The right way to kill a process in Java

ε祈祈猫儿з 提交于 2019-12-03 10:34:12
Derlin

If the process you want to kill has been started by your application

Then you probably have a reference to it (ProcessBuilder.start() or Runtime.exec() both return a reference). In this case, you can simply call p.destroy(). I think this is the cleanest way (but be careful: sub-processes started by p may stay alive, check http://bugs.sun.com/bugdatabase/view_bug.do?bug_id=4770092 for more info).

The destroyForcibly should only be used if destroy() failed after a certain timeout. In a nutshell

  1. terminate process with destroy()
  2. allow process to exit gracefully with reasonable timeout
  3. kill it with destroyForcibly() if process is still alive

If the process you want to kill is external

Then you don't have much choice: you need to pass through the OS API (Runtime.exec). On Windows, the program to call will be taskkill.exe, while on Mac and Linux you can try kill.


Have a look at https://github.com/zeroturnaround/zt-exec/issues/19 and Killing a process using Java and http://invisiblecomputer.wonderhowto.com/how-to/code-simple-java-app-kill-any-process-after-specified-time-0133513/ for more info.

nlloyd

If you're trying to kill the main process your java code started, I'd suggest using System.exit(). The benefits are explained here: when should we call system exit in java.

Essentially, System.exit() will run shutdown hooks that will make sure any dependent non-daemon processes that may not have completed their work are killed before your process is killed. This is the clean way to do it.

If the process is not yours, you will have to rely on the Operating System to do this work for you as explained in this answer: Killing a Process Using Java

In that case your suggestion of Runtime.exec() a kill on *nix would be a decent way to go.

Now as for destroyForcibly(), you're typically going to call that on a child process spawned by your java code that was presumably started with the process api's ProcessBuilder.start() or Runtime.exec()

the one that worked for me is System.exit(0); it's work's well because it closes all still running processes and components

钱宇豪

In java 8 source code

public Process destroyForcibly() {
    destroy();
    return this;
}

I just want to say that the destroyForcibly is equal to the destroy in Java 8.
So you should try to kill the process by pid if process is still alive after you called the destroy method. You can easily get the pid if you are on java 9+,just call Process.pid() method.

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