GETPRIORITY(3C) Standard C Library Functions GETPRIORITY(3C)
NAME
getpriority, setpriority - get and set the nice value
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/resource.h>
int getpriority(
int which,
id_t who);
int setpriority(
int which,
id_t who,
int value);
DESCRIPTION
The
getpriority() function obtains the nice value of a process,
thread, or set of processes. The
setpriority() function sets the
nice value of a process, thread, or set of processes to
value+
NZERO,
where
NZERO is defined to be 20.
Target entities are specified by the values of the
which and
who arguments. The
which argument can be one of the following values:
PRIO_PROCESS,
PRIO_PGRP,
PRIO_USER,
PRIO_GROUP,
PRIO_SESSION,
PRIO_LWP,
PRIO_TASK,
PRIO_PROJECT,
PRIO_ZONE, or
PRIO_CONTRACT,
indicating that the
who argument is to be interpreted as a process
ID, a process group ID, an effective user ID, an effective group ID,
a session ID, a thread (lwp) ID, a task ID, a project ID, a zone ID,
or a process contract ID, respectively. A 0 value for the
who argument specifies the current process, process group, or user. A 0
value for the
who argument is treated as valid group ID, session ID,
thread (lwp) ID, task ID, project ID, zone ID, or process contract
ID. A
P_MYID value for the
who argument can be used to specify the
current group, session, thread, task, project, zone, or process
contract, respectively.
If a specified process is multi-threaded, the nice value set with
setpriority() affects all threads in the process.
If more than one process is specified,
getpriority() returns
NZERO less than the lowest nice value pertaining to any of the specified
entities, and
setpriority() sets the nice values of all of the
specified processes to
value+
NZERO.
The default nice value is
NZERO. Lower nice values cause more
favorable scheduling. The range of valid nice values is 0 to
NZERO*2-1. If
value+
NZERO is less than the system's lowest supported
nice value,
setpriority() sets the nice value to the lowest supported
value. If
value+
NZERO is greater than the system's highest supported
nice value,
setpriority() sets the nice value to the highest
supported value.
Only a process with appropriate privileges can lower the nice value.
Any process or thread using
SCHED_FIFO or
SCHED_RR is unaffected by a
call to
setpriority(). This is not considered an error. A process or
thread that subsequently reverts to
SCHED_OTHER will not have its
priority affected by such a
setpriority() call.
The effect of changing the nice value varies depending on the
scheduling policy in effect.
Since
getpriority() can return the value -1 on successful completion,
it is necessary to set
errno to 0 prior to a call to
getpriority().
If
getpriority() returns the value -1, then
errno can be checked to
see if an error occurred or if the value is a legitimate nice value.
RETURN VALUES
Upon successful completion,
getpriority() returns an integer in the
range from -
NZERO to
NZERO-1. Otherwise,
-1 is returned and
errno is
set to indicate the error.
Upon successful completion,
setpriority() returns
0. Otherwise,
-1 is
returned and
errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
The
getpriority() and
setpriority() functions will fail if:
ESRCH No process or thread could be located using the
which and
who argument values specified.
EINVAL The value of the
which argument was not recognized, or the
value of the
who argument is not a valid process ID,
process group ID, user ID, group ID, session ID, thread
(lwp) ID, task ID, project ID, or zone ID.
In addition,
setpriority() may fail if:
EPERM A process was located, but neither the real nor effective
user ID of the executing process match the effective user
ID of the process whose nice value is being changed.
EACCES A request was made to change the nice value to a lower
numeric value and the current process does not have
appropriate privileges.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: Example using getpriority()
The following example returns the current scheduling priority for the
process ID returned by the call to
getpid(2).
#include <sys/resource.h>
...
int which = PRIO_PROCESS;
id_t pid;
int ret;
pid = getpid();
ret = getpriority(which, pid);
Example 2: Example using setpriority()
The following example sets the nice value for the current process to
0.
#include <sys/resource.h>
...
int which = PRIO_PROCESS;
id_t pid;
int value = -20;
int ret;
pid = getpid();
ret = setpriority(which, pid, value);
USAGE
The
getpriority() and
setpriority() functions work with an offset
nice value (
value-
NZERO). The nice value is in the range 0 to
2*
NZERO-1, while the return value for
getpriority() and the third
parameter for
setpriority() are in the range -
NZERO to
NZERO-1.
ATTRIBUTES
See
attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:
+--------------------+-------------------+
| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+--------------------+-------------------+
|Interface Stability | Committed |
+--------------------+-------------------+
|Standard | See
standards(7). |
+--------------------+-------------------+
SEE ALSO
nice(1),
renice(1),
sched_get_priority_max(3C),
sched_setscheduler(3C),
attributes(7),
standards(7) April 1, 2008 GETPRIORITY(3C)