    Mar 3, 2022 at 7:09
13

Only use Popen kill method

process = subprocess.Popen(
    task.getExecutable(), 
    stdout=subprocess.PIPE, 
    stderr=subprocess.PIPE, 
    shell=True
)
process.kill()
1
  • 5
    This does work until I add up "time.sleep(x)" in front of "process.kill()"..
    – user495511
    Nov 3, 2010 at 13:10
0

How about using os.kill? See the docs here: http://docs.python.org/library/os.html#os.kill

1
  • 6
    Thanks, but "os.kill(proc1.pid, signal.SIGTERM)" or "os.kill(proc1.pid, signal.SIGKILL)" are not working..
    – user495511
    Nov 3, 2010 at 13:11

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