when does kill -9 pid not work?
R.HUTCHISON
hutch at lzaz.ATT.COM
Tue Aug 8 23:04:11 AEST 1989
>From article <9748 at alice.UUCP>, by debra at alice.UUCP (Paul De Bra):
> In article <20495 at adm.BRL.MIL> Leisner.Henr at xerox.com (Marty) writes:
[stuff omitted]
> when the process exits (due to the kill -9) it may get stuck in a device
> driver or something, so it enters a "zombie" state. This means that the
> process is busy exiting, but hasn't quite gone far enough to tell init that
> it's really gone.
[stuff omitted]
> Paul.
>>I give up...Was Jason in my machine?
Small correction. If the process was hung in an exit...
Context:
- System V, Release 0,2,3
Scenario:
- process gets signal (any) or calls exit without closing all
files explicitly
- exit called
- exit ignores all (including #9) signals
- exit closes all open files
- exit changes process to ZOMBIE
- exit deallocated all memory
- ... and so on
If the close() routine for a logical device wants to contact
the physical device and wait for a response, it should have a
timer set, in case the device doesn't respond. Sometimes the
driver writer doesn't put in a timer (mistake). The device
never responds. The close() never finishes. The signal is
already being ignored. The process hasn't been changed
into a zombie yet. Its memory hasn't been deallocated yet. It's just
sitting there, wasting memory and slots in kernel tables.
Question to the original poster: If you do a ps -l on the process,
what is its value under the PRI heading? My guess is that there is a
bug in the device driver for that device and it might be hanging the
process with the priority high (low number) or with the "don't wake me
up when a signal comes in" flag (value 10 in ps listing under F
heading?). The ps output would vary depending on your version of the OS.
Bob Hutchison
att!lzaz!hutch
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