After looking into this for a while, there doesn't seem to be any clean way to kill a task in VS Code that was kicked off as part of preBuildTask
. It's a build task, and the debug task itself appears to be separate from that. Since the debug PID itself is targeted at Chrome, there's a weird separation between the two.
So, let's brute force it.
First, we need to get our initial ng serve
running as a child process so another task won't complain about the first task hogging the terminal. This task worked for me:
{
"version": "2.0.0",
"tasks": [
{
"label": "serve",
"command": "ng serve",
"isBackground": true,
"type": "shell",
"presentation": {
"reveal": "always"
},
"problemMatcher": {
"fileLocation": "relative",
"background": {
}
}
}
]
}
Note the isBackground
property. This will spawn any future tasks in their own shell. presentation
is reveal: always
so we can see the CLI output. We can get fancy and capture CLI problems with the debug process in problemMatcher
, but let's forget it for now.
Now, let's make a kill
task. Instead of working through VS Code to find the initial spawned task, let's do it through our OS. Now this is highly dependent on which OS and which shell you use (shells can be configured per task via the shell
property).
We need to find the PID of the ng serve
shell and send it off to the big computer in the sky. We can look for the PID hogging the localhost port being served against, which I'll assume is 4200 by default.
Example CMD command:
for /F "tokens=1,2,3,4,5" %A in ('"netstat -a -n -o | find 4200""') DO ('"Taskill /PID %E /F"')
Example bash/terminal command (simpler, as usual):
[sudo] lsof -ti:4200 | xargs kill
Then just make a kill
task with the command and add it to postDebugTask
:
{
"label": "kill",
"command": "lsof -ti:4200 | xargs kill",
"type": "shell",
}
If you run into access rights, you can probably fix it by running VS Code as admin or by providing a path to an .exe where you already have admin rights. Again, depends on your shell and OS.