getpriority(2)

SECCIÓN: 2 - Llamadas al sistema

getpriority(2) System Calls Manual getpriority(2)

NAME

getpriority, setpriority - get/set program scheduling priority

LIBRARY

Standard C library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS

#include <sys/resource.h>

int getpriority(int which, id_t who);

int setpriority(int which, id_t who, int prio);

DESCRIPTION

The scheduling priority of the process, process group, or user, as in‐

dicated by which and who is obtained with the getpriority() call and

set with the setpriority() call. The process attribute dealt with by

these system calls is the same attribute (also known as the "nice"

value) that is dealt with by nice(2).

The value which is one of PRIO_PROCESS, PRIO_PGRP, or PRIO_USER, and

who is interpreted relative to which (a process identifier for

PRIO_PROCESS, process group identifier for PRIO_PGRP, and a user ID for

PRIO_USER). A zero value for who denotes (respectively) the calling

process, the process group of the calling process, or the real user ID

of the calling process.

The prio argument is a value in the range -20 to 19 (but see NOTES be‐

low), with -20 being the highest priority and 19 being the lowest pri‐

ority. Attempts to set a priority outside this range are silently

clamped to the range. The default priority is 0; lower values give a

process a higher scheduling priority.

The getpriority() call returns the highest priority (lowest numerical

value) enjoyed by any of the specified processes. The setpriority()

call sets the priorities of all of the specified processes to the spec‐

ified value.

Traditionally, only a privileged process could lower the nice value

(i.e., set a higher priority). However, since Linux 2.6.12, an unpriv‐

ileged process can decrease the nice value of a target process that has

a suitable RLIMIT_NICE soft limit; see getrlimit(2) for details.

RETURN VALUE

On success, getpriority() returns the calling thread's nice value,

which may be a negative number. On error, it returns -1 and sets errno

to indicate the error.

Since a successful call to getpriority() can legitimately return the

value -1, it is necessary to clear errno prior to the call, then check

errno afterward to determine if -1 is an error or a legitimate value.

setpriority() returns 0 on success. On failure, it returns -1 and sets

errno to indicate the error.

ERRORS

EACCES The caller attempted to set a lower nice value (i.e., a higher

process priority), but did not have the required privilege (on

Linux: did not have the CAP_SYS_NICE capability).

EINVAL which was not one of PRIO_PROCESS, PRIO_PGRP, or PRIO_USER.

EPERM A process was located, but its effective user ID did not match

either the effective or the real user ID of the caller, and was

not privileged (on Linux: did not have the CAP_SYS_NICE capabil‐

ity). But see NOTES below.

ESRCH No process was located using the which and who values specified.

STANDARDS

POSIX.1-2001, POSIX.1-2008, SVr4, 4.4BSD (these interfaces first ap‐

peared in 4.2BSD).

NOTES

For further details on the nice value, see sched(7).

Note: the addition of the "autogroup" feature in Linux 2.6.38 means

that the nice value no longer has its traditional effect in many cir‐

cumstances. For details, see sched(7).

A child created by fork(2) inherits its parent's nice value. The nice

value is preserved across execve(2).

The details on the condition for EPERM depend on the system. The above

description is what POSIX.1-2001 says, and seems to be followed on all

System V-like systems. Linux kernels before Linux 2.6.12 required the

real or effective user ID of the caller to match the real user of the

process who (instead of its effective user ID). Linux 2.6.12 and later

require the effective user ID of the caller to match the real or effec‐

tive user ID of the process who. All BSD-like systems (SunOS 4.1.3,

Ultrix 4.2, 4.3BSD, FreeBSD 4.3, OpenBSD-2.5, ...) behave in the same

manner as Linux 2.6.12 and later.

C library/kernel differences

The getpriority system call returns nice values translated to the range

40..1, since a negative return value would be interpreted as an error.

The glibc wrapper function for getpriority() translates the value back

according to the formula unice = 20 - knice (thus, the 40..1 range re‐

turned by the kernel corresponds to the range -20..19 as seen by user

space).

BUGS

According to POSIX, the nice value is a per-process setting. However,

under the current Linux/NPTL implementation of POSIX threads, the nice

value is a per-thread attribute: different threads in the same process

can have different nice values. Portable applications should avoid re‐

lying on the Linux behavior, which may be made standards conformant in

the future.

SEE ALSO

nice(1), renice(1), fork(2), capabilities(7), sched(7)

Documentation/scheduler/sched-nice-design.txt in the Linux kernel

source tree (since Linux 2.6.23)

Linux man-pages 6.03 2022-12-04 getpriority(2)

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