NAME

ionice - set or get process I/O scheduling class and priority

SYNOPSIS

ionice [-c class] [-n level] [-t] -p PID...
ionice [-c class] [-n level] [-t] -P PGID...
ionice [-c class] [-n level] [-t] -u UID...
ionice [-c class] [-n level] [-t] command [argument...]

DESCRIPTION

This program sets or gets the I/O scheduling class and priority for a program. If no arguments or just -p is given, ionice will query the current I/O scheduling class and priority for that process.

When command is given, ionice will run this command with the given arguments. If no class is specified, then command will be executed with the "best-effort" scheduling class. The default priority level is 4.

As of this writing, a process can be in one of three scheduling classes:

Note that before kernel 2.6.26 a process that has not asked for an I/O priority formally uses "none" as scheduling class, but the I/O scheduler will treat such processes as if it were in the best-effort class. The priority within the best-effort class will be dynamically derived from the CPU nice level of the process: io_priority = (cpu_nice + 20) / 5.

For kernels after 2.6.26 with the CFQ I/O scheduler, a process that has not asked for an I/O priority inherits its CPU scheduling class. The I/O priority is derived from the CPU nice level of the process (same as before kernel 2.6.26).

OPTIONS

-c, --class class

Specify the name or number of the scheduling class to use; 0 for none, 1 for realtime, 2 for best-effort, 3 for idle.

-n, --classdata level

Specify the scheduling class data. This only has an effect if the class accepts an argument. For realtime and best-effort, 0-7 are valid data (priority levels), and 0 represents the highest priority level.

-p, --pid PID...

Specify the process IDs of running processes for which to get or set the scheduling parameters.

-P, --pgid PGID...

Specify the process group IDs of running processes for which to get or set the scheduling parameters.

-t, --ignore

Ignore failure to set the requested priority. If command was specified, run it even in case it was not possible to set the desired scheduling priority, which can happen due to insufficient privileges or an old kernel version.

-h, --help

Display help text and exit.

-u, --uid UID...

Specify the user IDs of running processes for which to get or set the scheduling parameters.

-V, --version

Display version information and exit.

NOTES

Linux supports I/O scheduling priorities and classes since 2.6.13 with the CFQ I/O scheduler.

EXAMPLES

# ionice -c 3 -p 89
Sets process with PID 89 as an idle I/O process.
# ionice -c 2 -n 0 bash
Runs 'bash' as a best-effort program with highest priority.
# ionice -p 89 91
Prints the class and priority of the processes with PID 89 and 91.

AUTHORS

Jens Axboe <jens@axboe.dk>
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>

SEE ALSO

ioprio_set(2)

AVAILABILITY

The ionice command is part of the util-linux package and is available from https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.