Windows has no process signaling mechanism like what POSIX provide using the kill command. But windows-kill could send signal to process by PID. :)
Well, I'm a node.js developer. Node has a functionality that could send signals to other process, by their PID. This functionality works great on POSIX OSes but in Windows, no signal is supported (even SIGINT
and SIGBREAK
, that node stated is supported in Windows), and sending any of those signals to any process in windows, will result in an immediate kill of those process (Even if those process have listener on sent signals). In one of my project signal sending and listening was a serious need, so I've made some research about signal sending in windows, and found an OLD (2003) project named SendSignal. Well that project doesn’t support 64bit systems and also could only send SIGBREAK
(Ctrl + Break) signal. More searches lead me to an enhanced version of SendSignal, that add support of 64bit systems, but only support sending SIGINT
(Ctrl + C) signal. So I've decided to write a library that support both 32bit & 64bit systems, and also both SIGBREAK
and SIGINT
signals. The result is the windows-kill-library that has all the functionality I've needed, and is the heart of windows-kill. For information about windows-kill-library navigate to windows-kill-library folder.
- Support both 32bit (Win32) & 64bit (x64) Windows
- Support both
SIGBREAK
(Ctrl + Break) andSIGINT
(Ctrl + C) Signals - A library that could be used directly (#include), As a static library (.lib) and a dynamic library (.dll)
- Prebuilt binaries and libraries
To read a detailed info please visit windows-kill-library Readme. But it's good to know that windows-kill will create a ctrl event in the process that is calling it. If the caller process has no child process or not a child process of another process, nothing will happen. But if has child process or is child process, sending signal will trigger the ctrl routine of all processes in the process group, and as a result, those process will be terminated.
> choco install windows-kill
> choco upgrade windows-kill
You can also download the prebuilt binaries of windows-kill. You could find them in repo's Releases page. Both the 32bit (Win32) and 64bit (x64) versions are available.
If you want to compile from the source code, you must install Visual Studio plus C++ development tools first. I'm developing this project in Visual Studio 2015 update 3. So it's recommended to use the same Visual Studio version. But maybe other versions are ok to use. Also I didn't compile the project using other C++ compilers. So any contribution to add other compilers support is welcomed!
After the Visual Studio installation, clone the GitHub project or download the latest master branch source code and extract the downloaded zip. Go to the project folder and open the windows-kill.sln in Visual Studio. From the build menu, click on batch build. There you could see different build configurations. For more information about build configuration see Build Configurations.
Using the windows-kill is easy & straightforward. It's just like POSIX kill. Just navigate to the folder that contains windows-kill.exe and open a cmd from that folder. Or add that folder in Environment Variables so you could use the command from any cmd. If signal sending was successful or any error occurred during the sending, appropriate message will be print in cmd.
> windows-kill -SIGNALTYPE PID
> windows-kill -SIGBREAK 1234
> windows-kill -1 1234
> windows-kill -SIGINT 1234
> windows-kill -2 1234
> windows-kill -l
> windows-kill -h
windows-kill Visual Studio solution contains different build configuration. There are two main Debug and Release configuration category. Each of these categories have two separate configurations for building the windows-kill-library as a dynamic link library (.dll) or static link library (.lib). Also all the build configurations in Visual Studio has 32bit (Win32) & 64bit (x64) versions. In Summary there are 4 build configurations:
- Debug Dll: Build windows-kill-library as a .dll with debug enabled.
- Debug Lib: Build windows-kill-library as a .lib with debug enabled.
- Release Dll: Build windows-kill-library as a .dll without debug.
- Release Lib: Build windows-kill-library as a .lib without debug.
The windows-kill & windows-kill-library are based on:
We love contributions from everyone. Please read Contributing guide.