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Without any argument, it sends [[Linux Signals#SIGTERM_.2815.29|SIGTERM]] - the termination signal. The SIGTERM signal is sent to a process to request its termination. Unlike the SIGKILL signal, it can be caught and interpreted or ignored by the process. This allows the process to perform nice termination releasing resources and saving state if appropriate. SIGINT is nearly identical to SIGTERM. | Without any argument, it sends [[Linux Signals#SIGTERM_.2815.29|SIGTERM]] - the termination signal. The SIGTERM signal is sent to a process to request its termination. Unlike the SIGKILL signal, it can be caught and interpreted or ignored by the process. This allows the process to perform nice termination releasing resources and saving state if appropriate. SIGINT is nearly identical to SIGTERM. | ||
=See Also= | |||
<blockquote style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: solid thin lightgrey;"> | |||
:[[Linux Signals]] | |||
</blockquote> |
Revision as of 04:25, 5 March 2016
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Overview
Without any argument, it sends SIGTERM - the termination signal. The SIGTERM signal is sent to a process to request its termination. Unlike the SIGKILL signal, it can be caught and interpreted or ignored by the process. This allows the process to perform nice termination releasing resources and saving state if appropriate. SIGINT is nearly identical to SIGTERM.