pskill sends a signal to a process, usually to terminate it.
pskill(pid, signal = SIGTERM)SIGHUP
SIGINT
SIGQUIT
SIGKILL
SIGTERM
SIGSTOP
SIGTSTP
SIGCHLD
SIGUSR1
SIGUSR2
positive integers: one or more process IDs as returned by
    Sys.getpid.
integer, most often one of the symbolic constants.
A logical vector of the same length as pid,
  TRUE (for success) or FALSE, invisibly.
Signals are a C99 concept, but only a small number are required to be
  supported (of those listed, only SIGINT and SIGTERM).
  They are much more widely used on POSIX operating systems (which
  should define all of those listed here), which also support a
  kill system call to send a signal to a process, most often to
  terminate it.  Function pskill provides a wrapper: it silently
  ignores invalid values of its arguments, including zero or negative pids.
In normal use on a Unix-alike, Ctrl-C sends SIGINT,
  Ctrl-\ sends SIGQUIT and Ctrl-Z sends
  SIGTSTP: that and SIGSTOP suspend a process which can be
  resumed by SIGCONT.
The signals are small integers, but the actual numeric values are not
  standardized (and most do differ between OSes).  The SIG*
  objects contain the appropriate integer values for the current platform
  (or NA_INTEGER_ if the signal is not defined).
Only SIGINT and SIGKILL will be defined on Windows, and
  pskill will always use the Windows system call
  TerminateProcess.
Package parallel has several means to launch child processes which record the process IDs.
# NOT RUN {
pskill(c(237, 245), SIGKILL)
# }
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