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After some recent update I just noticed this:
$ ps -ef|head -n 3
UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD
root 1 0 0 13:52 ? 00:00:00 ini
root 2 0 0 13:52 ? 00:00:00 [kthreadd]
On the other hand if I do
$ ps -ely|head -n 3
S UID PID PPID C PRI NI RSS SZ WCHAN TTY TIME CMD
S 0 1 0 0 80 0 632 949 ? ? 00:00:00 init
S 0 2 0 0 75 -5 0 0 ? ? 00:00:00 kthreadd
So why ps shows this process as "ini" in the first example and "init" in the second?
ps version is 3.2.8:
$ ps -V
procps version 3.2.8
Last edited by eirika (2009-09-17 16:35:42)
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hi, i too have the same issue, though i never had time to investigate it. will keep a look on this thread, too.
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How weird. It's like that for me too, and I never saw such a thing before.
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It's working fine here (Arch-x86_64)
ps -ef
UID PID PPID C STIME TTY TIME CMD
root 1 0 0 09:40 ? 00:00:00 init [5]
ps -V
procps version 3.2.8
(lambda ())
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I think this interesting output doesn't have anything to do with procps:
$ cat /proc/1/cmdline
ini$
Last edited by eirika (2009-09-17 15:30:57)
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Afaik this is a klibc bug.
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Afaik this is a klibc bug.
That helps. And thank you all for helping me identifying the problem. If that's true then
I think the solution is beyond the scope of this forum. As it has been solved in some sense
I'll mark it as solved soon.
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