I know kill -9 mean, but anyone can explain what does kill -3 mean? Any special signal it sends out?

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Have you tried man kill? – Tom Wijsman Oct 31 '11 at 13:24
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migrated from stackoverflow.com Oct 30 '11 at 15:51

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2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

The signals described in the original POSIX.1-1990 standard:

   Signal     Value     Action   Comment
   -------------------------------------------------------------------------
   SIGHUP        1       Term    Hangup detected on controlling terminal
                                 or death of controlling process
   SIGINT        2       Term    Interrupt from keyboard
   SIGQUIT       3       Core    Quit from keyboard
   SIGILL        4       Core    Illegal Instruction
   SIGABRT       6       Core    Abort signal from abort(3)
   SIGFPE        8       Core    Floating point exception
   SIGKILL       9       Term    Kill signal
   SIGSEGV      11       Core    Invalid memory reference
   SIGPIPE      13       Term    Broken pipe: write to pipe with no readers
   SIGALRM      14       Term    Timer signal from alarm(2)
   SIGTERM      15       Term    Termination signal
   SIGUSR1   30,10,16    Term    User-defined signal 1
   SIGUSR2   31,12,17    Term    User-defined signal 2
   SIGCHLD   20,17,18    Ign     Child stopped or terminated
   SIGCONT   19,18,25    Cont    Continue if stopped
   SIGSTOP   17,19,23    Stop    Stop process
   SIGTSTP   18,20,24    Stop    Stop typed at tty
   SIGTTIN   21,21,26    Stop    tty input for background process
   SIGTTOU   22,22,27    Stop    tty output for background process
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Unfortunately, the numeric values of these signals vary between operating systems and even between architectures. – grawity Oct 30 '11 at 18:06
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kill -l shows us all signals. Following this hint 3 means SIGQUIT

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