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Current File : //lib64/perl5/vendor_perl/Proc/Killall.pm |
# # Kill all instances of a process by pattern-matching the command-line # # (c) 2000 by Aaron Sherman, see documentation, below for details. package Proc::Killall; require Exporter; use Carp; use Proc::ProcessTable; use Config; use strict; use warnings; use vars qw(@EXPORT @EXPORT_OK @ISA $VERSION); @EXPORT=qw(killall); @EXPORT_OK=qw(killall); @ISA=qw(Exporter); $VERSION='1.0'; # Private function for checking to see if a signal identifier is # valid. sub is_sig { my $sig = shift; if (defined($sig)) { if ($sig =~ /^-?(\d+)/) { my $n = $1; my @sigs = split ' ', $Config{sig_num}; return grep {$_ == $n} @sigs; } elsif ($sig =~ /^[A-Z][A-Z0-9]+$/) { my @sigs = split ' ', $Config{sig_name}; return grep {$_ eq $sig} @sigs; } else { return 0; } } else { return 0; } } # usage: killall(signal, pattern) # return: number of procs killed sub killall { croak("Usage: killall(signal, pattern)") unless @_==2; my $signal = shift; my $pat = shift; my $self = shift; $self = 0 unless defined $self; my $nkilled = 0; croak("killall: Unsupported signal: $signal") unless is_sig($signal); my $t = Proc::ProcessTable->new; my $BANG = undef; foreach my $p (@{$t->table}) { my $cmndline = $p->{cmndline} || $p->{fname}; if ($cmndline =~ /$pat/) { next unless $p->pid != $$ || $self; if (kill $signal, $p->pid) { $nkilled++; } else { $BANG = $!; } } } $! = $BANG if defined $BANG; return $nkilled; } 1; __END__ =head1 NAME killall - Kill all instances of a process by pattern matching the command-line =head1 SYNOPSIS use Proc::Killall; killall('HUP', 'xterm'); # SIGHUP all xterms killall('KILL', '^netscape$'); # SIGKILL to "netscape" =head1 DESCRIPTION This module provides one function, C<killall()>, which takes two parameters: a signal name or number (see C<kill()>) and a process pattern. This pattern is matched against the process' command-line as the C<ps> command would show it (C<ps> is not used internally, instead a package called C<Proc::ProcessTable> is used). C<killall> searches the process table and sends that signal to all processes which match the pattern. The return value is the number of processes that were successfully signaled. If any kills failed, the C<$!> variable will be set based on that last one that failed (even if a successful kill happened afterward). =head1 AUTHOR Written in 2000 by Aaron Sherman E<lt>ajs@ajs.comE<gt> C<Proc::Killall> is copyright 2000 by Aaron Sherman, and may be distributed under the same terms as Perl itself. =head1 PREREQUISITES C<Proc::ProcessTable> is required for C<Proc::Killall> to function. =head1 SEE ALSO L<perl>, L<perlfunc>, L<perlvar>, L<Proc::ProcessTable>