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Start your free trialJonathan Grieve
Treehouse Moderator 91,253 PointsKilling a Process with Node on Windows
Hi all,
I'm having issues killing processes using the same method described in the video. I've tried opening a second instance of Node in the command prompted while a server is running but it doesn't recognise either the kill or of the ps command
'ps' is not recognized as an internal or external command,
operable program or batch file.
Is it vital that I need to be able to do this?
I can very easily kill all open processes by simply breaking out of the REPL with Ctrl + C.
Thanks. :)
3 Answers
Seth Kroger
56,413 PointsYou can also kill it from the Task Manager for for that matter. The important thing is that you're able to kill the old node process attached to the port. Andrew is showing a way to do it if you don't have access to it's console that works on Workspaces (as well as Linux/Mac)
ryanjones6
13,797 PointsIf you want to work in a linux simulated environment on Windows download Git for windows. This will install: Git Bash, Git CMD, and Git GUI. The Git Bash allows for linux commands. -- Also an alternative to killing the server is to type: CTRL + C. This will stop the server: you can then just run the command: node app.js and restart the server.
Git Download: https://git-scm.com/downloads
Rik Schoonbeek
4,279 PointsI killed the process in the windows powershell like so: (might work in command line too)
1) type 'ps' to show list of processes 2) find the process named 'node', and note the Id 3) type 'Stop-process <Id>'
Jonathan Grieve
Treehouse Moderator 91,253 PointsJonathan Grieve
Treehouse Moderator 91,253 PointsSo the ps and kill commands are workspace specific? Or specific to the framework that's the workspaces console is built on. :)
Seth Kroger
56,413 PointsSeth Kroger
56,413 PointsThey're Unix commands, so yes, they are platform specific. :)