Last active
September 27, 2024 04:10
-
-
Save jasonbekolay/dad7c446ae1b02f174dc3eb3a5ea70ee to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Killing a WKWebView content process in the iOS simulator to trigger a webViewWebContentProcessDidTerminate call
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
# In the command line, find the PID of your simulator process: | |
ps -p `pgrep launchd_sim` | |
# or if you have many simulators running: | |
ps -A | grep launchd_sim | |
# Find the PID of the WebContent process: | |
pgrep -P <simulator-pid> 'com.apple.WebKit.WebContent' | |
# kill it | |
kill <webcontent-pid> | |
# or if you want a one-lner: | |
kill $(pgrep -P $(pgrep launchd_sim) 'com.apple.WebKit.WebContent') |
Hello sir
Is there a way to kill WebContent process of a real iOS device ?I have not looked into this, but my guess is there isn't a simple way to do it. If it is possible, my best guess is using Instruments. If not, then maybe you can include some sort of memory leak or infinite allocation in your web code.
Thank you sir , memory leak or infinite allocation sounds a good idea .
You have no idea how many attempts I've had at trying to fix this for react pages built into our app and I was able to immediately reproduce and solve with this. THANK YOU!!!!
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
I have not looked into this, but my guess is there isn't a simple way to do it. If it is possible, my best guess is using Instruments. If not, then maybe you can include some sort of memory leak or infinite allocation in your web code.