package daemon import ( "fmt" "runtime" "syscall" "time" "github.com/Sirupsen/logrus" "github.com/docker/docker/container" "github.com/docker/docker/pkg/signal" ) // ContainerKill send signal to the container // If no signal is given (sig 0), then Kill with SIGKILL and wait // for the container to exit. // If a signal is given, then just send it to the container and return. func (daemon *Daemon) ContainerKill(name string, sig uint64) error { container, err := daemon.GetContainer(name) if err != nil { return err } if sig != 0 && !signal.ValidSignalForPlatform(syscall.Signal(sig)) { return fmt.Errorf("The %s daemon does not support signal %d", runtime.GOOS, sig) } // If no signal is passed, or SIGKILL, perform regular Kill (SIGKILL + wait()) if sig == 0 || syscall.Signal(sig) == syscall.SIGKILL { return daemon.Kill(container) } return daemon.killWithSignal(container, int(sig)) } // killWithSignal sends the container the given signal. This wrapper for the // host specific kill command prepares the container before attempting // to send the signal. An error is returned if the container is paused // or not running, or if there is a problem returned from the // underlying kill command. func (daemon *Daemon) killWithSignal(container *container.Container, sig int) error { logrus.Debugf("Sending %d to %s", sig, container.ID) container.Lock() defer container.Unlock() // We could unpause the container for them rather than returning this error if container.Paused { return fmt.Errorf("Container %s is paused. Unpause the container before stopping", container.ID) } if !container.Running { return errNotRunning{container.ID} } container.ExitOnNext() // if the container is currently restarting we do not need to send the signal // to the process. Telling the monitor that it should exit on it's next event // loop is enough if container.Restarting { return nil } if err := daemon.kill(container, sig); err != nil { return fmt.Errorf("Cannot kill container %s: %s", container.ID, err) } attributes := map[string]string{ "signal": fmt.Sprintf("%d", sig), } daemon.LogContainerEventWithAttributes(container, "kill", attributes) return nil } // Kill forcefully terminates a container. func (daemon *Daemon) Kill(container *container.Container) error { if !container.IsRunning() { return errNotRunning{container.ID} } // 1. Send SIGKILL if err := daemon.killPossiblyDeadProcess(container, int(syscall.SIGKILL)); err != nil { // While normally we might "return err" here we're not going to // because if we can't stop the container by this point then // its probably because its already stopped. Meaning, between // the time of the IsRunning() call above and now it stopped. // Also, since the err return will be exec driver specific we can't // look for any particular (common) error that would indicate // that the process is already dead vs something else going wrong. // So, instead we'll give it up to 2 more seconds to complete and if // by that time the container is still running, then the error // we got is probably valid and so we return it to the caller. if container.IsRunning() { container.WaitStop(2 * time.Second) if container.IsRunning() { return err } } } // 2. Wait for the process to die, in last resort, try to kill the process directly if err := killProcessDirectly(container); err != nil { return err } container.WaitStop(-1 * time.Second) return nil } // killPossibleDeadProcess is a wrapper around killSig() suppressing "no such process" error. func (daemon *Daemon) killPossiblyDeadProcess(container *container.Container, sig int) error { err := daemon.killWithSignal(container, sig) if err == syscall.ESRCH { logrus.Debugf("Cannot kill process (pid=%d) with signal %d: no such process.", container.GetPID(), sig) return nil } return err }