Logo Questions Linux Laravel Mysql Ubuntu Git Menu
 

is nice() used to change the thread priority or the process priority?

Tags:

The man page for nice says "nice() adds inc to the nice value for the calling process. So, can we use it to change the nice value for a thread created by pthread_create?

EDIT: It seems that we can set the nice value per thread.

I wrote an application, setting different nice values for different threads, and observed that the "nicer" thread has been scheduled with lower priority. Checking the output, I found that the string "high priority ................" gets outputted more frequently.

void * thread_function1(void *arg) {   const pid_t tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);    int ret = setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, tid, -10);   printf("tid of high priority thread %d , %d\n", tid ,getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, tid));   while(1)   {     printf("high priority ................\n");   } }   void * thread_function(void *arg) {   const pid_t tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);   int ret = setpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, tid, 10);   printf("tid of low priority thread %d , %d \n", tid ,getpriority(PRIO_PROCESS, tid));   while(1)   {     printf("lower priority\n");   } }   int main() {   pthread_t id1;   pthread_t id2;    pid_t pid = getpid();   pid_t tid = syscall(SYS_gettid);    printf("main thread : pid = %d , tid = %d \n" , pid, tid);   pthread_create(&id1, NULL, thread_function1,  NULL);   pthread_create(&id2, NULL,thread_function,   NULL);    pthread_join(id1, NULL);   pthread_join(id2, NULL); } 
like image 267
pierrotlefou Avatar asked Oct 07 '11 07:10

pierrotlefou


1 Answers

The pthreads man page says:

POSIX.1 also requires that threads share a range of other attributes (i.e., these attributes are process-wide rather than per-thread):

[...]

  • nice value (setpriority(2))

So, theoretically, the "niceness" value is global to the process and shared by all threads, and you should not be able to set a specific niceness for one or more individual threads.

However, the very same man page also says:

LinuxThreads

The notable features of this implementation are the following:

[...]

  • Threads do not share a common nice value.

NPTL

[...]

NPTL still has a few non-conformances with POSIX.1:

  • Threads do not share a common nice value.

So it turns out that both threading implementations on Linux (LinuxThreads and NPTL) actually violate POSIX.1, and you can set a specific niceness for one or more individual threads by passing a tid to setpriority() on these systems.

like image 115
Frédéric Hamidi Avatar answered Sep 30 '22 19:09

Frédéric Hamidi