with reference to: https://kb.iu.edu/d/adqw

 

You can kill a Unix login session remotely by sending a hangup signal (SIGHUP) to the process running the login session. To do this, follow the steps below:

  1. Identify the shell you want to kill. To determine your current tty, from your Unix shell prompt, enter:
      tty
  2. To show all of your running processes, enter:
      ps -fu username

    Replace username with your username.

  3. You should see something like this:
      PID    TT  STAT   TIME COMMAND
      13964  v5   I      0:00 elm
      13126  ue   S      0:00 -bash (bash)
      13133  ue   R      0:00 ps x
      13335  v5   S      0:00 -bash (bash)

    In the first column, “PID” stands for “process ID”. The second column shows the tty to which your processes are connected. The dash (-) before a process name shows that the process is a login shell.

  4. To remove the remote shell, look for the processes with a dash and choose the process number that is not for your current tty. Then issue the following command:
      kill -HUP processid

    Replace processid with the process ID number you identified.

When you send a SIGHUP (by entering killĀ -HUP or killĀ -1) to a login shell, all the processes that were started in the shell will be killed as well (unless they were in the background). SIGHUP is good because it allows applications like Elm and Emacs to exit gracefully, leaving your files intact.

Note: You cannot kill processes that are running on a computer different from the one you are logged into. This rule extends to individual nodes within clusters of Unix systems as well.