// priorities when making adjustments. Generally, increasing spread
// reduces the total number of adjustments made. A smaller spread
// produces lower nice values, which is useful for old SLURM versions
// with a limited "nice" range and for sites where SLURM is also
// running non-Arvados jobs with low nice values.
// priorities when making adjustments. Generally, increasing spread
// reduces the total number of adjustments made. A smaller spread
// produces lower nice values, which is useful for old SLURM versions
// with a limited "nice" range and for sites where SLURM is also
// running non-Arvados jobs with low nice values.