I understand this, but the manpage and the help file do not explain the functionally this way. The manpage suggests that the following should work: $ timeout -k 10s sleep 10 It does not because the first argument after -k MUST be the an integer value of the signal you want to send, not the duration that the manpage and --help tell you to pass. Regards, B > On Apr 6, 2024, at 4:06 AM, Andreas Schwab wrote: > > On Apr 05 2024, "Branden R. Williams" via GNU coreutils Bug Reports wrote: > >> That’s not an accurate representation of what the command actually does. The argument after -k MUST be the kill signal code, without the code the command fails. The manpage and help document agree with what you are saying but the execution of the program fails. > > $ timeout -k USR1 1s sleep 10 > timeout: invalid time interval ‘USR1’ > Try 'timeout --help' for more information. > $ timeout -s KILL 1s sleep 10 > Killed > > -- > Andreas Schwab, schwab@linux-m68k.org > GPG Key fingerprint = 7578 EB47 D4E5 4D69 2510 2552 DF73 E780 A9DA AEC1 > "And now for something completely different."