# kill > Sends a signal to a process, usually related to stopping the process. > All signals except for SIGKILL and SIGSTOP can be intercepted by the process to perform a clean exit. > More information: . - Terminate a program using the default SIGTERM (terminate) signal: `kill {{process_id}}` - List signal values and their corresponding names (to be used without the `SIG` prefix): `kill -L` - Terminate a background job: `kill %{{job_id}}` - Terminate a program using the SIGHUP (hang up) signal. Many daemons will reload instead of terminating: `kill -{{1|HUP}} {{process_id}}` - Terminate a program using the SIGINT (interrupt) signal. This is typically initiated by the user pressing `Ctrl + C`: `kill -{{2|INT}} {{process_id}}` - Signal the operating system to immediately terminate a program (which gets no chance to capture the signal): `kill -{{9|KILL}} {{process_id}}` - Signal the operating system to pause a program until a SIGCONT ("continue") signal is received: `kill -{{17|STOP}} {{process_id}}` - Send a `SIGUSR1` signal to all processes with the given GID (group id): `kill -{{SIGUSR1}} -{{group_id}}`