(PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)
proc_nice — Change the priority of the current process
   proc_nice() changes the priority of the current
   process by the amount specified in priority. A
   positive priority will lower the priority of the
   current process, whereas a negative priority
   will raise the priority.
  
proc_nice() is not related to proc_open() and its associated functions in any way.
priorityThe new priority value, the value of this may differ on platforms.
       On Unix, a low value, such as -20 means high priority 
       whereas positive values have a lower priority.
      
       For Windows the priority parameter has the 
       following meaning:
      
| Priority class | Possible values | 
|---|---|
| High priority | 
           priority < -9
           | 
         
| Above normal priority | 
           priority < -4
           | 
         
| Normal priority | 
           priority < 5 & 
           priority > -5
           | 
         
| Below normal priority | 
           priority > 5
           | 
         
| Idle priority | 
           priority > 9
           | 
         
   Returns true on success or false on failure.
   If an error occurs, like the user lacks permission to change the priority, 
   an error of level E_WARNING is also generated.
  
| Version | Description | 
|---|---|
| 7.2.0 | This function is now available on Windows. | 
Example #1 Using proc_nice() to set the process priority to high
<?php
// Highest priority
proc_nice(-20);
?>Note: Availability
proc_nice() will only exist if your system has 'nice' capabilities. 'nice' conforms to: SVr4, SVID EXT, AT&T, X/OPEN, BSD 4.3.
Note: Windows only
proc_nice() will change the current process priority, even if PHP was compiled using thread safety.