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Re: nice not setting above/below normal
- From: Brian Dessent <brian at dessent dot net>
- To: 'cygwin-list' <cygwin at cygwin dot com>
- Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 05:42:38 -0700
- Subject: Re: nice not setting above/below normal
- Organization: My own little world...
- References: <1981E79C7C98A547B36D794FBEC5337002967DF6@MOSCNTX1>
- Reply-to: cygwin at cygwin dot com
"Mironov, Leonid {PBG}" wrote:
> If I am to believe windows task manager windows processes can have 6
> priority levels - realtime, high, above normal, normal, below normal and
> low, but cygwin nice can set only 2: when -n parameter is above 0 priority
> is set to low, when -n is below 0 priority is set to high, actual value of
> -n parameter is ignored. Am I missing something or ...?
>
> windows XP SP1, nice 2.0.15 (sh-utuils 2.0.15.4)
I don't know about 'nice', but Windows actually has 32 priority levels.
Priority 0 is reserved for the system idle process, and 16-31 are
reserved for real-time processes. The remaining range 1-15 are the
regular (dynamic) priorities that most processes run with. In reality
you don't set the priority directly this way, rather you choose a
priority class (realtime, high, normal, idle; corresponding to 24, 13,
8, 4) and then a modifier (highest, above normal, normal, below normal,
lowest; corresponding to +2, +1, 0, -1, -2).
Thus the priorities you see in taskman consist of the four base classes,
and the +2 and -2 variants of 'normal', thus: idle (4), below normal
(6), normal (8), above normal (10), high (13), and realtime (24).
Brian
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