19

How would I go about killing a process on Windows?

I am starting the process with

    self.p = Process(target=self.GameInitialize, args=(testProcess,))
    self.p.start()

I have tried

self.p.kill()
self.p.terminate()
os.kill(self.p.pid, -1)
os.killpg(self.p.pid, signal.SIGTERM)  # Send the signal to all the process groups

Errors

Process Object has no Attribute kill
Process Object has no Attribute terminate
Access Denied

I cannot use .join.

11

4 Answers 4

25
+100

On windows, os.killpg will not work because it sends a signal to the process ID to terminate. This is now how you kill a process on Windows, instead you have to use the win32 API's TerminateProcess to kill a process.

So, you can kill a process by the following on windows:

import signal
os.kill(self.p.pid, signal.CTRL_C_EVENT)

If the above does not work, then try signal.CTRL_BREAK_EVENT instead.

4
  • There is no os.killpg in Windows, and the os.kill implementation is deeply conflated and confused. It tries GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent if the 'signal' is either CTRL_C_EVENT (0) or CTRL_BREAK_EVENT (1). Otherwise it opens handle to the process and calls TerminateProcess(handle, signal).
    – Eryk Sun
    Jan 22, 2020 at 18:43
  • The confused part is that GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent targets a console process group. For a group target, POSIX kill requires a negative ID value, so this is wrong from the outset. Also, Windows provides no way to query a console process group ID, so the only way this makes sense (and everything else is extremely buggy) is to use group 0 (all console client processes) or to create the process as a new group with the flag CREATE_NEW_PROCESS_GROUP, for which the PGID is the PID. With this flag, Ctrl+C is initially disabled in the process, so only CTRL_BREAK_EVENT is reliable.
    – Eryk Sun
    Jan 22, 2020 at 18:44
  • If the process either has no console or isn't attached to the same console as the calling process, then GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent fails. In this case, os.kill continues on to try TerminateProcess, but in CPython this is buggy (inexcusably, but no one has patched it) because the previous exception hasn't been cleared, which leads to a RuntimeError. If you know a process doesn't share the same console as your process, do not even try sending CTRL_BREAK_EVENT. It's not worth the headache. Just use os.kill(pid, status), where status > 1.
    – Eryk Sun
    Jan 22, 2020 at 18:51
  • I'm using multithreading and a queue in my calling program and it sometimes receives the KeyboardInterrupt instead of the child process -- what the hell??
    – xjcl
    Dec 7, 2020 at 14:01
14

I had to do it using this method from this link:

subprocess.call(['taskkill', '/F', '/T', '/PID',  str(self._active_process.pid)])

This is because self._active_process.kill() was not adequate

1
  • 1
    Fantastic, the subprocess does stop, my output on windows was: SUCCESS: The process with PID 9028 (child process of PID 25224) has been terminated. SUCCESS: The process with PID 25224 (child process of PID 10340) has been terminated. SUCCESS: The process with PID 10340 (child process of PID 18632) has been terminated. Thank you ! splendid work Jun 21, 2020 at 3:32
3

You should provide a minimal, working example of the problem you are having. As show below, this minimal, working example correctly terminates the process (Tested on Python 2.7.5 64-bit), so the error you are seeing lies in code you haven't shown.

import multiprocessing as mp
import time

def work():
    while True:
        print('work process')
        time.sleep(.5)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    p = mp.Process(target=work)
    p.start()
    for i in range(3):
        print('main process')
        time.sleep(1)
    p.terminate()
    for i in range(3):
        print('main process')
        time.sleep(.5)

Output:

main process
work process
work process
main process
work process
work process
main process
work process
work process
main process
main process
main process
3
  • This is good indeed, but it seems, Python's multiprocessing.Process isnt very class friendly! Did you try this in a class?
    – Hossein
    May 4, 2020 at 10:53
  • 1
    @Rika Yes, converting work to a class derived from Process and with the work in a def run(self): works the same way. p = Worker() then gives the same result. If you have a problem post a question with a minimal reproducible example. May 4, 2020 at 21:57
  • Thanks, the issue is not the worker itself, is the other class that will use worker to run the subprocess. at the very least, worker would accept an instance of the class in question, and simply execute the method which needs to be run as a seaprate thread. class Worker(multiprocessing.Process): def __init__(self, obj, *args, **kwargs): super.__init__(*args, **kwargs) self.obj = obj def run(self): self.obj.cpu_intensive_method() but using this inside the main class will produce pickle error. ami I missing sth here?
    – Hossein
    May 5, 2020 at 4:13
0
os.kill(self.p.pid, -9)

Works. I am unsure why -1 returns a access denied error but -9 does not.

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