I researched the kill, pkill and killall commands, and I understood most of their differences. However, I am confused about their signals:
If I run kill -l, I see:
1) SIGHUP 2) SIGINT 3) SIGQUIT 4) SIGILL 5) SIGTRAP
6) SIGABRT 7) SIGBUS 8) SIGFPE 9) SIGKILL 10) SIGUSR1
11) SIGSEGV 12) SIGUSR2 13) SIGPIPE 14) SIGALRM 15) SIGTERM
16) SIGSTKFLT 17) SIGCHLD 18) SIGCONT 19) SIGSTOP 20) SIGTSTP
21) SIGTTIN 22) SIGTTOU 23) SIGURG 24) SIGXCPU 25) SIGXFSZ
26) SIGVTALRM 27) SIGPROF 28) SIGWINCH 29) SIGIO 30) SIGPWR
31) SIGSYS 34) SIGRTMIN 35) SIGRTMIN+1 36) SIGRTMIN+2 37) SIGRTMIN+3
38) SIGRTMIN+4 39) SIGRTMIN+5 40) SIGRTMIN+6 41) SIGRTMIN+7 42) SIGRTMIN+8
43) SIGRTMIN+9 44) SIGRTMIN+10 45) SIGRTMIN+11 46) SIGRTMIN+12 47) SIGRTMIN+13
48) SIGRTMIN+14 49) SIGRTMIN+15 50) SIGRTMAX-14 51) SIGRTMAX-13 52) SIGRTMAX-12
53) SIGRTMAX-11 54) SIGRTMAX-10 55) SIGRTMAX-9 56) SIGRTMAX-8 57) SIGRTMAX-7
58) SIGRTMAX-6 59) SIGRTMAX-5 60) SIGRTMAX-4 61) SIGRTMAX-3 62) SIGRTMAX-2
63) SIGRTMAX-1 64) SIGRTMAX
But pkill -l gives:
pkill: invalid option -- 'l'
Usage:
pkill [options] <pattern>
Options:
-<sig>, --signal <sig> signal to send (either number or name)
-e, --echo display what is killed
-c, --count count of matching processes
-f, --full use full process name to match
-g, --pgroup <PGID,...> match listed process group IDs
-G, --group <GID,...> match real group IDs
-i, --ignore-case match case insensitively
-n, --newest select most recently started
-o, --oldest select least recently started
-P, --parent <PPID,...> match only child processes of the given parent
-s, --session <SID,...> match session IDs
-t, --terminal <tty,...> match by controlling terminal
-u, --euid <ID,...> match by effective IDs
-U, --uid <ID,...> match by real IDs
-x, --exact match exactly with the command name
-F, --pidfile <file> read PIDs from file
-L, --logpidfile fail if PID file is not locked
--ns <PID> match the processes that belong to the same
namespace as <pid>
--nslist <ns,...> list which namespaces will be considered for
the --ns option.
Available namespaces: ipc, mnt, net, pid, user, uts
-h, --help display this help and exit
-V, --version output version information and exit
For more details see pgrep(1).
Even when there is no list of signals, this command supports/uses signals, just see in the previous output that appears
-<sig>, --signal <sig> signal to send (either number or name)
And finally, killall -l returns:
HUP INT QUIT ILL TRAP ABRT BUS FPE KILL USR1 SEGV USR2 PIPE ALRM TERM STKFLT
CHLD CONT STOP TSTP TTIN TTOU URG XCPU XFSZ VTALRM PROF WINCH POLL PWR SYS
Question
- Why are the signal lists for
kill,killallandpkillnot the same?
I assumed pkill and killall should had shown the same output as kill -l - and at first glance, it seems like pkill does not support signals.
Environment:
I have this situation for Ubuntu Server 18:04, 20:04 and Fedora Workstation 36
pkillhas no-loption, so you're just looking at the standard help message.--helpor its equivelant. Giving possible options for one specific argument in response to an unknown argument would be a very odd design decision in my opinion.pkill -l(at least on my Arch) does something completely different. You should always read the man page before trying random options.killcommand, so it does not even run the command/bin/killwhich the man page describes: it is instead described in the Bash Reference Manual, and judging by your output, you are running that. It also accepts signal names with or without theSIGprefix. Other shells may also have built-ins, or not (you don't tag which specific shell you are using).