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Date:      Mon, 7 Jan 2002 21:45:12 +0200 (EET)
From:      Andrey Simonenko <simon@simon.org.ua>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   What is the sense of the -c option in killall(1) ?
Message-ID:  <20020107212311.L40428-100000@lion.com.ua>

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Hi all!

According to the killall(1) manual page the "-c progname" option "when
used with the -u ant -t flags, limits potentially matching processes to
those matching the specified progname".

According to the source of killall(1) the -c option doesn't have anything
common with the -u and -t options. Also killall(1) always checked
procnames passed in the command line and the -c option is useful only
with the -m flag, in this case it (the -c option) limits potentially
mathing processes to those matching the specified POSIX regular expression.
But in this case the -c option used with the -m flag also duplicates given
in the command line procnames.

So, here is my question. What is the sense and purpose of the -c option?


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