Re: What would be the PPID after process after parent process exit, abort, crash

2018-02-23 Thread Stephen Connolly
So on *nix systems PID 1 is supposed to be the init process. Any processes that lose their parent are *supposed* to be adopted by the init process so it can reap them. You find out a lot about this when dealing with Docker containers and java processes. If your java process is PID 1 in the contain

What would be the PPID after process after parent process exit, abort, crash

2018-02-23 Thread Tibor Digana
Hi Michael, I found in C libraries documentation that PPID is =1 if the parent process has exited - called native exit(). Would the child process see PPID=1 in other cases too, like parent abort() or segmentation fault? Can I rely on this on all platforms? It might be easy detection of parent proc

Re: scm/wagon-scm bugfixes

2018-02-23 Thread Robert Scholte
Hi Basin, I'm quite pleased that you give these subprojects some TLC. I can try to validate some of them, and I hope Olivier Lamy can have a look at them too. Give us a little bit of time to verify the patches, but don't hesitate to ping us if it takes too long. thanks, Robert On Thu, 22