systemd.kill — Kill environment configuration
,
service
.service
,
socket
.socket
,
mount
.mountswap
.swap
Unit configuration files for services, sockets, mount points and swap devices share a subset of configuration options which define the process killing parameters of spawned processes.
This man page lists the configuration options shared by these four unit types. See systemd.unit(5) for the common options of all unit configuration files, and systemd.service(5), systemd.socket(5), systemd.swap(5) and systemd.mount(5) for more information on the specific unit configuration files. The execution specific configuration options are configured in the [Service], [Socket], [Mount], or [Swap] section, depending on the unit type.
KillMode=
¶Specifies how
processes of this service shall be
killed. One of
control-group
,
process
,
none
.
If set to
control-group
, all
remaining processes in the control
group of this unit will be terminated
on unit stop (for services: after the
stop command is executed, as
configured with
ExecStop=
). If set
to process
, only the
main process itself is killed. If set
to none
, no process is
killed. In this case only the stop
command will be executed on unit
stop, but no process be killed
otherwise. Processes remaining alive
after stop are left in their control
group and the control group continues
to exist after stop unless it is
empty. Defaults to
control-group
.
Processes will first be
terminated via
SIGTERM
(unless
the signal to send is changed via
KillSignal=
). Optionally,
this is immediately followed by a
SIGHUP
(if
enabled with
SendSIGHUP=
). If
then, after a delay (configured via the
TimeoutStopSec=
option),
processes still remain, the
termination request is repeated with
the SIGKILL
signal (unless this is disabled via
the SendSIGKILL=
option). See
kill(2)
for more
information.
KillSignal=
¶Specifies which signal
to use when killing a
service. Defaults to SIGTERM
.
SendSIGHUP=
¶Specifies whether to
send SIGHUP
to
remaining processes immediately after
sending the signal configured with
KillSignal=
. This
is useful to indicate to shells and
shell-like programs that their
connection has been severed. Takes a
boolean value. Defaults to "no".
SendSIGKILL=
¶Specifies whether to
send SIGKILL
to remaining processes
after a timeout, if the normal
shutdown procedure left processes of
the service around. Takes a boolean
value. Defaults to "yes".