#To list any process listening to the port 8080:lsof-i:8080#To kill any process listening to the port 8080:kill$(lsof-t-i:8080)#or more violently:kill-9$(lsof-t-i:8080)
netstat-ano| findstr :<PORT>(Replace <PORT> with the port number you want, but keep the colon)
Step 2:
Next, run the following command:
taskkill /PID <PID> /F
# To list any process listening to the port 8080:lsof-i:8080# To kill any process listening to the port 8080:kill$(lsof-t-i:8080)# or more violently:kill-9$(lsof-t-i:8080)# (-9 corresponds to the SIGKILL - terminate immediately/hard kill signal: see List of Kill Signals and What is the purpose of the -9 option in the kill command?. If no signal is specified to kill, the TERM signal a.k.a. -15 or soft kill is sent, which sometimes isn't enough to kill a process.).
#list process running on specified port (here 80, change to your port)sudolsof-i:80#kill process on specified port (here 80, change to your port)sudokill$(sudolsof-t-i:80)
/*
if you have ran a code that uses a server or server port you can easily
kill the server port, and the just created server i think, simply typing:
(ctrl + c) or (cmd + c)for MAC
*/