Matt
Matt

Reputation: 373

How to send SIGINT to a remote process over SSH?

I have a program running on a remote machine which expects to receive SIGINT from the parent. That program needs to receive that signal to function correctly. Unfortunately, if I run that process remotely over SSH and send SIGINT, the ssh process itself traps and interrupts rather than forwarding the signal.

Here's an example of this behavior using GDB:

Running locally:

$ gdb
GNU gdb 6.3.50-20050815 (Apple version gdb-1344) (Fri Jul  3 01:19:56 UTC 2009)
...
This GDB was configured as "x86_64-apple-darwin".
^C
(gdb) Quit
^C
(gdb) Quit
^C
(gdb) Quit

Running remotely:

$ ssh foo.bar.com gdb
GNU gdb Red Hat Linux (6.3.0.0-1.159.el4rh)
...
This GDB was configured as "i386-redhat-linux-gnu".
(gdb) ^C
Killed by signal 2.
$

Can anybody suggest a way of working around this problem? The local ssh client is OpenSSH_5.2p1.

Upvotes: 21

Views: 17404

Answers (4)

ephemient
ephemient

Reputation: 204698

$ ssh -t foo.bar.com gdb
...
(gdb) ^C
Quit

Upvotes: 27

Mike
Mike

Reputation: 60751

It looks like you're doing ctrl+c. The problem is that your terminal window is sending SIGINT to the ssh process running locally, not to the process on the remote system.

You'll have to specify a signal manually using the kill command or system call on the remote system.

or more conveniently using killall

$killall -INT gdb

Upvotes: 1

Martin v. Löwis
Martin v. Löwis

Reputation: 127447

Try signal SIGINT at the gdb prompt.

Upvotes: 1

Carl Norum
Carl Norum

Reputation: 224864

Can you run a terminal on the remote machine and use kill -INT to send it the signal?

Upvotes: 0

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