On Wed, Feb 03, 2016 at 09:33:00PM +0100, Bram Moolenaar wrote:

> 
> Lcd wrote:
> 
> > On 3 February 2016, Jun T. <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > On 2016/02/03, at 19:04, Jun T. <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >
> > > >  call system("killall test_channel.py") this doesn't work either,
> > > > because the name of the process is not 'test_channel.py' but
> > > > 'python'.
> > >
> > > I forgot to mention that killall works on Linux. killall on Mac (and
> > > maybe on many non-linux systems) is not so clever.
> > 
> >     pkill(1) should work on (recent) Linux, *BSD, OS-X, and Solaris.
> 
> Thanks for the hint.  "pkill --full test_channel.py" should work.
> I'll add a check for "pkill".  I'll assume they all have the --full
> argument.

Not on Solaris, which has just -f for that.

Is there a reason that grabbing the pid and killing that directly wasn't
appropriate?  Do not all shells support $!?

Danek

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