8. niceness

Lesson Content

When you run multiple things on your computer, like perhaps Chrome, Microsoft Word or Photoshop at the same time, it may seem like these processes are running at the same time, but that isn’t quite true.

Processes use the CPU for a small amount of time called a time slice. Then they pause for milliseconds and another process gets a little time slice. By default, process scheduling happens in this round-robin fashion. Every process gets enough time slices until it’s finished processing. The kernel handles all of these switching of processes and it does a pretty good job at it most of the time.

Processes aren’t able to decide when and how long they get CPU time, if all processes behaved normally they would each (roughly) get an equal amount of CPU time. However, there is a way to influence the kernel’s process scheduling algorithm with a nice value. Niceness is a pretty weird name, but what it means is that processes have a number to determine their priority for the CPU. A high number means the process is nice and has a lower priority for the CPU and a low or negative number means the process is not very nice and it wants to get as much of the CPU as possible.

$ top

You can see a column for NI right now, that is the niceness level of a process.

To change the niceness level you can use the nice and renice commands:

$ nice -n 5 apt upgrade

The nice command is used to set priority for a new process. The renice command is used to set priority on an existing process.

$ renice 10 -p 3245

Exercise

What processes aren’t very nice and why?

Quiz Question

# If I want a process to get more CPU priority, do I use a lower or higher nice number? > The higher the number, the lower the priority. If you use zero, the process will run at its base scheduling priority. ProcessID is the PID for which you want to change the priority. You can also use the smit renice command to perform this task. 1. [ ] down 2. [ ] up 3. [ ] high 4. [x] lower