In Linux, a daemon is typically created by forking twice with the intermediate process exiting after forking the grandchild. This has the effect of orphaning the grandchild process. As a result, it becomes the responsibility of the OS to clean up after it if it terminates. The reason has to do with what are known as zombie processes which continue to live and consume resources after exiting because their parent, who'd normally be responsible for the cleaning up, has also died.