$Priorty: Difference between revisions

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==Syntax==
==Syntax==
<p class="syntax"><span class="term">%result </span><span class="literal">= $Priorty ( </span><span class="term">user_num, userid, min, max</span><span class="literal">)</span>
<p class="syntax"><span class="term">%result </span><span class="literal">= $Priorty ( </span><span class="term">user_num</span>, <span class="term">userid</span>, min, max</span><span class="literal">)</span>
</p>
</p>



Revision as of 17:37, 12 April 2013

Change a user's priority

Most Sirius $functions have been deprecated in favor of Object Oriented methods. There is no OO equivalent for the $Priorty function.

The $Priorty function allows a privileged user (system manager or system administrator) to change another user's priority.

Note: As of Sirius Mods Version 7.3, you can open access to $Priorty beyond system managers or system administrators by specifying the FUNCOPTS system parameter X'40' or X'20' bit settings.

The $Priorty function accepts four arguments and returns a numeric code.

The first argument is the number of the user whose priority is to be changed.

The second argument is an optional userid. If this argument is provided, the user number indicated by argument one will only have its priority changed if the userid matches the second argument. This prevents accidentally changing the priority of a user that just logged onto a thread previously occupied by another user.

The third argument is a number indicating the user's new minimum priority. This is a required argument and must be between 0 and 111.

The fourth argument is a number indicating the user's new maximum priority. This is an optional argument and must be between the minimum priority (argument 3) plus 16 and 127. The default for this argument is the minimum priority plus 47.

Syntax

%result = $Priorty ( user_num, userid, min, max)

Where %result is set to indicate the success of the function.

0 - Priority changed 1 - User not found 2 - Not privileged to issue PRIORITY command 3 - Invalid priority specified

$Priorty return codes

$Priorty gives you more flexibility in the priorities you can assign to a user than does the PRIORITY command. The valid priorities with the PRIORITY command and their corresponding minimum and maximum priority values are:

LOW0 and 47
STANDARD32 and 79
HIGH80 and 127

The current priority of a user whose priority is reset via $Priorty is set to

( ( 2 * min_priority ) + max_priority ) / 3

The following program sets user 0 to low priority.

B %rc = $priorty( 0, , 0) End

Products authorizing $Priorty