nice(3C) — C LIBRARY FUNCTIONS
NAME
nice − change priority of a process
SYNOPSIS
/usr/ucb/cc [ flag. . . ] file . . .
int nice(incr)
int incr;
DESCRIPTION
The scheduling priority of the process is augmented by incr. Positive priorities get less service than normal. Priority 10 is recommended to users who wish to execute long-running programs without undue impact on system performance.
Negative increments are illegal, except when specified by the privileged user. The priority is limited to the range −20 (most urgent) to 20 (least). Requests for values above or below these limits result in the scheduling priority being set to the corresponding limit.
The priority of a process is passed to a child process by fork(2). For a privileged process to return to normal priority from an unknown state, nice should be called successively with arguments −40 (goes to priority −20 because of truncation), 20 (to get to 0), then 0 (to maintain compatibility with previous versions of this call).
RETURN VALUE
Upon successful completion, nice returns 0. Otherwise, a value of −1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
ERRORS
The priority is not changed if:
EACCES The value of incr specified was negative, and the effective user ID is not the privileged user.
SEE ALSO
nice(1), renice(1M), priocntl(2), fork(2), getpriority(2), priocntl(2).
— BSD Compatibility Package