(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
proc_nice — 修改当前进程的优先级
proc_nice() 修改当前进程的优先级,
修改量由 priority 参数指定。
priority 为正数会降低当前进程优先级,
反之,为负数会提高优先级。
proc_nice() 和 proc_open() 函数以及和 proc_open() 相关的函数并无什么关系。
priority新的优先级值,具体的设定取决于所运行的平台。
在 Unix 系统上,较小的值表示较高的优先级,例如:-20,
而正数值表示更低的优先级。
在 Windows 平台上,priority 参数
的含义如下:
| 优先级 | 可能的值 |
|---|---|
| 高优先级 |
priority < -9
|
| 较高优先级 |
priority < -4
|
| 正常优先级 |
priority < 5 &
priority > -5
|
| 较低优先级 |
priority > 5
|
| 低优先级 |
priority > 9
|
| 版本 | 说明 |
|---|---|
| 7.2.0 | 在 Windows 平台上可用。 |
注意: 可用性
仅在具有 'nice' 能力的系统上才可以使用 proc_nice() 函数。 下列系统含有 'nice':SVr4, SVID EXT, AT&T, X/OPEN, BSD 4.3。
注意: Windows 平台
proc_nice() 函数会改变当前进程优先级,即使 PHP 是使用线程安全模式编译的。
On a Linux system, running apache2 as a non-privileged user you can not increase the niceness of the process after decreasing it. Also, you can not use the apache_child_ terminate either. I found the following does work though:
<?php
//decrease niceness
proc_nice(19);
//kill child process to "reset" niceness
posix_kill( getmypid(), 28 );
?>If a process is reniced, then all its children inherit that niceness. So a PHP script can call proc_nice on itself, then invoke system(), and the command executed via system() will also be niced.
Also worth making a note of ionice. There's no PHP function for this, but it's important. A nice'd program will happily try to chew up all i/o bandwidth with very little CPU usage, it can therefore make the entire computer non-responsive despite the programmer's intention. Use "ionice -c3" or see "man ionice"Regarding ionice - on linux the impact of the ionice -c3 class is similar to that of nice, because the CPU "niceness" is taken into account when calculating the io niceness.It is important to note that this is a relative change. I didn't read the description properly and couldn't figure out why setting proc_nice(0) didn't take the forked children back to 0!
For example if you run:
<?php
proc_nice(-5);
proc_nice(0); // will have no effect
proc_nice(5); // will take the niceness back to 0
?>
In PHP CLI under Debian (and probably many other Linux flavours) you can read the 'niceness' from the proc filesystem. (There may be a PHP command that gives this info but there doesn't seem to be a link to it on this page.)
E.g
<?php
$Current_Niceness_Value = intval(explode(" ",file_get_contents("/proc/".getmypid()."/stat"))[18]);
// Note: Older versions of Linux return an unsigned integer which has to be converted to a signed integer.
$Current_Niceness_Value = unpack("l",pack("L",intval(explode(" ",file_get_contents("/proc/".getmypid()."/stat"))[18])))[1];
?>Simple function for check process nice, by default returns nice of current process:
<?php
public static function getProcessNice ($pid = null) {
if (!$pid) {
$pid = getmypid ();
}
$res = `ps -p $pid -o "%p %n"`;
preg_match ('/^\s*\w+\s+\w+\s*(\d+)\s+(\d+)/m', $res, $matches);
return array ('pid' => (isset ($matches[1]) ? $matches[1] : null), 'nice' => (isset ($matches[2]) ? $matches[2] : null));
}
?>