In general, Ubuntu "system monitor" is equivalent to "Task Manager" in Windows ". However, these two managers are difficult to be called out when the system is suspended. Linux has its own advantages at this time. After all, it can use TTY. 1. Press ctrl + alt + F1 ~ 6. Go to any TTY interface and enter the user name and password (there is often a joke for beginners that login TTY cannot enter the password. No. * is displayed .) 2. Run the ps-A command to view the current process. For ps commands, we recommend that you
In general, Ubuntu "system monitor" is equivalent to "Task Manager" in Windows ". However, these two managers are difficult to be called out when the system is suspended.
Linux has its own advantages at this time. After all, it can use TTY.
1. Press ctrl + alt + F1 ~ 6. Go to any TTY interface and enter the user name and password (there is often a joke for beginners that login TTY cannot enter the password. No. * is displayed .)
2. Run the ps-A command to view the current process. We recommend that you use man ps for more information on ps commands.
3. killall the processes you want to kill.
4. Press ctrl + alt + F7 to return to the X-window Interface (NOTE: Some Linux systems use F8, and Ubuntu uses F8 to debian)
Speaking of X-window, I was depressed recently. Go to the market to buy a RedHat9 book. The boss said it was a genuine version and made a discount. Once I bought it, I saw a chapter in tmd named X-Windows. If this s is used, I am skeptical about the author's level or source of publishing. This is what most people who are used to Windows often do. It is strange that, as a window that appears for thousands of years and is exposed every day, people are getting increasingly accustomed to making it appear in the form of plural numbers.