360

I have a simple TCP server that listens on a port.

var net = require("net");

var server = net.createServer(function(socket) {
    socket.end("Hello!\n");
});

server.listen(7777);

I start it with node server.js and then close it with Ctrl + Z on Mac. When I try to run it again with node server.js I get this error message:

node.js:201
        throw e; // process.nextTick error, or 'error' event on first tick
          ^
Error: listen EADDRINUSE
at errnoException (net.js:670:11)
at Array.0 (net.js:771:26)
at EventEmitter._tickCallback (node.js:192:41)

Am I closing the program the wrong way? How can I prevent this from happening?

2
  • 5
    Probably worth adding that Ctrl-Z suspends a command on *NIX, and doesn't close it. If you type fg after Ctrl-Z, you'll be back where you left off. So your earlier node is still running. Watch out if you're doing this for other commands too!
    – ruffin
    Nov 11, 2016 at 16:37
  • 4
    @ruffin this should be an answer. If you've done the Ctrl+Z action, a proper methodology could be fg to revive the process, and then Ctrl+C to kill it proper. May 26, 2017 at 21:18

19 Answers 19

422

To end the program, you should be using Ctrl + C. If you do that, it sends SIGINT, which allows the program to end gracefully, unbinding from any ports it is listening on.

See also: https://superuser.com/a/262948/48624

16
  • 29
    Ctrl + C does not work for me. Only ^C gets typed into the console, and program does not exits.
    – Eleeist
    May 9, 2012 at 19:21
  • 2
    @Eleeist, What are you using as a terminal? It works great for me.
    – Brad
    May 9, 2012 at 19:22
  • 4
    @Eleeist, You've probably remapped your keys or something. Ctrl+C works fine. In any case, that's a separate issue from your real problem. You should post a "Ctrl+C doesn't work" question over at SuperUser.com.
    – Brad
    May 9, 2012 at 19:31
  • 1
    @jt0dd You could always kill -9, but I wouldn't. Are you actually sure your application is still the one keeping ports open? I've never had that problem. As soon as my application ends, the connections are always immediately terminated. I would use netstat to determine if your app or something else is lingering on that port.
    – Brad
    Jul 10, 2014 at 19:52
  • 1
    I faced to this problem when I was using keyboard type on other language. Be sure your mac input language is English Dec 28, 2016 at 17:07
403

Ctrl+Z suspends it, which means it can still be running.

Ctrl+C will actually kill it.

you can also kill it manually like this:

ps aux | grep node

Find the process ID (second from the left):

kill -9 PROCESS_ID

This may also work

killall node
8
  • ctrl+c will work but none of these command will work for me. I don't know why ? And I'm looking for command line solution
    – angry kiwi
    Aug 26, 2012 at 3:59
  • 11
    Be careful with killall node, you might kill process you wouldn't want to kill if they match "node" Jul 17, 2013 at 17:21
  • 5
    you may want to move up killall nodein your answer since that is really the easiest and most reliable option (as long as you're ok with killing all instances)
    – Boern
    Jan 24, 2016 at 14:42
  • 6
    'killall' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file. Am i missing something?
    – Ayyash
    Nov 8, 2016 at 8:42
  • Same here... No answer? It says 'killall' is not recognized. None of the other commands work either. Do I need to restart my computer or what? Feb 1, 2017 at 2:13
41

Or alternatively you can do all of these in one line:

kill -9 $(ps aux | grep '\snode\s' | awk '{print $2}')

You can replace node inside '\snode\s' with any other process name.

2
  • 3
    alternately, you can always try: ps -ef | grep "node" | awk '{print $2}' | xargs kill -9
    – frymaster
    Jul 16, 2015 at 22:20
  • Seems to work but does not properly return me to a prompt. Thoughts?
    – user736893
    Sep 5, 2019 at 17:49
35

Resume and kill the process:

Ctrl+Z suspends it, which means it is still running as a suspended background process.

You are likely now at a terminal prompt...

  1. Give the command fg to resume the process in the foreground.

  2. type Ctrl+C to properly kill it.


Alternatively, you can kill it manually like this:

(NOTE: the following commands may require root, so sudo ... is your friend)

pkill -9 node

or, if you don't have pkill, this may work:

killall node

or perhaps this:

kill $(ps -e | grep node | awk '{print $1}')

sometimes the process will list its own grep, in which case you'll need:

kill $(ps -e | grep dmn | awk '{print $2}')

.


h/t @ruffin from the comments on the question itself. I had the same issue and his comment helped me solve it myself.

23

If you are running Node.js interactively (the REPL):

Ctrl + C will take back you to > prompt then type:

process.exit()

or just use Ctrl + D.

0
22

you can type .exit to quit node js REPL

1
  • 3
    That assumes that you are in REPL to begin with. What if I have a Node script running? Mar 6, 2017 at 17:26
20

on linux try: pkill node

on windows:

Taskkill /IM node.exe /F

or

from subprocess import call

call(['taskkill', '/IM', 'node.exe', '/F'])
1
  • Taskkill /IM node.exe /F worked for me on windows10 with node.js running on a usb. I am using pm2 to start/stop but this doesn't stop node.js which means you can't safely eject the usb as node.js still runs after pm2 stop. Your solution is perfect! Jan 1, 2022 at 20:02
17

$ sudo killall node in another terminal works on mac, while killall node not working:

$ killall node
No matching processes belonging to you were found
13

you can work following command to be specific in localserver kill(here: 8000)

http://localhost:8000/ kill PID(processId):

$:lsof -i tcp:8000

It will give you following groups of TCPs:

COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME

node 21521 ubuntu 12u IPv6 345668 0t0 TCP *:8000 (LISTEN)

$:kill -9 21521

It will kill processId corresponding to TCP*:8000

1
  • Something to the point! Thank you.
    – Fawkes
    Dec 5, 2022 at 10:33
9

You can use fuser to get what you want to be done.

In order to obtain the process ids of the tasks running on a port you can do:

fuser <<target_port>>/tcp

Let's say the port is 8888, the command becomes:

fuser 8888/tcp

And to kill a process that is running on a port, simply add -k switch.

fuser <<target_port>>/tcp -k

Example (port is 8888):

fuser 8888/tcp -k

That's it! It will close the process listening on the port. I usually do this before running my server application.

8

For MacOS

  1. Open terminal
  2. Run the below code and hit enter

     sudo kill $(sudo lsof -t -i:4200)
    
0
6

Though this is a late answer, I found this from NodeJS docs:

The 'exit' event is emitted when the REPL is exited either by receiving the .exit command as input, the user pressing <ctrl>-C twice to signal SIGINT, or by pressing <ctrl>-D to signal 'end' on the input stream. The listener callback is invoked without any arguments.

So to summarize you can exit by:

  1. Typing .exit in nodejs REPL.
  2. Pressing <ctrl>-C twice.
  3. pressing <ctrl>-D.
  4. process.exit(0) meaning a natural exit from REPL. If you want to return any other status you can return a non zero number.
  5. process.kill(process.pid) is the way to kill using nodejs api from within your code or from REPL.
6

I'm adding this answer because for many projects with production deployments, we have scripts that stop these processes so we don't have to.

A clean way to manage your Node Server processes is using the forever package (from NPM).

Example:

Install Forever

npm install forever -g

Run Node Server

forever start -al ./logs/forever.log -ao ./logs/out.log -ae ./logs/err.log server.js

Result:

info: Forever processing file: server.js

Shutdown Node Server

forever stop server.js

Result

info: Forever stopped process: uid command script forever pid id logfile uptime [0] sBSj "/usr/bin/nodejs/node" ~/path/to/your/project/server.js 23084 13176 ~/.forever/forever.log 0:0:0:0.247

This will cleanly shutdown your Server application.

5

If you want to stop your server with npm stop or something like this. You can write the code that kill your server process as:

require('child_process').exec(`kill -9 ${pid}`)

Check this link for the detail: https://gist.github.com/dominhhai/aa7f3314ad27e2c50fd5

3

I ran into an issue where I have multiple node servers running, and I want to just kill one of them and redeploy it from a script.

Note: This example is in a bash shell on Mac.

To do so I make sure to make my node call as specific as possible. For example rather than calling node server.js from the apps directory, I call node app_name_1/app/server.js

Then I can kill it using:

kill -9 $(ps aux | grep 'node\ app_name_1/app/server.js' | awk '{print $2}')

This will only kill the node process running app_name_1/app/server.js.

If you ran node app_name_2/app/server.js this node process will continue to run.

If you decide you want to kill them all you can use killall node as others have mentioned.

2

Late answer but on windows, opening up the task manager with CTRL+ALT+DEL then killing Node.js processes will solve this error.

1

My use case: on MacOS, run/rerun multiple node servers on different ports from a script

run: "cd $PATH1 && node server1.js & cd $PATH2 && node server2.js & ..."

stop1: "kill -9 $(lsof -nP -i4TCP:$PORT1 | grep LISTEN | awk '{print $2}')"

stop2, stop3...

rerun: "stop1 & stop2 & ... & stopN ; run

for more info about finding a process by a port: Who is listening on a given TCP port on Mac OS X?

1

For windows first search the PID with your port number

netstat -ano | findStr "portNumber"

After that, kill the task, make sure you are in root of your "c" drive enter image description here And the command will be taskkill /F /PID your pid

1

if you are using VS Code and terminal select node from the right side dropdown first and then do Ctrl + C. Then It will work

enter image description here

Press y when you are prompted.

enter image description here

Thanks

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