80

Is there a Windows equivalent of the Unix command, nice?

I'm specifically looking for something I can use at the command line, and not the "Set Priority" menu from the task manager.

My attempts at finding this on Google have been thwarted by those who can't come up with better adjectives.

4 Answers 4

71

If you want to set priority when launching a process you could use the built-in START command:

START ["title"] [/Dpath] [/I] [/MIN] [/MAX] [/SEPARATE | /SHARED]
      [/LOW | /NORMAL | /HIGH | /REALTIME | /ABOVENORMAL | /BELOWNORMAL]
      [/WAIT] [/B] [command/program] [parameters]

Use the low through belownormal options to set priority of the launched command/program. Seems like the most straightforward solution. No downloads or script writing. The other solutions probably work on already running procs though.

5
  • 9
    To make start behave even more like nice, use the /WAIT and /B options to make the terminal output go to the same window. Sep 2, 2014 at 17:52
  • However, this seems to completely delete your command history (both from the arrow keys and hitting F7). Sep 2, 2014 at 21:26
  • 3
    This still doesn't answer how to change the priority of running processes - the answer from duane (via VBScript) is currently the best answer for this. Nov 11, 2016 at 8:01
  • If you try to run something like start /low "C:\Program Files\myprog.exe" param1 param2 you'll receive error "Windows cannot find 'param1'". The solution is to replace "C:\Program Files\..." with c:\progra~1\.. without quotes (DOS directory name).
    – Putnik
    Mar 23, 2019 at 14:28
  • How to run in bash? For start /LOW /B type ls I get a popup: "cannot find B:/"
    – jaques-sam
    Jun 23, 2023 at 9:14
10

If you use PowerShell, you could write a script that let you change the priority of a process. I found the following PowerShell function on the Monad blog:

function set-ProcessPriority { 
    param($processName = $(throw "Enter process name"), $priority = "Normal")

    get-process -processname $processname | foreach { $_.PriorityClass = $priority }
    write-host "`"$($processName)`"'s priority is set to `"$($priority)`""
}

From the PowerShell prompt, you would do something line:

set-ProcessPriority SomeProcessName "High"
1
  • Notes: - don't include the ".exe" (maybe it was obvious for others, but it appears in the TaskManager and confused me). - Priorities are case-sensitive (first and only first letter is uppercase) Mar 23, 2022 at 9:20
6

Maybe you want to consider using ProcessTamer that "automatize" the process of downgrading or upgrading process priority based in your settings.

I've been using it for two years. It's very simple but really effective!

5

from http://techtasks.com/code/viewbookcode/567

# This code sets the priority of a process

# ---------------------------------------------------------------
# Adapted from VBScript code contained in the book:
#      "Windows Server Cookbook" by Robbie Allen
# ISBN: 0-596-00633-0
# ---------------------------------------------------------------

use Win32::OLE;
$Win32::OLE::Warn = 3;

use constant NORMAL => 32;
use constant IDLE => 64;
use constant HIGH_PRIORITY => 128;
use constant REALTIME => 256;
use constant BELOW_NORMAL => 16384;
use constant ABOVE_NORMAL => 32768;

# ------ SCRIPT CONFIGURATION ------
$strComputer = '.';
$intPID = 2880; # set this to the PID of the target process
$intPriority = ABOVE_NORMAL; # Set this to one of the constants above
# ------ END CONFIGURATION ---------

print "Process PID: $intPID\n";

$objWMIProcess = Win32::OLE->GetObject('winmgmts:\\\\' . $strComputer . '\\root\\cimv2:Win32_Process.Handle=\'' . $intPID . '\'');

print 'Process name: ' . $objWMIProcess->Name, "\n";

$intRC = $objWMIProcess->SetPriority($intPriority);

if ($intRC == 0) {
    print "Successfully set priority.\n";
}
else {
    print 'Could not set priority. Error code: ' . $intRC, "\n";
}

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