On Fri, 20 May 2005, Christian Hiris wrote:
On Friday 20 May 2005 01:01:01, Darrel wrote:
I installed openntpd considering that it should run with reduced
privileges. The Workgroup did not sync up right away and I reinstalled
NTP4.
Currently, I can sync Window XP and Windows 98. My /var/log/messages:
May 19 12:25:37 ntpd[379]: kernel time sync enabled 6001
May 19 12:42:40 ntpd[379]: kernel time sync enabled 2001
May 19 14:59:14 ntpd[379]: kernel time sync enabled 6001
May 19 15:16:19 ntpd[379]: kernel time sync enabled 2001
May 19 18:24:09 ntpd[379]: kernel time sync enabled 6001
May 19 18:41:14 ntpd[379]: kernel time sync enabled 2001
I am not sure, but this could be normal phase-lock-loop of the
kernel.
I think this is normal, the above status codes are in hex. Bit 0 of the 1st
byte tells about clock source (0=A 1=B), bit 1 of 1st byte stands for mode
status (0=PLL 1=FLL), bit 2 of 1st byte represents resolution status (0=us
1=ns) and bit 7 of the 2nd byte indicates that PLL updates are enabled.
status 0x2001 = source A, mode PLL, resolution ns, PLL updates enabled
status 0x6001 = source A, mode FLL, resolution ns, PLL updates enabled
The command 'ntpdc -c kerninfo | grep status' displays some of this status
information in human-readable format.
You can find a document that describes the Adaptive Hybrid Clock Discipline
Algorithm at http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/database/papers/allan.pdf
Cheers,
ch
--
Christian Hiris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | OpenPGP KeyID 0x3BCA53BE
OpenPGP-Key at hkp://wwwkeys.eu.pgp.net and http://pgp.mit.edu
Thanks, Christian!
I am comparing to a NetBSD computer with older hardware, that seems to
always have PLL enabled:
May 14 18:26:10 ntpd[343]: ntpd 4.2.0-r Wed Mar 23 08:12:50 UTC
2005 (1)
May 14 18:26:11 ntpd[343]: precision = 2.000 usec
May 14 18:26:11 ntpd[343]: kernel time sync status 0040
May 14 18:26:12 ntpd[343]: frequency initialized 74.725 PPM
from /var/db/ntp.drift
May 14 18:29:29 ntpd[343]: time reset -1.128987 s
May 14 18:29:29 ntpd[343]: kernel time sync disabled 0041
May 14 18:35:49 ntpd[343]: kernel time sync enabled 0001
Probably the 4 indicates that the clock had drifted too far for the
program to permit syncing to- perhaps the battery should be replaced. I
am still not sure why we do not see the new NTP4 mode shift to FLL, as
with the FreeBSD computer.
Maybe the /var/log/messages are just implemented differently on NetBSD
2.02. I will watch it occasionally with 'ntpdc -c kerninfo | grep
status'. This NetBSD clock is also set to UTC and it seems that I
recall that UTC can be improperly implemented when the computer
previously had Microsoft Windows installed.
Cheers,
Darrel
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