On Fri, Jan 19, 2007 at 07:01:28AM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote: > Douglas Allan Tutty wrote: > >On Thu, Jan 18, 2007 at 11:59:46AM -0600, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote: > >>Douglas Allan Tutty wrote: >>> > >>>Running chrony version 1.21z05 a.k.a. the current Etch chrony version. > >>> > >>>I access the internet via intermittant dial-up ppp. > >>> > >>>It seems that chrony won't or can't access the hardware clock. > >>>Unfortunaly, it prevents hwclock from doing so either. > >>> "Cannot access the Hardware Clock via any known method." > >>>So over time, my hwclock is drifting away from reality. > >>> > >>>If I remove the chrony package, then hwclock works as it should. > >>> > >>>Does anyone know a remidy to this? Does the npt package work on > >>>intermittant connections? > > >I received a reply back from the maintainer to comment out the > >rtcfile directive, that this should keep it from trying to touch the > >rtc. > > > >Which it seems to. > > > > Doug, I recall(?) that solution from the list. I subscribe to it. But > you only rarely need the list because most of the time chrony works as > advertized. >
Hi Hugo I'm also having other problems with Etch's version of chrony. For example, I find that the online command gives a response of something like no such source. On my Sarge 486 box I ended up having the /etc/ppp/ip-up.d/chrony script just restart chrony with /etc/init.d/chrony restart. However, under Etch, the /etc/init.d/chrony script calls /etc/ppp/ip-up.d so it goes in a loop. Since chrony won't touch my hwc, it seems to have lost all advantage over plain ntp for me, so I've purged chrony and installed ntp. We'll see how it goes. Thanks anyway. Doug. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]