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priocntl(1)			 User Commands			   priocntl(1)

NAME
       priocntl	 - display or set scheduling parameters of specified processes
       and LWPs

SYNOPSIS
       priocntl -l

       priocntl -d [-i idtype] [idlist]

       priocntl -s [-c class] [class-specific options]
	    [-i idtype] [idlist]

       priocntl -e [-c class] [class-specific options] command
	    [argument(s)]

DESCRIPTION
       The priocntl command displays or	 sets  scheduling  parameters  of  the
       specified  processes  or LWPs.. It can also be used to display the cur‐
       rent configuration information for the system's	process	 scheduler  or
       execute a command with specified scheduling parameters.

       Processes  and LWPs fall into distinct classes with a separate schedul‐
       ing policy applied to each class. The classes currently	supported  are
       the  real-time class, time-sharing class, interactive class, fair-share
       class, and the fixed  priority  class.  The  characteristics  of	 these
       classes	and the class-specific options they accept are described below
       in the USAGE section under the headings Real-Time  Class,  Time-Sharing
       Class,  Inter-Active Class, Fair-Share Class, and Fixed-Priority Class.
       With appropriate permissions, the priocntl command can change the class
       and  other  scheduling  parameters associated with a running process or
       LWPs.

       In the default configuration, a runnable real-time process or LWP  runs
       before  any  other  process.  Therefore, inappropriate use of real-time
       processes or LWPs can have a dramatic negative impact on system perfor‐
       mance.

       If  an  idlist  is present, it must appear last on the command line and
       the elements of the list must be separated by white space. If no idlist
       is  present, an idtype argument of pid, ppid, pgid, sid, taskid, class,
       uid, gid, projid, or zoneid specifies the process  ID,  parent  process
       ID,  process  group  ID, session ID, task ID, class, user ID, group ID,
       project ID, or zone ID, respectively, of the priocntl command itself.

       The command

	 priocntl -d [-i idtype] [idlist]

       displays the class and  class-specific  scheduling  parameters  of  the
       process(es) specified by idtype and idlist.

       The command

	 priocntl -s [-c class] [class-specific options]\
	      [-i idtype] [idlist]

       sets the class and class-specific parameters of the specified processes
       or LWP to the values given on the command line.	The  -c	 class	option
       specifies  the  class  to be set. (The valid class arguments are RT for
       real-time, TS for time-sharing, IA  for	inter-active,  FSS  for	 fair-
       share, or FX for fixed-priority.)

       The class-specific parameters to be set are specified by the class-spe‐
       cific options as explained under the appropriate heading below. If  the
       -c  class  option  is  omitted, idtype and idlist must specify a set of
       processes or LWPs which are all in the same class, otherwise  an	 error
       results.	 If  no	 class-specific	 options  are specified, the process's
       class-specific parameters are set to the default values for  the	 class
       specified  by  -c  class	 (or  to  the default parameter values for the
       process's current class if the -c class option is also omitted).

       To change the scheduling parameters of a process or LWP using  priocntl
       the  real  or  effective	 user  ID  (respectively, groupID) of the user
       invoking priocntl must match the real or	 effective  user  ID  (respec‐
       tively, groupID) of the receiving process or LWP, or the effective user
       ID of the user must be super-user. These	 are  the  minimum  permission
       requirements  enforced  for all classes. An individual class can impose
       additional permissions requirements  when  setting  processes  to  that
       class or when setting class-specific scheduling parameters.

       When  idtype  and  idlist specify a set of processes, with or without a
       list of LWPs, priocntl acts on the processes in the set in an implemen‐
       tation-specific	order. If priocntl encounters an error for one or more
       of the target processes, it can or cannot continue through the  set  of
       processes, depending on the nature of the error.

       If  the	error is related to permissions, priocntl prints an error mes‐
       sage and then continues through the process set, resetting the  parame‐
       ters  for  all target processes for which the user has appropriate per‐
       missions. If priocntl encounters an error other	than  permissions,  it
       does  not  continue through the process set but prints an error message
       and exits immediately.

       A special sys scheduling class exists for the purpose of scheduling the
       execution  of  certain  special	system	processes (such as the swapper
       process). It is not possible to change the class of any process to sys.
       In  addition, any processes or LWPs in the sys class that are specified
       by idtype and idlist are	 disregarded  by  priocntl.  For  example,  if
       idtype  were uid, an idlist consisting of a zero would specify all pro‐
       cesses with a UID of 0, except processes	 in  the  sys  class  and  (if
       changing the parameters using the -s option) the init process.

       The  init  process  (process  ID 1) is a special case. In order for the
       priocntl command to change the class or other scheduling parameters  of
       the init process, idtype must be pid and idlist must be consist of only
       a 1. The init process can be assigned to any class  configured  on  the
       system,	but  the  time-sharing	class is almost always the appropriate
       choice. Other choices can be highly  undesirable;  see  the   for  more
       information.

       The command

	 priocntl -e [-c class] [class-specific options] command\
	      [argument...]

       executes the specified command with the class and scheduling parameters
       specified on the command line (arguments are the arguments to the  com‐
       mand).  If  the	-c  class  option is omitted the command is run in the
       user's current class.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -c class	    Specifies the class to be set. (The valid class  arguments
		    are	 RT  for real-time, TS for time-sharing, IA for inter-
		    active, FSS for fair-share, or FX for fixed-priority.)  If
		    the specified class is not already configured, it is auto‐
		    matically configured.

       -d	    Displays the scheduling parameters associated with	a  set
		    of processes.

       -e	    Executes a specified command with the class and scheduling
		    parameters associated with a set of processes.

       -i idtype    This option, together with the idlist arguments (if	 any),
		    specifies  one or more processes or LWPs to which the pri‐
		    ocntl command is to apply. The  interpretation  of	idlist
		    depends on the value of idtype. If the -i idtype option is
		    omitted when using the -d or -s options the default idtype
		    of pid is assumed.

		    The	 valid	idtype arguments and corresponding interpreta‐
		    tions of idlist are as follows:

		    -i all	    The priocntl command applies to all exist‐
				    ing	 processes. No idlist should be speci‐
				    fied (if one is specified, it is ignored).
				    The	  permission   restrictions  described
				    below still apply.

		    -i ctid	    idlist is a list of process contract  IDs.
				    The	 priocntl  command applies to all pro‐
				    cesses with a process contract ID equal to
				    an ID from the list.

		    -i class	    idlist consists of a single class name (RT
				    for real-time, TS for time-sharing, IA for
				    inter-active,  FSS	for  fair-share, or FX
				    for fixed-priority). The priocntl  command
				    applies  to all processes in the specified
				    class.

		    -i gid	    idlist is a list of group IDs. The	prioc‐
				    ntl	 command applies to all processes with
				    an effective group ID equal to an ID  from
				    the list.

		    -i pgid	    idlist is a list of process group IDs. The
				    priocntl command applies to all  processes
				    in the specified process groups.

		    -i pid[/lwp]    idlist is a list of process IDs, possitble
				    followed by a list	of  LWPs  (lightweight
				    processes).	 The  priocntl command applies
				    to the specified processes and LWPs.

		    -i ppid	    idlist is a list of	 parent	 process  IDs.
				    The	 priocntl  command applies to all pro‐
				    cesses whose parent process ID is  in  the
				    list.

		    -i projid	    idlist  is a list of project IDs. The pri‐
				    ocntl command  applies  to	all  processes
				    with  an  effective project ID equal to an
				    ID from the list.

		    -i sid	    idlist is a list of session IDs. The  pri‐
				    ocntl  command applies to all processes in
				    the specified sessions.

		    -i taskid	    idlist is a list of task IDs. The priocntl
				    command  applies  to  all processes in the
				    specified tasks.

		    -i uid	    idlist is a list of user IDs. The priocntl
				    command  applies  to all processes with an
				    effective user ID equal to an ID from  the
				    list.

		    -i zoneid	    idlist is a list of zone IDs. The priocntl
				    command applies to all processes  with  an
				    effective  zone ID equal to an ID from the
				    list.

       -l	    Displays a list of the classes currently configured in the
		    system  along  with	 class-specific information about each
		    class. The format of the class-specific  information  dis‐
		    played is described under USAGE.

       -s	    Sets  the  scheduling  parameters associated with a set of
		    processes.

       The valid class-specific options for setting real-time parameters are:

       -p rtpri		    Sets the real-time priority of the specified  pro‐
			    cesses and LWPs to rtpri.

       -t tqntm [-r res]    Sets the time quantum of the specified process(es)
			    to tqntm. You can optionally specify a  resolution
			    as explained below.

       -q tqsig		    Sets  the  real-time  time	quantum	 signal of the
			    specified processes and LWPs to tqsig.

       The valid class-specific options for  setting  time-sharing  parameters
       are:

       -m tsuprilim    Sets the user priority limit of the specified processes
		       and LWPs to tsuprilim.

       -p tsupri       Sets the user priority of the specified	processes  and
		       LWPs to tsupri.

       The  valid  class-specific  options for setting inter-active parameters
       are:

       -m iauprilim    Sets the user priority limit of the specified processes
		       and LWPs to iauprilim.

       -p iaupri       Sets  the  user priority of the specified processes and
		       LWPs to iaupri.

       The valid class-specific options for setting fair-share parameters are:

       -m fssuprilim	Sets the user priority limit  of  the  specified  pro‐
			cesses and LWPs to fssuprilim.

       -p fssupri	Sets  the user priority of the specified processes and
			LWPs to fssupri.

       The valid class-specific options for setting fixed-priority  parameters
       are:

       -m fxuprilim    Sets the user priority limit of the specified processes
		       and LWPs to fxuprilim.

       -p fxupri       Sets the user priority of the specified	processes  and
		       LWPs to fxupri.

       -t tqntm	       [-r  res]  Sets	the time quantum of the specified pro‐
		       cesses and LWPs to tqntm. You can optionally specify  a
		       resolution as explained below.

USAGE
   Real-Time Class
       The  real-time  class  provides	a fixed priority preemptive scheduling
       policy for those processes requiring fast  and  deterministic  response
       and  absolute user/application control of scheduling priorities. If the
       real-time class is configured in the system, it should  have  exclusive
       control	of  the	 highest range of scheduling priorities on the system.
       This ensures that a runnable real-time process  is  given  CPU  service
       before any process belonging to any other class.

       The  real-time  class  has a range of real-time priority (rtpri) values
       that can be assigned to processes within the class.  Real-time  priori‐
       ties range from 0 to x, where the value of x is configurable and can be
       displayed for a specific installation that  has	already	 configured  a
       real-time scheduler, by using the command

	 priocntl -l

       The  real-time scheduling policy is a fixed priority policy. The sched‐
       uling priority of a real-time  process  never  changes  except  as  the
       result  of  an  explicit	 request by the user/application to change the
       rtpri value of the process.

       For processes in the real-time class, the rtpri value is, for all prac‐
       tical  purposes,	 equivalent to the scheduling priority of the process.
       The rtpri value completely determines  the  scheduling  priority	 of  a
       real-time process relative to other processes within its class. Numeri‐
       cally higher rtpri values represent higher priorities. Since the	 real-
       time  class  controls the highest range of scheduling priorities in the
       system, it is guaranteed that the runnable real-time process  with  the
       highest	rtpri value is always selected to run before any other process
       in the system.

       In addition to providing control over priority, priocntl	 provides  for
       control	over  the  length of the time quantum allotted to processes in
       the real-time class. The	 time  quantum	value  specifies  the  maximum
       amount of time a process can run, assuming that it does not complete or
       enter a resource or event wait state (sleep). Notice  that  if  another
       process	becomes	 runnable  at a higher priority, the currently running
       process can be preempted before receiving its full time quantum.

       The command

	 priocntl -d [-i idtype] [idlist]

       displays the real-time priority, time quantum (in  millisecond  resolu‐
       tion),  and time quantum signal value for each real-time process in the
       set specified by idtype and idlist.

       Any combination of the -p, -t [-r], and -q options  can	be  used  with
       priocntl	 -s  or	 priocntl  -e for the real-time class. If an option is
       omitted and the process is currently real-time, the associated  parame‐
       ter is unaffected. If an option is omitted when changing the class of a
       process to real-time from some other class, the associated parameter is
       set  to	a  default  value.  The	 default  value for rtpri is 0 and the
       default for time quantum is dependent on the value of rtpri and on  the
       system configuration; see rt_dptbl(4).

       When using the -t tqntm option, you can optionally specify a resolution
       using the -r res option. (If no resolution  is  specified,  millisecond
       resolution  is  assumed.)  If  res  is specified, it must be a positive
       integer between 1 and 1,000,000,000 inclusively and the resolution used
       is  the	reciprocal of res in seconds. For example, specifying -t 10 -r
       100 would set the resolution to hundredths of a second and the  result‐
       ing  time  quantum  length would be 10/100 seconds (one tenth of a sec‐
       ond). Although very fine (nanosecond) resolution can be specified,  the
       time  quantum  length  is rounded up by the system to the next integral
       multiple	 of the system clock's resolution. Requests for time  quantums
       of zero or quantums greater than the (typically very large) implementa‐
       tion-specific maximum quantum result in an error.

       The real-time time quantum signal can be used to notify	runaway	 real-
       time  processes about the consumption of their time quantum. Those pro‐
       cesses, which are monitored  by	the  real-time	time  quantum  signal,
       receive	the configured signal in the event of time quantum expiration.
       The default value (0) of the time quantum signal tqsig denotes no  sig‐
       nal delivery. A positive value denotes the delivery of the signal spec‐
       ified by the value. Like kill(1) and other commands operating  on  sig‐
       nals,  the  -q  tqsig  option is also able to handle symbolically named
       signals, like XCPU or KILL.

       In order to change the class of a process to real-time (from any	 other
       class),	the  user invoking priocntl must have super-user privilege. In
       order to change the rtpri value or time quantum of a real-time process,
       the user invoking priocntl must either be super-user, or must currently
       be in the real-time class (shell running as a real-time process) with a
       real or effective user ID matching the real or effective user ID of the
       target process.

       The real-time priority, time  quantum,  and  time  quantum  signal  are
       inherited  across  the fork(2) and exec(2) system calls. When using the
       time quantum signal with a  user	 defined  signal  handler  across  the
       exec(2)	system	call,  the  new image must install an appropriate user
       defined signal handler before  the  time	 quantum  expires.  Otherwise,
       unpredicable behavior would result.

   Time-Sharing Class
       The  time-sharing  scheduling  policy provides for a fair and effective
       allocation of the CPU resource among processes with  varying  CPU  con‐
       sumption characteristics. The objectives of the time-sharing policy are
       to provide  good	 response  time	 to  interactive  processes  and  good
       throughput to CPU-bound jobs, while providing a degree of user/applica‐
       tion control over scheduling.

       The time-sharing class  has  a  range  of  time-sharing	user  priority
       (tsupri)	 values	 that  can  be assigned to processes within the class.
       User priorities range from −x to +x, where the value of	x  is  config‐
       urable. The range for a specific installation can be displayed by using
       the command

	 priocntl -l

       The purpose  of	the  user  priority  is	 to  provide  some  degree  of
       user/application	 control over the scheduling of processes in the time-
       sharing class. Raising or lowering the tsupri value of a process in the
       time-sharing  class  raises  or	lowers	the scheduling priority of the
       process. It is not guaranteed, however,	that  a	 time-sharing  process
       with  a	higher tsupri value runs before one with a lower tsupri value.
       This is because the tsupri value is just one factor used	 to  determine
       the  scheduling	priority  of  a	 time-sharing  process. The system can
       dynamically adjust the internal scheduling priority of  a  time-sharing
       process based on other factors such as recent CPU usage.

       In  addition to the system-wide limits on user priority (displayed with
       priocntl -l), there is a per process user priority  limit  (tsuprilim),
       which  specifies	 the  maximum tsupri value that can be set for a given
       process.

       The command

	 priocntl -d [-i idtype] [idlist]

       displays the user priority and user priority limit for each  time-shar‐
       ing process in the set specified by idtype and idlist.

       Any  time-sharing  process  can	lower  its  own	 tsuprilim (or that of
       another process with the same user ID).	Only  a	 time-sharing  process
       with  super-user	 privilege  can	 raise	a tsuprilim. When changing the
       class of a process to time-sharing from some  other  class,  super-user
       privilege  is required in order to set the initial tsuprilim to a value
       greater than zero.

       Any time-sharing process can set its own tsupri	(or  that  of  another
       process	with  the same user ID) to any value less than or equal to the
       process's tsuprilim. Attempts to set the	 tsupri	 above	the  tsuprilim
       (and/or	set the tsuprilim below the tsupri) result in the tsupri being
       set equal to the tsuprilim.

       Any combination of the -m and -p options can be used with  priocntl  -s
       or  priocntl -e for the time-sharing class. If an option is omitted and
       the process is currently time-sharing, the associated parameter is nor‐
       mally unaffected. The exception is when the -p option is omitted and -m
       is used to set a tsuprilim below the current tsupri. In this case,  the
       tsupri  is  set equal to the tsuprilim which is being set. If an option
       is omitted when changing the class of a process	to  time-sharing  from
       some  other  class, the associated parameter is set to a default value.
       The default value for tsuprilim is 0 and the default for tsupri	is  to
       set it equal to the tsuprilim value which is being set.

       The  time-sharing  user	priority and user priority limit are inherited
       across the fork(2) and exec(2) system calls.

   Inter-Active Class
       The inter-active scheduling policy provides for a  fair	and  effective
       allocation  of  the  CPU resource among processes with varying CPU con‐
       sumption characteristics while providing good responsiveness  for  user
       interaction.  The  objectives of the inter-active policy are to provide
       good response time to interactive processes and good throughput to CPU-
       bound  jobs.  The priorities of processes in the inter-active class can
       be changed in the same manner  as  those	 in  the  time-sharing	class,
       though  the modified priorities continue to be adjusted to provide good
       responsiveness for user interaction.

       The inter-active user priority limit, iaupri, is equivalent to  tsupri.
       The inter-active per process user priority, iauprilim, is equivalent to
       tsuprilim.

       Inter-active class processes that have the iamode ("interactive	mode")
       bit  set are given a priority boost value of 10, which is factored into
       the user mode priority of the process when that	calculation  is	 made,
       that  is,  every time a process's priority is adjusted. This feature is
       used by the X windowing system, which sets this bit for those processes
       that run inside of the current active window to give them a higher pri‐
       ority.

   Fair-Share Class
       The fair-share scheduling policy provides a fair allocation  of	system
       CPU  resources  among  projects, independent of the number of processes
       they own. Projects are given "shares" to control their  entitlement  to
       CPU resources. Resource usage is remembered over time, so that entitle‐
       ment is reduced	for heavy usage, and increased for light  usage,  with
       respect	to  other  projects.  CPU  time	 is  scheduled among processes
       according to their owner's entitlements, independent of the  number  of
       processes each project owns.

       The FSS scheduling class supports the notion of per-process user prior‐
       ity and user priority  limit  for  compatibility	 with  the  time-share
       scheduler.  The	fair  share  scheduler	attempts  to provide an evenly
       graded effect across the whole range of user priorities. Processes with
       positive	 fssupri  values receive time slices less frequently than nor‐
       mal,  while negative nice processes  receive  time  slices  more	  fre‐
       quently than normal.  Notice that user priorities do not interfere with
       shares. That is, changing a fssupri value of a process is not going  to
       affect its project's overall CPU usage which only relates to the amount
       of shares it is allocated compared to other projects.

       The priorities of processes in the fair-share class can be  changed  in
       the same manner as those in the time-share class.

   Fixed-Priority Class
       The  fixed-priority class provides a fixed priority preemptive schedul‐
       ing policy for those processes requiring that the scheduling priorities
       do  not get dynamically adjusted by the system and that the user/appli‐
       cation have control of the scheduling priorities.

       The fixed-priority class shares the same range of scheduling priorities
       with the time-sharing class, by default. The fixed-priority class has a
       range of fixed-priority user  priority  (fxupri)	 values	 that  can  be
       assigned to processes within the class. User priorities range from 0 to
       x, where the value of x is  configurable.  The  range  for  a  specific
       installation can be displayed by using the command

	 priocntl -l

       The purpose of the user priority is to provide user/application control
       over the scheduling of processes in the fixed-priority class. For  pro‐
       cesses  in the fixed-priority class, the fxupri value is, for all prac‐
       tical purposes, equivalent  to the scheduling priority of the  process.
       The  fxupri  value  completely  determines the scheduling priority of a
       fixed-priority process relative to other processes  within  its	class.
       Numerically higher fxupri values represent higher priorities.

       In  addition to the system-wide limits on user priority (displayed with
       priocntl	 -l), there is a per process user priority  limit (fxuprilim),
       which  specifies	 the  maximum fxupri value that can be set for a given
       process.

       Any fixed-priority process can lower its	 own  fxuprilim	 (or  that  of
       another	process with the same user ID). Only a process with super-user
       privilege can raise a fxuprilim. When changing the class of  a  process
       to  fixed-priority  from	 some  other  class,  super-user  privilege is
       required in order to set the initial fxuprilim to a value greater  than
       zero.

       Any  fixed-priority  process can set its own fxupri (or that of another
       process with the same user ID) to any value less than or equal  to  the
       process's fxuprilim. Attempts to set the fxupri above the fxuprilim (or
       set the fxuprilim below the fxupri) result  in  the  fxupri  being  set
       equal to the fxuprilim.

       In  addition  to providing control over priority, priocntl provides for
       control over the length of the time quantum allotted  to	 processes  in
       the  fixed-priority class. The time quantum value specifies the maximum
       amount of time a process can run, before surrendering the CPU, assuming
       that  it	 does  not  complete  or  enter a resource or event wait state
       (sleep). Notice that if another process becomes runnable	 at  a	higher
       priority, the currently running process can be preempted before receiv‐
       ing its full time quantum.

       Any combination of the -m, -p, and -t options can be used with priocntl
       -s or priocntl -e for the fixed-priority class. If an option is omitted
       and the process is currently fixed-priority, the	 associated  parameter
       is  normally unaffected. The exception is when the -p option is omitted
       and the -m option is used to set a fxuprilim below the current  fxupri.
       In  this	 case, the fxupri is set equal to the fxuprilim which is being
       set. If an option is omitted when changing the class of	a  process  to
       fixed-priority  from  some other class, the associated parameter is set
       to a default value. The default value for fxuprilim is 0.  The  default
       for  fxupri  is	to  set it equal to the fxuprilim value which is being
       set. The default for time quantum is dependent on the fxupri and on the
       system configuration. See fx_dptbl( 4).

       The  time  quantum of processes in the fixed-priority class	can be
       changed in the same manner as those in the real-time class.

       The fixed-priority user priority, user priority limit, and time quantum
       are inherited across the fork(2) and exec(2) system calls.

EXAMPLES
       The following are real-time class examples:

       Example 1 Setting the Class

       The  following  example	sets  the class of any non-real-time processes
       selected by idtype and idlist to real-time  and	sets  their  real-time
       priority	 to  the  default  value of 0. The real-time priorities of any
       processes currently in the real-time class  are	unaffected.  The  time
       quantums of all of the specified processes are set to 1/10 seconds.

	 example% priocntl -s -c RT -t 1 -r 10 -i idtype idlist

       Example 2 Executing a Command in Real-time

       The  following  example	executes command in the real-time class with a
       real-time priority of 15 and a time quantum of 20 milliseconds:

	 example% priocntl -e -c RT -p 15 -t 20 command

       Example 3 Executing a Command in Real-time  with	 a  Specified  Quantum
       Signal

       The  following  example	executes command in the real-time class with a
       real-time priority of 11, a time quantum of 250 milliseconds, and where
       the specified real-time quantum signal is SIGXCPU:

	 example% priocntl -e -c RT -p 11 -t 250 -q XCPU command

       The following are time-sharing class examples:

       Example 4 Setting the Class of non-time-sharing Processes

       The  following example sets the class of any non-time-sharing processes
       selected by idtype and idlist to time-sharing and sets both their  user
       priority	 limit	and user priority to 0. Processes already in the time-
       sharing class are unaffected.

	 example% priocntl -s -c TS -i idtype idlist

       Example 5 Executing a Command in the Time-sharing Class

       The following example executes command with the arguments arguments  in
       the  time-sharing class with a user priority limit of 0 and a user pri‐
       ority of −15:

	 example% priocntl -e -c TS -m 0 -p -15 command [arguments]

       Example 6 Executing a Command in Fixed-Priority Class

       The following example executes a command in the	fixed-priority	 class
       with a user priority limit of 20 and user priority of 10 and time quan‐
       tum of 250 milliseconds:

	 example% priocntl -e -c FX -m 20 -p 10 -t 250 command

       Example 7 Changing the Priority of a Specific LWP

       The following example sets the user priority limit of 20 and user  pri‐
       ority of 15 for the LWP 5 in process 500:

	 example% priocntl -s -m 20 -p 15 500/5

EXIT STATUS
       The following exit values are returned:

       For options -d, -l, and -s:

       0    Successful operation.

       1    Error condition.

       For option -e:

       Return  of  the	Exit Status of the executed command denotes successful
       operation. Otherwise,

       1    Command could not be executed at the specified priority.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │SUNWcsu			   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │CSI			     │Enabled			   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       kill(1), nice(1), ps(1), dispadmin(1M), exec(2), fork(2),  priocntl(2),
       fx_dptbl(4), process(4), rt_dptbl(4), attributes(5), zones(5), FSS(7)

DIAGNOSTICS
       priocntl prints the following error messages:

       Process(es) not found

	   None of the specified processes exists.

       Specified processes from different classes

	   The	-s option is being used to set parameters, the -c class option
	   is not present, and processes from more than one class  are	speci‐
	   fied.

       Invalid option or argument

	   An unrecognized or invalid option or option argument is used.

SunOS 5.10			  1 May 2011			   priocntl(1)
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