2.3 KiB
kill
Kill one or more running containers
Aliases
docker container kill
, docker kill
Options
Name | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
-s , --signal |
string |
Signal to send to the container |
Description
The docker kill
subcommand kills one or more containers. The main process
inside the container is sent SIGKILL
signal (default), or the signal that is
specified with the --signal
option. You can reference a container by its
ID, ID-prefix, or name.
The --signal
flag sets the system call signal that is sent to the container.
This signal can be a signal name in the format SIG<NAME>
, for instance SIGINT
,
or an unsigned number that matches a position in the kernel's syscall table,
for instance 2
.
While the default (SIGKILL
) signal will terminate the container, the signal
set through --signal
may be non-terminal, depending on the container's main
process. For example, the SIGHUP
signal in most cases will be non-terminal,
and the container will continue running after receiving the signal.
Note
ENTRYPOINT
andCMD
in the shell form run as a child process of/bin/sh -c
, which does not pass signals. This means that the executable is not the container’s PID 1 and does not receive Unix signals.
Examples
Send a KILL signal to a container
The following example sends the default SIGKILL
signal to the container named
my_container
:
$ docker kill my_container
Send a custom signal to a container (--signal)
The following example sends a SIGHUP
signal to the container named
my_container
:
$ docker kill --signal=SIGHUP my_container
You can specify a custom signal either by name, or number. The SIG
prefix
is optional, so the following examples are equivalent:
$ docker kill --signal=SIGHUP my_container
$ docker kill --signal=HUP my_container
$ docker kill --signal=1 my_container
Refer to the signal(7)
man-page for a list of standard Linux signals.