One of the best features in Linux is the way you can control processes from the command line, so if you have an application that locks up your GUI, you can always SSH over from another machine and just kill the offending process.

The problem is that if you are killing the same process repeatedly, it’s very tedious to have to figure out the process ID every single time so that you can kill it… so here’s the easier way to do it.

The Old Way

The classic way of killing processes meant you’d first need to use the ps command piped through grep to find the process you are trying to kill:

$ ps -ef | grep swiftfox
geek      7206 22694  0 Dec04 ?        00:00:00 /bin/sh /opt/swiftfox/swiftfox
geek      7209  7206  0 Dec04 ?        00:00:00 /bin/sh /opt/swiftfox/run-mozilla.sh /opt/swiftfox/swiftfox-bin
geek      7213  7209  0 Dec04 ?        00:04:29 /opt/swiftfox/swiftfox-bin
geek     14863 14224  0 18:19 pts/4    00:00:00 grep swiftfox

Then to kill the process, you’d have to use the kill command:

$ kill 7206

The New Way

Instead of going through all of that, you can simply use the pkill command if you already know the process name or part of it.

$ pkill swiftfox

It’s as simple as that. You should note that pkill will kill all processes matching the search text, in this case swiftfox

If you want to see what process names are matched before using the pkill command, you can use the pgrep command. Passing the -l switch tells pgrep to show the process name as well.

$ pgrep -l swiftfox
7206 swiftfox
7213 swiftfox-bin

Swiftfox seems to crash on me a lot, so I’ve unfortunately had to use this command a lot lately.

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Lowell is the founder and CEO of How-To Geek. He’s been running the show since creating the site back in 2006. Over the last decade, Lowell has personally written more than 1000 articles which have been viewed by over 250 million people. Prior to starting How-To Geek, Lowell spent 15 years working in IT doing consulting, cybersecurity, database management, and programming work.
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