The ALTPRI privilege allows the user's process to:
Increase its own base priority
Set the base priority of a target process
Change the priority of its batch or print jobs
The base priority is increased by executing the Set Priority
($SETPRI) system service or the DCL command SET PROCESS/PRIORITY.
As a rule, this system service lets a process set its own base priority
or the base priority of another process. However, one process can
set the priority of a second process only if one of the following
conditions applies:
The process calling the $SETPRI system
service has the same UIC as the target process.
The calling process has process control privilege
(GROUP or WORLD) over the target process.
With ALTPRI, a process can create a detached process with
a priority higher than its own. It creates such a process by using
an optional argument to the Create Process ($CREPRC) system service
or to the DCL command RUN/PRIORITY.
ALTPRI also lets you adjust the scheduling priority of a job
($SNDJBC) to a value even greater than that established with the
system parameter MAXQUEPRI.
Do not grant this privilege widely; if unqualified users have
the unrestricted ability to set base priorities, fair and orderly
scheduling of processes for execution can easily be disrupted.