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Full Discussion: top and nice
Operating Systems HP-UX top and nice Post 302163768 by CBorgia on Saturday 2nd of February 2008 10:09:05 AM
Old 02-02-2008
Thanks Perderabo,

I'm not explicitly using nice or renice. The bulk of the processes running on the two boxes are identical. These processes saturate the CPU, its a batch machine, if the batch job is not running the machine is idle. The set of processes on a machine make up a single job, if one of the processes is niced out to let another run then the overall job should run in the same time (minus some time for swapping tasks around). However, with the same processes and the same load, one machine displays a lot of nice activity in top, the other doesn't ever show nice above 0%, and these runs last many hours or days at 100% CPU. The machine without nice activity finishes its 50% share of the load well before the other does. I'm not sure what is meant by "copy the good one to the bad one".
 

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NICE(1) 						    BSD General Commands Manual 						   NICE(1)

NAME
nice -- execute a utility at an altered scheduling priority SYNOPSIS
nice [-n increment] utility [argument ...] DESCRIPTION
The nice utility runs utility at an altered scheduling priority, by incrementing its ``nice'' value by the specified increment, or a default value of 10. The lower the nice value of a process, the higher its scheduling priority. The superuser may specify a negative increment in order to run a utility with a higher scheduling priority. Some shells may provide a builtin nice command which is similar or identical to this utility. Consult the builtin(1) manual page. ENVIRONMENT
The PATH environment variable is used to locate the requested utility if the name contains no '/' characters. EXIT STATUS
If utility is invoked, the exit status of nice is the exit status of utility. An exit status of 126 indicates utility was found, but could not be executed. An exit status of 127 indicates utility could not be found. EXAMPLES
Execute utility 'date' at priority 5 assuming the priority of the shell is 0: nice -n 5 date Execute utility 'date' at priority -19 assuming the priority of the shell is 0 and you are the super-user: nice -n 16 nice -n -35 date COMPATIBILITY
The traditional -increment option has been deprecated but is still supported. SEE ALSO
builtin(1), csh(1), idprio(1), rtprio(1), getpriority(2), setpriority(2), renice(8) STANDARDS
The nice utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1''). HISTORY
A nice utility appeared in Version 4 AT&T UNIX. BSD
February 24, 2011 BSD
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