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A few days ago I was faced with the issue of Task Manager not responding…so how would I kill tasks…or, how do I kill Task Manager?

Not too many people know about taskkill, the command prompt’s End Task equivalent.

In my particular case I used:

taskkill /f /im Taskmgr.exe

If you are unsure of the Image Name, you can specify a wildcard in the syntax, ex. Task*. The Process ID can also be used. It can be found through Perfmon (Windows 2008) if Task Manager is unresponsive. Go to Start -> Run -> Perfmon.

Below is the full syntax and options available using Taskkill from the Command Prompt.

taskkill [/s Computer] [/u Domain\User [/p Password]]] [/fi FilterName] [/pid ProcessID]|[/im ImageName] [/f][/t]

/s computer

  • Specifies the name or IP address of a remote computer (do not use backslashes). The default is the local computer.

/u domain\user

  • Runs the command with the account permissions of the user specified by User or Domain\User. The default is the permissions of the current logged on user on the computer issuing the command.

/p password

  • Specifies the password of the user account that is specified in the /u parameter.

/fi FilterName

  • Specifies the types of process(es) to include in or exclude from termination. The following are valid filter names, operators, and values.
Name Operators Value
Hostname eq, ne Any valid string.
Status eq, ne RUNNING|NOT RESPONDING
Imagename eq, ne Any valid string.
PID eq, ne, gt, lt, ge, le Any valid positive integer.
Session eq, ne, gt, lt, ge, le Any valid session number.
CPUTime eq, ne, gt, lt, ge, le Valid time in the format of hh:mm:ss. The mm and ss parameters should be between 0 and 59 and hh can be any valid unsigned numeric value.
Memusage eq, ne, gt, lt, ge, le Any valid integer.
Username eq, ne Any valid user name ([Domain\]User).
Services eq, ne Any valid string.
Windowtitle eq, ne Any valid string.

/pid processID

  • Specifies the process ID of the process to be terminated.

/im ImageName

  • Specifies the image name of the process to be terminated. Use the wildcard (*) to specify all image names.

/f

  • Specifies that process(es) be forcefully terminated. This parameter is ignored for remote processes; all remote processes are forcefully terminated.

/t

  • Specifies to terminate all child processes along with the parent process, commonly known as a tree kill.

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