Basically, what signal does '0' represent, because here I see SIGNAL numbers starting from 1.
6 Answers
sending the signal 0
to a given PID
just checks if any process with the given PID
is running and you have the permission to send a signal to it.
For more information see the following manpages:
kill(1)$ man 1 kill
...
If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed.
...
kill(2)
$ man 2 kill
...
If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed; this
can be used to check for the existence of a process ID or process group ID.
...
-
7The location of this information (if it exists at all) is highly system-dependent. On recent Debian-based systems, use
man 2 kill
instead. Jan 12, 2013 at 18:15 -
2Both
man 1 kill
andman 2 kill
had it on my Fedora 20 system. It's hard to spot though, buried in both those man pages.– slmNov 21, 2014 at 22:15 -
Or rely on the posix manual instead:
If sig is 0 (the null signal), error checking is performed but no signal is actually sent. The null signal can be used to check the validity of pid.
pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/kill.html May 9, 2017 at 4:53 -
2
This is a Good Question Because...
...it can be hard to find documentation on this special signal. Despite what others have said, the only mention of this signal in man 1 kill
in Debian-based systems is:
Particularly useful signals include HUP, INT, KILL, STOP, CONT, and 0.
Not especially helpful, especially if you don't already know what the signal does. It is also not listed by the output of kill -l
, so you won't know about it unless you already know about it.
Where to Find It Documented
On Debian and Ubuntu systems, the output of man 2 kill
says, in part:
If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed; this can be used to check for the existence of a process ID or process group ID.
What It's Good For
You can use kill -0
to check whether a process is running. Consider these examples.
# Kill the process if it exists and accepts signals from
# the current user.
sleep 60 &
pid=$!
kill -0 $pid && kill $pid
# Check if a PID exists. When missing, this should result
# in output similar to:
# bash: kill: (6228) - No such process
# Exit status: 1
kill -0 $pid; echo "Exit status: $?"
You can also use kill -0
to determine if the current user has permissions to signal a given process. For example:
# See if you have permission to signal the process. If not,
# this should result in output similar to:
# bash: kill: (15764) - Operation not permitted
# Exit status: 1
sudo sleep 60 &
kill -0 $!; echo "Exit status: $?"
-
On mac and BSD it's also documented in
kill(2)
Here's the snippet:The kill() function sends the signal specified by sig to pid, a process or a group of processes. Typically, Sig will be one of the signals specified in sigaction(2). A value of 0, however, will cause error checking to be performed (with no signal being sent). This can be used to check the validity of pid.
May 5, 2014 at 14:44 -
8This should be the accepted answer. Much better than the other one. the documentation on signal 0 is tough to locate. It's buried in the
kill
man page: "If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed."– slmNov 21, 2014 at 22:10
kill -0 $pid
is to check whether the process with process id (pid) exists or not.
Be careful while using kill -0 $pid
to check the process existence because
Once the intended process exit then its pid can be allot to other newly created process. ( So one can not be so sure that particular process is alive or not )
In case of zombie process, for which child is waiting for parent to call wait. Here it hold the $pid and give the positive result while that process is not running.
This command checks wether the process with PID in $pid is alive.
-
1The man page says: "If sig is 0, then no signal is sent, but error checking is still performed." What error checking are we referring to here?– gjainJun 13, 2012 at 10:14
-
2-1, since a process with PID
$pid
may be running but you don't have the permission to send a signal to it.– dwalterJun 13, 2012 at 10:16 -
3@dwalter: If you do not have permission you will get an EPERM. If it does not exist, you will get an ESRCH. The
kill(1)
will print a different error for each. So, you can tell if the pid is alive regardless of whether you have permissions to send signals or not. Furthermore, the typical usage ofkill -0
is to see if the pid is alive, even if it is not always used correctly. I'd say this answer is correct (apart from the spelling).– camhJun 13, 2012 at 10:43 -
3@camh: no the return value of
kill -0 $pid
will be the same in both cases. It will return1
so you cannot say without parsing the ouput ofkill
if the process is running or not, if you don't have the permission to send a signal to it. EDIT: yes I know it is used most of the time for checking if a process is alive, but this is wrong unless you can guarantee that you have the permission to send the signal (eg: being root)– dwalterJun 13, 2012 at 10:45 -
2@dwalter: My point was that the answer is correct. You tried to be pedantic and point out that there was another error case, but I am telling you that technically the answer covers that case too since the
kill
bash built-in (the question is taggedbash
) outputs the type of error on stderr, and indication of an error in its return code. That is, "This command checks [whether] the process with PID in $pid is alive" is completely correct if you interpret the output correctly. [I would not have commented if you did not say you gave -1 to the answer. Your comment is otherwise valid].– camhJun 13, 2012 at 11:00
Sending the EXIT
signal, or 0
to a process will:
- Check for the existence of a process.
- Do various error checking on the process (PID, PGID, etc ...).
- It will not send any output to
stdout
upon success. - Send an error message to
stderr
if something is not right. - Give you a false positive if the process is defunct (i.e. Zombie).
More explicitly, a useful function for your shell scripts would be:
function isProcess ()
{
kill -s EXIT $1 2> /dev/null
}
This returns no text to stdout
upon success, but an error message to stderr
upon failure (but I have redirected that error message to /dev/null
).
If you are concerned about defunct / zombie process status, then you need to use ps
, preferably with the --no-headers
switch.
#!/bin/ksh
function trim ()
{
echo -n "$1" | tr -d [:space:]
}
function getProcessStatus ()
{
trim $(ps -p $1 -o stat --no-headers)
}
function isZombie ()
{
typeset processStatus=$(getProcessStatus $1)
[[ "$processStatus" == "Z" ]]
return $?
}
kill -0 $pid
is used to check if a process running with $pid
is alive or not. But this can be tricky, as process ID can be reassigned, once a process exit and new process runs.
One can use killall -0 <process name>
to get about a particular process is running or not.
kill 0
(no dash), explained here and here.