05-18-2012
With AIX-LPAR and all, your's must be a very big and so procedure oriented organisation. So you really have two approaches. One described earlier. ie. Do but dont tell anyone, take care etc.
The other : talk about it to end users, see how you can repeat it again for their benefit. ie. see to it that you become the end users' goto person for problem resolution. Then with your favourite user, try to wangle a seat in a meeting with the authorised vendor and so on. spread your wings man (or woman).
For your information, a recent article I read says that in future more and more IT persons will be away from core IT departments and get embedded in end user departments as co-ordinators, implementors and so on. As and when this happens in your organisation (ie downsizing, out sourcing) you can make the jump.
OK
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nice(3) Library Functions Manual nice(3)
Name
nice - set program priority
Syntax
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 flack from the administration.
Negative increments are ignored except on behalf of the super-user. The priority is limited to the range -20 (most urgent) to 20 (least).
The priority of a process is passed to a child process by For a privileged process to return to normal priority from an unknown state,
should be called successively with arguments -40 (goes to priority -20 because of truncation), 20 (to get to 0), then 0 (to maintain com-
patibility with previous versions of this call).
Environment
In any mode, nice returns -1 and sets on an error. On success, the return value depends on the mode in which your program was compiled.
In POSIX or System V mode, it is the new priority; otherwise, it is zero. Note that, in POSIX and System V mode, -1 can indicate either
success or failure; must be used to determine which.
See Also
nice(1), fork(2), setpriority(2), renice(8)
nice(3)