135

In Windows what can look for port 8080 and try to kill the process it is using through a .BAT file?

3
  • I can get you part of the way there... from the command prompt use the command 'netstat -a -n -o' and you will see a list of processes and which ports they are listening on (as well as ip and whether they are connected to another IP or not..) Invaluable. There'll almost certainly be nicer switches to refine the results, but I can't remember them off hand... Hopefully someone can build on this?
    – Dave
    Jun 1, 2011 at 15:52
  • In linux you can. if you install cygwin you would be able to in bat aswell
    – Daniel
    Jun 1, 2011 at 15:53
  • @Dani, Mike: Cygwin is a huge dependency and not required to solve this problem. If you've already got it, though, use it - linux command line tools are much better. Jun 1, 2011 at 15:58

13 Answers 13

200

Open command prompt and run the following commands

 C:\Users\username>netstat -o -n -a | findstr 0.0:3000
   TCP    0.0.0.0:3000      0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING       3116

C:\Users\username>taskkill /F /PID 3116

, here 3116 is the process ID

4
  • yeah that will differ everywhere Nov 23, 2015 at 13:31
  • 3
    very useful ! Mind you I search for :3000 instead of 0.0:3000 because it could under 127.0.01 instead of 0.0.0.0
    – Leeeeeeelo
    Sep 7, 2016 at 14:41
  • 2
    Thank you, great job killing an out of control webpack dev task :)
    – danjah
    Nov 22, 2016 at 9:37
  • Or you may simply provide netstat -ano | findstr :9797 taskkill /PID typeyourPIDhere /F Here 9797 is the port number, iI frequently use this command to kill the misbehaving/hanged server. May 26, 2019 at 11:08
153

Here's a command to get you started:

FOR /F "tokens=4 delims= " %%P IN ('netstat -a -n -o ^| findstr :8080') DO @ECHO TaskKill.exe /PID %%P

When you're confident in your batch file, remove @ECHO.

FOR /F "tokens=4 delims= " %%P IN ('netstat -a -n -o ^| findstr :8080') DO TaskKill.exe /PID %%P

Note that you might need to change this slightly for different OS's. For example, on Windows 7 you might need tokens=5 instead of tokens=4.

How this works

FOR /F ... %variable IN ('command') DO otherCommand %variable...

This lets you execute command, and loop over its output. Each line will be stuffed into %variable, and can be expanded out in otherCommand as many times as you like, wherever you like. %variable in actual use can only have a single-letter name, e.g. %V.

"tokens=4 delims= "

This lets you split up each line by whitespace, and take the 4th chunk in that line, and stuffs it into %variable (in our case, %%P). delims looks empty, but that extra space is actually significant.

netstat -a -n -o

Just run it and find out. According to the command line help, it "Displays all connections and listening ports.", "Displays addresses and port numbers in numerical form.", and "Displays the owning process ID associated with each connection.". I just used these options since someone else suggested it, and it happened to work :)

^|

This takes the output of the first command or program (netstat) and passes it onto a second command program (findstr). If you were using this directly on the command line, instead of inside a command string, you would use | instead of ^|.

findstr :8080

This filters any output that is passed into it, returning only lines that contain :8080.

TaskKill.exe /PID <value>

This kills a running task, using the process ID.

%%P instead of %P

This is required in batch files. If you did this on the command prompt, you would use %P instead.

17
  • You may need to play with tokens, delims, etc. Check HELP FOR on the command line to see a lot of other options that FOR will give you, and check netstat -?, findstr /?, and TaskKill /? for even more help. Jun 1, 2011 at 16:15
  • I will try it out and get back to you.
    – Mike Flynn
    Jun 1, 2011 at 16:28
  • 6
    FOR /F "tokens=5 delims= " %%P IN ('netstat -a -n -o ^| findstr :8080') DO TaskKill.exe /F /PID %%P
    – Mike Flynn
    Jun 1, 2011 at 16:45
  • 11
    This is great. tokens=4 is Windows XP I think and tokens=5 Windows 7. Also a good idea to /F force the kill.
    – Strelok
    Dec 1, 2011 at 1:13
  • 1
    @MerlynMorgan-Graham as this is an accepted answer, please consider adding points from stackoverflow.com/a/20637662/5243762 this answer as well Oct 10, 2019 at 6:58
58

To find specific process on command line use below command here 8080 is port used by process

netstat -ano | findstr 8080

to kill process use below command here 21424 is process id

taskkill /pid 21424 /F 
1
23

Using Merlyn's solution caused other applications to be killed like firefox. These processes were using the same port, but not as a listener:

eg:

netstat -a -n -o | findstr :8085
  TCP    0.0.0.0:8085           0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING       6568
  TCP    127.0.0.1:49616        127.0.0.1:8085         TIME_WAIT       0
  TCP    127.0.0.1:49618        127.0.0.1:8085         TIME_WAIT       0

Therefore, can excluded these by adding "LISTENING" to the findstr as follows:

FOR /F "tokens=5 delims= " %%P IN ('netstat -a -n -o ^| findstr :8085.*LISTENING') DO TaskKill.exe /PID %%P
1
  • 1
    I got %%P was unexpected at this time. Any suggestion ? May 19, 2021 at 11:16
19

To list all the process running on port 8080 do the following.

netstat -ano | find "8080"

TCP    0.0.0.0:8080           0.0.0.0:0              LISTENING       10612

TCP    [::]:8080              [::]:0                 LISTENING       10612

Then to kill the process run the following command

taskkill /F /PID 10612

16

Thank you all, just to add that some process wont close unless the /F force switch is also send with TaskKill. Also with /T switch, all secondary threads of the process will be closed.

C:\>FOR /F "tokens=5 delims= " %P IN ('netstat -a -n -o ^|
 findstr :2002') DO TaskKill.exe /PID %P /T /F

For services it will be necessary to get the name of the service and execute:

sc stop ServiceName

1
  • 1
    Works fine on windows 10 ! May 19, 2021 at 11:17
7

Created a bat file with the below contents, it accepts the input for port number

@ECHO ON
set /p portid=Enter the Port to be killed: 
echo %portid%                                                                              
FOR /F "tokens=5" %%T IN ('netstat -a -n -o ^| findstr %portid% ') DO (
SET /A ProcessId=%%T) &GOTO SkipLine                                                   
:SkipLine                                                                              
echo ProcessId to kill = %ProcessId%
taskkill /f /pid %ProcessId%
PAUSE

Finally click "Enter" to exit.

1
  • @TusharPandey This is windows tagged question , so it is a windows script, not shell script Aug 5, 2019 at 15:36
2

Just for completion:

I wanted to kill all processes connected to a specific port but not the process listening

the command (in cmd shell) for the port 9001 is:

FOR /F "tokens=5 delims= " %P IN ('netstat -ano ^| findstr -rc:":9001[ ]*ESTA"') DO TaskKill /F /PID %P

findstr:

  • r is for expressions and c for exact chain to match.
  • [ ]* is for matching spaces

netstat:

  • a -> all
  • n -> don't resolve (faster)
  • o -> pid

It works because netstat prints out the source port then destination port and then ESTABLISHED

1

Similar to Merlyn's response, but this one handles these cases as well:

  • The port number is actually a left substring of another longer port number that you're not looking for. You want to search for an exact port number so that you do not kill a random, innocent process!
  • The script code needs to be able to run more than once and be correct each time, not showing older, incorrect answers.

Here it is:

set serverPid=
for /F "tokens=5 delims= " %%P in ('netstat -a -n -o ^| findstr /E :8080 ') do set serverPid=%%P
if not "%serverPid%" == "" (
  taskkill /PID %serverPid%
) else (
  rem echo Server is not running.
)
1

If you want to kill the process that's listening on port 8080, you could use PowerShell. Just combine Get-NetTCPConnection cmdlet with Stop-Process.

Tested and should work with PowerShell 5 on Windows 10 or Windows Server 2016. However, I guess that it should also work on older Windows versions that have PowerShell 5 installed.

Here is an example:

PS C:\> Stop-Process -Id (Get-NetTCPConnection -LocalPort 8080).OwningProcess

Confirm
Are you sure you want to perform the Stop-Process operation on the following item: MyTestServer(9408)?
[Y] Yes  [A] Yes to All  [N] No  [L] No to All  [S] Suspend  [?] Help (default is "Y"):
0

Steps:

  1. Go to conf folder of your apache tomcat server. In my case,its apache-tomcat-7.0.61\conf as I am using apache-tomcat-7.0.61

  2. Open server.xml and change the port number from 8080 to any other port as your wish. For example:8081,8082,8087 etc

  3. Now go to bin folder and run shutdown.bat

  4. Now restart the server through eclipse.

Now your project will work without any interruption.

0

If anyone is looking for a Powershell Script:

function Search-And-Destroy
{
    param ( [Parameter(Mandatory=$true)][string]$port )
    $lines = netstat -a -o -n | findstr $port
    $ports = @()

    ForEach($line In $lines)
    {
        $res = $($lines -split '\s+')
        $ports += $res[5]
    }

    $ports = $ports | select -uniq

    ForEach($port In $ports)
    {
        echo $(taskkill /F /PID $port)
    }
}

This function basically does what the above functions do, but it is in the Powershell scripting format so you can add it to your Powershell profile. To find your profile's location go to powershell and type echo $profile

1
  • 1
    This is not really a PowerShell script, but a PowerShell-based wrapper around netstat tool.
    – bahrep
    Nov 2, 2016 at 19:27
0

Paste this into command line

FOR /F "tokens=5 delims= " %P IN ('netstat -ano ^| find "LISTENING" ^| find ":8080 "') DO (TASKKILL /PID %P)

If you want to use it in a batch pu %%P instead of %P

4
  • This is dependent on the language of the OS, any way to make it work for all languages?
    – Jakob
    Jan 20, 2020 at 15:54
  • @Jakob This can only be run in cmd terminal in Windows, also only in .cmd or .bat files Jan 21, 2020 at 8:04
  • Yes, but only in english language, since otherwise "LISTENING" will be translated to the language of the OS.
    – Jakob
    Jan 21, 2020 at 8:51
  • @Jakob I am not aware that netstat tool is translated to other languages Jan 21, 2020 at 10:08

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