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IPCRM(1)                         User Commands                         IPCRM(1)

NAME
       ipcrm - remove certain IPC resources

SYNOPSIS
       ipcrm [options]

       ipcrm [shm|msg|sem] ID ...

DESCRIPTION
       ipcrm removes POSIX and System V inter-process communication (IPC)
       objects and associated data structures from the system. In order to
       delete such objects, you must be superuser, or the creator or owner of
       the object.

       POSIX and System V IPC objects are of three types: shared memory,
       message queues, and semaphores. Deletion of a message queue or semaphore
       object is immediate (regardless of whether any process still holds an
       IPC identifier for the object). A shared memory object is only removed
       after all currently attached processes have detached (shmdt(2)) the
       object from their virtual address space.

       Two syntax styles are supported. The old Linux historical syntax
       specifies a three-letter keyword indicating which class of object is to
       be deleted, followed by one or more IPC identifiers for objects of this
       type.

       The SUS-compliant syntax allows the specification of zero or more
       objects of all three types in a single command line, with objects
       specified either by key or by identifier (see below). Both keys and
       identifiers may be specified in decimal, hexadecimal (specified with an
       initial '0x' or '0X'), or octal (specified with an initial '0').

       The details of the removes are described in shmctl(2), shm_unlink(3),
       msgctl(2), mq_unlink(3), semctl(2), and sem_unlink(3). The identifiers
       and keys can be found by using lsipc(1) or ipcs(1).

OPTIONS
       -a, --all [shm] [pshm] [msg] [pmsg] [sem] [psem]
           Remove all resources. When an option argument is provided, the
           removal is performed only for the specified resource types.

           Warning! Do not use -a if you are unsure how the software using the
           resources might react to missing objects. Some programs create these
           resources at startup and may not have any code to deal with an
           unexpected disappearance.

       -M, --shmem-key shmkey
           Remove the shared memory segment created with shmkey after the last
           detach is performed.

       -m, --shmem-id shmid
           Remove the shared memory segment identified by shmid after the last
           detach is performed.

       -x, --posix-shmem name
           Remove the POSIX shared memory segment created with name.

       -Q, --queue-key msgkey
           Remove the message queue created with msgkey.

       -q, --queue-id msgid
           Remove the message queue identified by msgid.

       -y, --posix-mqueue name
           Remove the POSIX message queue created with name.

       -S, --semaphore-key semkey
           Remove the semaphore created with semkey.

       -s, --semaphore-id semid
           Remove the semaphore identified by semid.

       -z, --posix-semaphore name
           Remove the POSIX named semaphore created with name.

       -h, --help
           Display help text and exit.

       -V, --version
           Display version and exit.

NOTES
       In its first Linux implementation, ipcrm used the deprecated syntax
       shown in the second line of the SYNOPSIS. Functionality present in other
       *nix implementations of ipcrm has since been added, namely the ability
       to delete resources by key (not just identifier), and to respect the
       same command-line syntax. For backward compatibility the previous syntax
       is still supported.

SEE ALSO
       ipcmk(1), ipcs(1), lsipc(1), msgctl(2), mq_unlink(3), msgget(2),
       semctl(2), semget(2), sem_unlink(3), shmctl(2), shmdt(2), shmget(2),
       shm_unlink(3), ftok(3), sysvipc(7)

REPORTING BUGS
       For bug reports, use the issue tracker
       <https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues>.

AVAILABILITY
       The ipcrm command is part of the util-linux package which can be
       downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive
       <https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/>.

util-linux 2.41                    2025-02-26                          IPCRM(1)

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