xref: /original-bsd/usr.bin/nice/nice.1 (revision ea3a8ee8)
1.\" Copyright (c) 1980, 1990 The Regents of the University of California.
2.\" All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\"
5.\" %sccs.include.redist.roff%
6.\"
7.\"	@(#)nice.1	6.7 (Berkeley) 07/24/91
8.\"
9.Dd
10.Dt NICE 1
11.Os BSD 4
12.Sh NAME
13.Nm nice
14.Nd execute a command at a low scheduling priority
15.Sh SYNOPSIS
16.Nm nice
17.Op Fl Ns Ar number
18.Ar command
19.Op Ar arguments
20.Sh DESCRIPTION
21.Nm Nice
22runs
23.Ar command
24at a low priority.
25(Think of low and slow).
26If
27.Fl Ns Ar number
28is specified, and if it is greater than or equal
29to 10 (the default),
30.Nm nice
31will execute
32.Ar command
33at that priority.
34The upper bound, or lowest priority that
35.Nm nice
36will run a command is 20.
37The lower bounds or
38higher priorities (integers less than 10)
39can only be requested by the super-user.
40Negative numbers are expressed as
41.Fl - Ns Ar number .
42.Pp
43The returned exit status is the exit value from the
44command executed by
45.Nm nice .
46.Sh SEE ALSO
47.Xr csh 1 ,
48.Xr renice 8
49.Sh HISTORY
50A
51.Nm nice
52command appeared in
53.At v6 .
54.Sh BUGS
55.Nm Nice
56is particular to
57.Xr sh  1  .
58If you use
59.Xr csh  1  ,
60then commands executed with ``&'' are automatically immune to hangup
61signals while in the background.
62.Pp
63.Nm Nice
64is built into
65.Xr csh  1
66with a slightly different syntax than described here.  The form
67.Ql nice +10
68nices to positive nice, and
69.Ql nice \-10
70can be used
71by the super-user to give a process more of the processor.
72