Comment by q2dg 1 month ago pstree doesn't answer the why? 3 comments q2dg Reply mathfailure 1 month ago No, it does not. tatref 1 month ago I'm on mobile, so it's not super easy to read the source, but it seems like it only checks for the parent processes?Also I don't think this approach works correctly, because a disowned/nohup process will show up as PPID 1 (systemd), which is not correct pranshuparmar 1 month ago Yes, this is a bug. Planning to fix it soon.
mathfailure 1 month ago No, it does not. tatref 1 month ago I'm on mobile, so it's not super easy to read the source, but it seems like it only checks for the parent processes?Also I don't think this approach works correctly, because a disowned/nohup process will show up as PPID 1 (systemd), which is not correct pranshuparmar 1 month ago Yes, this is a bug. Planning to fix it soon.
tatref 1 month ago I'm on mobile, so it's not super easy to read the source, but it seems like it only checks for the parent processes?Also I don't think this approach works correctly, because a disowned/nohup process will show up as PPID 1 (systemd), which is not correct pranshuparmar 1 month ago Yes, this is a bug. Planning to fix it soon.
No, it does not.
I'm on mobile, so it's not super easy to read the source, but it seems like it only checks for the parent processes?
Also I don't think this approach works correctly, because a disowned/nohup process will show up as PPID 1 (systemd), which is not correct
Yes, this is a bug. Planning to fix it soon.