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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion cli/command/container/kill.go
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -34,7 +34,7 @@ func NewKillCommand(dockerCli command.Cli) *cobra.Command {
}

flags := cmd.Flags()
flags.StringVarP(&opts.signal, "signal", "s", "KILL", "Signal to send to the container")
flags.StringVarP(&opts.signal, "signal", "s", "", "Signal to send to the container")
return cmd
}

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2 changes: 1 addition & 1 deletion docs/reference/commandline/kill.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Kill one or more running containers

Options:
--help Print usage
-s, --signal string Signal to send to the container (default "KILL")
-s, --signal string Signal to send to the container
```

## Description
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22 changes: 20 additions & 2 deletions man/src/container/kill.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,2 +1,20 @@
The main process inside each container specified will be sent SIGKILL,
or any signal specified with option --signal.
The `docker kill` subcommand kills one or more containers. The main process
inside the container is sent `SIGKILL` signal (default), or the signal that is
specified with the `--signal` option. You can reference a container by its
ID, ID-prefix, or name.

The `--signal` flag sets the system call signal that is sent to the container.
This signal can be a signal name in the format `SIG<NAME>`, for instance `SIGINT`,
or an unsigned number that matches a position in the kernel's syscall table,
for instance `2`.

While the default (`SIGKILL`) signal will terminate the container, the signal
set through `--signal` may be non-terminal, depending on the container's main
process. For example, the `SIGHUP` signal in most cases will be non-terminal,
and the container will continue running after receiving the signal.

> **Note**
>
> `ENTRYPOINT` and `CMD` in the *shell* form run as a child process of
> `/bin/sh -c`, which does not pass signals. This means that the executable is
> not the container’s PID 1 and does not receive Unix signals.