864

I want to kill all processes that I get by:

ps aux | grep my_pattern

How to do it?

This does not work:

pkill my_pattern
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  • 13
    Is my_pattern simply a substring of the name, or does it contain any regex special characters? Commented Jan 24, 2012 at 12:48
  • I wasn't the one who closed it, but that is most likely the case. unix.stackexchange.com is the site for Unix and Linux related questions :) @ryanjdillon
    – Catlover
    Commented Jun 24, 2021 at 14:24

14 Answers 14

1793

Use pkill -f, which matches the pattern for any part of the command line

pkill -f my_pattern

Just in case it doesn't work, try to use this one as well:

pkill -9 -f my_pattern
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  • 10
    @Jayan: it's also quite indiscriminate in its killing. It's surprisingly easy to mishandle...
    – thkala
    Commented Jan 24, 2012 at 13:15
  • 27
    For any Mac users who find this answer, like I did, the Mac equivalent is killall -m my_pattern. Commented Aug 18, 2014 at 22:25
  • 4
    If you have a number of hanging processes which do not get killed use pkill -f -9 to mercilessly kill them
    – MacK
    Commented Mar 16, 2016 at 11:43
  • 47
    I recommend using pgrep first to verify what you are going to kill. You can use pgrep -l to see process names or pgrep -a to see full command lines. It uses the same flags as pkill. So in this case you could use pgrep -fa my_pattern.
    – studgeek
    Commented Aug 29, 2016 at 22:29
  • 9
    I'd recommend adding the -I flag (capital i) so that it asks for confirmation before killing each matched process. Harder to shoot yourself in the foot that way. Commented Jun 21, 2018 at 14:18
278

Kill all processes matching the string "myProcessName":

ps -ef | grep 'myProcessName' | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}' | xargs -r kill -9

Source: http://www.commandlinefu.com/commands/view/1138/ps-ef-grep-process-grep-v-grep-awk-print-2-xargs-kill-9

Why "ps pipe kill" from terminal is evil:

The Piping of integers you scraped from ps -ef to kill -9 is bad, and you should feel bad, doubly so if you're root or a user with elevated privileges, because it doesn't give your process a chance to cleanly shut down socket connections, clean up temp files, inform its children that it is going away or reset its terminal characteristics.

Instead send 15, and wait a second or two, and if that doesn't work, send 2, and if that doesn't work, send 1. If that doesn't, REMOVE THE BINARY because the program is badly behaved.

As a general principle we don't use Unix Railgun to trim the hedges. https://porkmail.org/era/unix/award.html#kill

Explanation of above command:

ps -ef produces a list of process id's on the computer visible to this user. The pipe grep filters that down for rows containing that string. The grep -v grep says don't match on the process itself doing the grepping. The pipe awk print says split the rows on default delimiter whitespace and filter to the second column which is our process id. The pipe xargs spins up a new process to send all those pid's to kill -9, ending them all.

Why ps pipe kill is bad, dangerous, ugly and hackish:

  1. There's a small possibility that you will accidentally end the operating system or cause undefined behavior in an unrelated process, leading to whole system instability because ps -ef lists thousands of processes, and you can't be sure some 3rd party process shares your process name, or that in the time between read and execute kill -9, the processid had changed to something else, and now you've ended some random necessary process unrelated to yours.

  2. If the code being force-ended is doing any database ops or secure transactions with low probability race conditions, some fraction of a percent of the time, atomicity of that transaction will be wrecked, producing undefined behavior. kill -9 takes no prisoners. If your code is sensitive to this, try replacing the xargs kill part with a transmitted flag that requests a graceful shutdown, and only if that request is denied, last-resort to kill -9

But, if you understand all the risks and control for them with unique names, and you're ok with a few dropped transactions or occasional corruption, then 99.9% of the time yer gonna be fine. If there's a problem, reboot the computer, make sure there aren't any process collisions. It's because of code like this that makes the tech support script: "Have you tried restarting your computer" a level 5 meme. "A Rogue Robot scraped ps to find integers and sent those to kill -9, so reboot the computer to clear the problem.

Why not just use pkill which is easier?

The above gives me manual control because ps, grep, awk, kill and xargs are multi-platform standard. It gives full control to which regex engine to use, which part of the process name to match, handling case sensitivity and exception management.

pkill -f -e -c myProcessName

Does the same thing for me, but see man pkill has different behaviors, flags and regex engines between variants of Linux, Mac, Zune-Bash and my opensource router. So yes, put your 35000 Watt Unix-Railgun into the capable hands of pkill to trim the hedges. See what happens.

Grepping once

You can substitute the grep -v grep | with square brackets around the first letter of the command to kill, which does the same thing and prevents grep from grepping itself, for example:

ps -ef | grep '[m]yProcessName' | awk '{print $2}' | xargs -r kill -9

Why that works: https://askubuntu.com/questions/153419/how-does-this-tricky-bracket-expression-in-grep-work

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  • 2
    Just a slight modification, perhaps it is better to quote the process name: ps -ef | grep 'myProcessName' | grep -v grep | awk '{print $2}' | xargs -r kill -9 Without quotes, only one of my background processes was killed on the first run. Running it again killed the rest.
    – Ali Haider
    Commented Feb 14, 2018 at 10:28
  • 1
    -r option doesn't exist on OS X, so it seems.
    – Danijel
    Commented Oct 10, 2019 at 9:41
  • @Eric-Leschinski pkill -e option is not available in CentOS7 that is to say with pkill (procps version 3.2.8)
    – SebMa
    Commented Jul 12, 2022 at 8:38
57

If you need more flexibility in selecting the processes use

for KILLPID in `ps ax | grep 'my_pattern' | awk ' { print $1;}'`; do 
  kill -9 $KILLPID;
done

You can use grep -e etc.

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  • 4
    -1 You don't need a loop, you can just kill -9 `ps ax | awk '[m]y_pattern { print $1 }'` (note also the refactoring; see also my comment on @synthesizerpatel's answer).
    – tripleee
    Commented Jul 9, 2012 at 7:05
  • 11
    @tripleee No problem with your downvote, but you do realize, that the OQ was "I want to kill all processes that I get by: ps aux | grep my_pattern", which I dutyfully accepted. Commented Jul 9, 2012 at 7:26
  • Kill will kill all the processes in one go, you don't need a loop for that. If the ps returns three processes 123, 234, and 345, you can kill 123 234 345 just like you can rm or cat multiple file arguments.
    – tripleee
    Commented Jul 9, 2012 at 7:49
  • @tripleee I ment removing the grep Commented Jul 9, 2012 at 8:18
  • for KILLPID in ps ax | grep 'puma' | grep -v 'grep' | awk ' { print $1;}'; do kill -9 $KILLPID; done will remove the grep
    – Justin E
    Commented Sep 14, 2014 at 1:49
21

you can use the following command to list the process

ps aux | grep -c myProcessName 

if you need to check the count of that process then run

ps aux | grep -c myProcessName |grep -v grep 

after which you can kill the process using

kill -9 $(ps aux | grep -e myProcessName | awk '{ print $2 }') 
1
  • you can use the following command to list the process ps aux | grep -c myProcessName if you need to check the count of that process then run ps aux | grep -c myProcessName |grep -v grep after which you can kill the process using kill -9 $(ps aux | grep -e myProcessName | awk '{ print $2 }') Commented Jun 21, 2016 at 7:15
19

Also you can use killall -r my_pattern. -r Interpret process name pattern as an extended regular expression.

killall -r my_pattern
9

If you judge pkill -f PATTERN a bit too dangerous, I wrote ezkill a bash script that prompt you to choose which processes amongst those that match the PATTERN you want to kill.

Warning: This project is no more maintained.

8

You can use the following command to

kill -9 $(ps aux | grep 'process' | grep -v 'grep' | awk '{print $2}')
7

If you do not want to take headache of finding process id, use regexp to kill process by name. For example, to kill chrome following code will do the trick.

killall --regexp chrome
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  • 1
    You only need either -r or --regexp, which are the short and the GNU long option, respectively.
    – BigSmoke
    Commented Jan 10, 2020 at 10:47
6

Found the best way to do it for a server which does not support pkill

kill -9 $(ps ax | grep My_pattern| fgrep -v grep | awk '{ print $1 }')

You do not have to loop.

5

This is the way:

kill -9 $(pgrep -d' ' -f chrome)

The pgrep searches for all processes related to chrome and returns them in a list separated by spaces.

This is passed to the kill application that can safely kill all the related chrome processes.

This is still dangerous, be careful.

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  • 3
    While this code may answer the question, providing additional context regarding how and/or why it solves the problem would improve the answer's long-term value.
    – Igor F.
    Commented Feb 19, 2020 at 13:40
  • first the pgrep search for all processes related to chrome and return them in a list separated by space. This is pass to the kill application that can safety kill all the related chrome processes.
    – efsandino
    Commented Feb 9, 2021 at 15:56
3

You can use the following command to:

ps -ef | grep -i myprocess | awk {'print $2'} | xargs kill -9

or

ps -aux | grep -i myprocess | awk {'print $2'} | xargs kill -9

It works for me.

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  • 1
    Welcome to StackOverflow. Please use 4-space or tab indentation for your code lines so that they are formatted as code blocks. Best regards
    – YakovL
    Commented Sep 8, 2017 at 16:56
2

Sounds bad?

 pkill `pidof myprocess`

example:

# kill all java processes
pkill `pidof java`
1

It's best and safest to use pgrep -f with kill, or just pkill -f, greping ps's output can go wrong.

Unlike using ps | grep with which you need to filter out the grep line by adding | grep -v or using pattern tricks, pgrep just won't pick itself by design.

Moreover, should your pattern appear in ps's UID/USER, SDATE/START or any other column, you'll get unwanted processes in the output and kill them, pgrep+pkill don't suffer from this flaw.

also I found that killall -r/ -regexp didn't work with my regular expression.

pkill -f "^python3 path/to/my_script$"

You can read the pkill manual by man pkill or from this link.

0

I took Eugen Rieck's answer and worked with it. My code adds the following:

  1. ps ax includes grep, so I excluded it with grep -Eiv 'grep'
  2. Added a few ifs and echoes to make it human-readable.

I've created a file, named it killserver, here it goes:

#!/bin/bash
PROCESS_TO_KILL=bin/node
PROCESS_LIST=`ps ax | grep -Ei ${PROCESS_TO_KILL} | grep -Eiv 'grep' | awk ' { print $1;}'`
KILLED=
for KILLPID in $PROCESS_LIST; do
  if [ ! -z $KILLPID ];then
    kill -9 $KILLPID
    echo "Killed PID ${KILLPID}"
    KILLED=yes
  fi
done

if [ -z $KILLED ];then
    echo "Didn't kill anything"
fi

Results

➜  myapp git:(master) bash killserver
Killed PID 3358
Killed PID 3382
Killed
➜  myapp git:(master) bash killserver
Didn't kill anything

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