Killing a running process in an Ubuntu machine remotely from a windows machine which is in LAN
Is it possible to kill a process running in an Ubuntu machine from a Windows(XP) machine remotely connected via LAN ?
I can kill the process in a windows machine from a remote windows machine (in LAN) by the following command,
taskkill /S system /U username /P password /IM process.exe
Is there any thing like that to kill the process running in the Linux machine ?
Solution 1:
Install openssh-server
on Ubuntu and PuTTY on Windows. Then you can get a shell on your Ubuntu machine from the Windows one.
Once logged into your Ubuntu machine remotely, you can use kill
or pkill
or killall
as you prefer. I find pkill
simplest if you just want to kill based on the process's name. For example: pkill firefox
If, however, you wanted to kill a specific process whose PID (process ID) you know (possibly from looking through the output of ps -ef
), you can use kill 1234
You can combine kill signals with these to say how they should be killed. The default is 15, or SIGTERM (term = terminate), which is a polite request to please close now. If a process doesn't respond to that, 9 (SIGKILL) is popular. See man 7 signal
for more information about signals. To use this with kill
or pkill
you'd simply add -9
for example: kill -9 firefox
Solution 2:
If you are running an ssh daemon on your Ubuntu machine then you can login via SSH using PuTTy from your windows machine.
Once you are logged in, you can look at the current running processes with the ps aux
command and then use kill or pkill to end the task
Note: You may need to use sudo
with the kill commands
Solution 3:
If you have sshd installed on the Ubuntu box (almost always a good thing) you can connect and kill the process as normal (e.g. killall process, or similar).
On the Ubuntu box:
$ sudo apt-get install ssh
On Windows, download PuTTY: http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
Open PuTTY and set it to connect to the Ubuntu box's IP address (e.g. 192.168.0.1). You should be presented with a login prompt, so provide your Ubuntu username and password.
As maco has already said, there are a variety of ways of killing processes - just take your pick of pkill
, killall
etc., e.g.:
$ killall firefox