![]() ![]() One example is whenever I want to kill the explorer.exe process I have to use the /F flag or else the process just does not terminate. Failure to use the /F flag will result in nothing happening in some cases. ![]() ![]() The /f flag is kills the process forcefully. If you want to kill the firefox process run: C:\>Taskkill /IM firefox.exe /F In the example above you can see the image name and the PID for each process. Open up an Administrative level Command Prompt and run tasklist to see all of the running processes: C:\>tasklist You can kill a process by the process ID (PID) or by image name (EXE filename). Additionally, killing processes in Command Prompt provides much more control and the ability to end multiple processes at once.Īll of this is possible with the TaskKill command. This method is effective but not nearly as fun as killing a process in Command Prompt. I'm sure you are familiar with the traditional way to kill or end a process in Windows using Task Manager. ![]()
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