Reading Gilles' answer,
SIGHUP is about the same as SIGTERM in terms of harshness, but it has a specific role because it's automatically sent to applications running in a terminal when the user disconnects from that terminal (etymologically, because the user was connecting via a telephone line and the modem hung up). SIGHUP is often involuntary, unlike SIGTERM which has to be sent explicitly, so applications should try to save their state on a SIGHUP.
Does "explicitly" in "SIGTERM which has to be sent explicitly" mean that SIGTERM must be sent initially by a process (instead of the kernel) via the process calling kill()
?
I was wondering if SIGKILL must be explicitly sent to a specified process? Can kernel implicitly send any of SIGKILL and SIGTERM to a process?
When an OS is shut down, does the kernel send some signal(s) to running processes to terminate them? What signal(s) is it and does the kernel send it implicitly?
Thanks.
reboot()
doesn’t sendSIGKILL
. – Stephen Kitt Dec 06 '18 at 13:14