This is designed behaviour and is done as a last option to close the processes on user action.
In AutoPie, each command is run in a specific shell instance but closing the processes inside it cleanly is a chore because Android doesn't provide a simple way to do that. Either with process.destroy() or with the other methods.
I was storing the pids of each of the processes and stopping them manually for some processes and that did work.
I don't think it'll be necessary with the Termux shell instance which AutoPie will be migrating to.
It'll be fixed when the Termux integration arrives.
This is designed behaviour and is done as a last option to close the processes on user action.
In AutoPie, each command is run in a specific shell instance but closing the processes inside it cleanly is a chore because Android doesn't provide a simple way to do that. Either with process.destroy() or with the other methods.
I was storing the pids of each of the processes and stopping them manually for some processes and that did work.
I don't think it'll be necessary with the Termux shell instance which AutoPie will be migrating to.
It'll be fixed when the Termux integration arrives.