table of contents
PMSIGNAL(1) | General Commands Manual | PMSIGNAL(1) |
NAME¶
pmsignal - send a signal to one or more processes
SYNOPSIS¶
$PCP_BINADM_DIR/pmsignal [-alnp] [-s signal] [PID ...|name ...]
DESCRIPTION¶
pmsignal provides a cross-platform event signalling mechanism for use with tools from the Performance Co-Pilot toolkit. It can be used to send a named signal (only HUP, USR1, TERM, and KILL are accepted) to one or more processes.
The processes are specified directly using PIDs or as program names (with either the -a or -p options). In the all case, the set of all running processes is searched for a basename(1) match on name. In the program case, process identifiers are extracted from files in the $PCP_RUN_DIR directrory where file names are matched on name.pid.
The -n option reports the list of process identifiers that would have been signalled, but no signals are actually sent.
If a signal is not specified, then the TERM signal will be sent. The list of supported signals is reported when using the -l option.
On Linux and UNIX platforms, pmsignal is a simple wrapper around the kill(1) command. On Windows, the is no direct equivalent to this mechanism, and so an alternate mechanism has been implemented - this is only honoured by PCP tools, however, not all Windows utilities.
OPTIONS¶
The available command line options are:
- -a, --all
- Send signal to all named processes.
- -l, --list
- List supported signals.
- -n, --dry-run
- List processes that would be affected.
- -p, --program
- Extract programs from PCP runtime PID files.
- -s signal, --signal=signal
- Specify the signal to send, one of: HUP, USR1, TERM, KILL.
- -?, --help
- Display usage message and exit.
PCP ENVIRONMENT¶
Environment variables with the prefix PCP_ are used to parameterize the file and directory names used by PCP. On each installation, the file /etc/pcp.conf contains the local values for these variables. The $PCP_CONF variable may be used to specify an alternative configuration file, as described in pcp.conf(5).
SEE ALSO¶
basename(1), kill(1), killall(1), pcp.conf(5) and pcp.env(5).
PCP | Performance Co-Pilot |