Lines Matching refs:its

133 process initially inherits its limit values from its parent, but it can
149 set its current limit. It is also called the ``hard limit'' because
151 its own maximum limit, but only the superuser may increase a maximum
181 This function is similar to @code{getrlimit} but its second parameter is
221 This function is similar to @code{setrlimit} but its second parameter is
254 its components have wider ranges. It has two fields:
291 its stack past this size, it gets a @code{SIGSEGV} signal.
323 open more files than this, its open attempt fails with @code{errno}
398 @code{vlimit} and its resource symbols are declared in @file{sys/vlimit.h}.
432 The process tried to set its current limit beyond its maximum limit.
512 for something like I/O, its absolute priority is irrelevant.
528 A process begins life with the same absolute priority as its parent
534 target process' owner can change its absolute priority at all.
569 than any other process in the system and due to a bug in its program, it
584 its absolute priority when the process isn't getting its entitled share
589 most important feature of the absolute priority: its absoluteness.
658 round robin time slice is a thousand times shorter than its typical
661 A process begins life with the same scheduling policy as its parent process.
750 The calling task does not have @code{CAP_SYS_NICE} permission and its
935 gets pushed onto the tail of the queue of tasks that share its
936 absolute priority and are ready to run, and it will run again when its
937 turn next arrives. If its absolute priority is 0, it is more
993 In addition to its absolute priority of zero, every process has another
1005 If it doesn't use up its time slice before giving up the CPU to do
1007 it's ready for it, to finish out its time slice. Other than that,
1027 ability to refuse its equal share of CPU time that others might prosper.
1040 process begins life with the same nice value as its parent process and
1043 privileged process can lower its nice value. A privileged process can
1157 If the argument @var{id} is 0, it stands for the calling process, its
1158 process group, or its owner (real uid), according to @var{class}.
1531 increases its memory usage). The value returned for