[Buildroot] nice() seems to have stopped working?
Bernhard Fischer
rep.nop at aon.at
Wed Oct 18 20:35:12 UTC 2006
On Wed, Oct 18, 2006 at 01:09:30PM -0500, David Lambert wrote:
>Since moving to this distribution, I notice that some of my programs
>that use nice() give errors when attempting to raise their priorities.
>In order to try and nail this down I wrote the following trivial program:
>
>#include <stdio.h>
>#include <stdlib.h>
>#include <string.h>
>#include <unistd.h>
>
>int main(int ac, char *av[])
>{
> int n = atoi(av[1]);
> printf("Trying nice(%d)\n", n);
> if (nice(n) < 0) { /* Attempt to change priority */
> perror("Nice failed to change priority");
> }
> else {
> printf("Success\n");
> }
> return 0;
>}
>
>
>Running this program as root provides the following output:
>
>/ # whoami
>root
>/ # niceTest 0
>Trying nice(0)
>Success
>/ # niceTest 1
>Trying nice(1)
>Success
>/ # niceTest -1
>Trying nice(-1)
>Nice failed to change priority: Success
>/ #
>
>Has anyone else experience this behavior?
>
>Best regards,
>
>Dave.
hm?
See man 2 nice
[snip]
NOTES
SUSv2 and POSIX.1-2001 specify that nice() should return the new nice
value. However, the Linux syscall and the nice() library function pro-
vided in older versions of (g)libc (earlier than glibc 2.2.4) return 0
on success. The new nice value can be found using getpriority(2).
Since glibc 2.2.4, nice() is implemented as a library function that
calls getpriority(2) to obtain the new nice value to be returned to the
caller. With this implementation, a successful call can legitimately
return -1. To reliably detect an error, set errno to 0 before the
call, and check its value when nice() returns -1.
PS: See uClibc/libc/sysdeps/linux/common/nice.c for the gory details.
HTH,
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