kill sends a signal, that's all it does. It doesn't care about what the process did with it.
Not with any filesystem with a proper journaling system. Filesystem corruption is almost impossible.
It's 2016, if you abruptly shut down a computer in the middle of a filesystem write the chances of ending up with a corrupted filesystem are of around a 0 %, so those are the chances of getting a brick when you drop…
kill sends a signal, that's all it does. It doesn't care about what the process did with it.
Not with any filesystem with a proper journaling system. Filesystem corruption is almost impossible.
It's 2016, if you abruptly shut down a computer in the middle of a filesystem write the chances of ending up with a corrupted filesystem are of around a 0 %, so those are the chances of getting a brick when you drop…