03-02-2013
Determining Values for NIce and Priority items in limits.conf file
I've been looking online trying to find the correct value nice and priority can take in the limits.conf file. ON the man page it says;
Quote:
Priority - the priority to run user process with (negative values boost priority)
Does this mean priority can be any negative number and any positive?
Then
Quote:
Nice - maximum nice priority allowed to raise to (Linux 2.6.12 or higher) values: [-20, 19]
Does this mean any number between -20 and 19 also what does the definition of nice mean when it mentions Linux 2.6.12 or higher? Does the definition mean you can only set the nice value if you have Linux 2.6.12 or higher?
Sorry if this seems straight forward. I am just a little stuck on these two.
Moderator's Comments:
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edit by bakunin: as this has seemingly nothing to do with "Shell Programming and Scripting" i am going to transfer this thread to the Linux forum. You might consider editing in your OS and version so that we can help you more specifically.
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Last edited by bakunin; 03-02-2013 at 12:19 PM..
Reason: missing a word
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NICE(1) BSD General Commands Manual NICE(1)
NAME
nice -- execute a utility with an altered scheduling priority
SYNOPSIS
nice [-n increment] utility [argument ...]
DESCRIPTION
nice runs utility at an altered scheduling priority. If an increment is given, it is used; otherwise an increment of 10 is assumed. The
super-user can run utilities with priorities higher than normal by using a negative increment. The priority can be adjusted over a range of
-20 (the highest) to 20 (the lowest). A priority of 19 or 20 will prevent a process from taking any cycles from others at nice 0 or better.
Available options:
-n increment
A positive or negative decimal integer used to modify the system scheduling priority of utility.
EXIT STATUS
The nice utility exits with one of the following values:
1-125 An error occurred in the nice utility.
126 The utility was found but could not be invoked.
127 The utility could not be found.
Otherwise, the exit status of nice will be that of utility.
COMPATIBILITY
The historic -increment option has been deprecated but is still supported in this implementation.
SEE ALSO
csh(1), getpriority(2), setpriority(2), renice(8)
STANDARDS
The nice utility conforms to IEEE Std 1003.2-1992 (``POSIX.2'').
HISTORY
A nice utility appeared in Version 6 AT&T UNIX.
BUGS
nice is built into csh(1) with a slightly different syntax than described here. The form 'nice +10' nices to positive nice, and 'nice -10'
can be used by the super-user to give a process more of the processor.
BSD
June 6, 1993 BSD