The nice value is meant to represent how much priority the scheduler gives a given process relative to other process. BUT! On macOS you can modify the "niceness" of a running process. However! I do not have an M1 so have no idea how or if this affects scheduling of performance/efficiency cores - my knowledge of scheduling is limited to what Apple's developer documentation says and working with A series chips on iOS. Setting nice to 20 for a given process may make it more likely to run on efficiency cores, but would also lower its priority on those cores relative to other processes running on them, and I honestly would expect the scheduler to still push it to performance cores when it sees the high usage, especially if the app itself sets the QoS value to. ![]() ![]() You can't just edit their source and recompile them, because only their respective companies have the source code. And you also don't have the resources required Geekbench and Cinebench are not open source projects.
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