#include <sched.h> int sched_setscheduler(pid_t pid, int policy, const struct sched_param *param);
The possible values for the policy parameter are defined in the <sched.h> header.
If a process specified by pid exists, and if the calling process has permission, the scheduling policy and scheduling parameters shall be set for the process whose process ID is equal to pid.
If pid is zero, the scheduling policy and scheduling parameters shall be set for the calling process.
The conditions under which one process has appropriate privileges to change the scheduling parameters of another process are implementation-defined.
Implementations may require that the requesting process have permission to set its own scheduling parameters or those of another process. Additionally, implementation-defined restrictions may apply as to the appropriate privileges required to set the scheduling policy of the process, or the scheduling policy of another process, to a particular value.
The sched_setscheduler() function shall be considered successful if it succeeds in setting the scheduling policy and scheduling parameters of the process specified by pid to the values specified by policy and the structure pointed to by param, respectively.
See Scheduling Policies for a description on how this function affects the scheduling of the threads within the target process.
If the current scheduling policy for the target process is not SCHED_FIFO, SCHED_RR, or SCHED_SPORADIC, the result is implementation-defined; this case includes the SCHED_OTHER policy.
The specified sched_ss_repl_period shall be greater than or equal to the specified sched_ss_init_budget for the function to succeed; if it is not, then the function shall fail.
The value of sched_ss_max_repl shall be within the inclusive range [1,{SS_REPL_MAX}] for the function to succeed; if not, the function shall fail. It is unspecified whether the sched_ss_repl_period and sched_ss_init_budget values are stored as provided by this function or are rounded to align with the resolution of the clock being used.
This function is not atomic with respect to other threads in the process. Threads may continue to execute while this function call is in the process of changing the scheduling policy and associated scheduling parameters for the underlying kernel-scheduled entities used by the process contention scope threads.
The following sections are informative.
The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1-2017, <sched.h>
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