On 2/13/2006 12:22 PM Mark Knecht wrote:
On 2/13/06, Drew Tomlinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Anyway, I really appreciate your thoughts. Because this box runs
MythTV, time is *VERY* important. Imagine my surprise when I went to
watch the first day of the Olympics on to find out that my recordings
were off by over an hour and half. :)
Thanks,
Drew
Drew,
Please excuse me jumping in here. I have seen no other emails in
this thread so maybe I'm wasting time. I hope not.
Thanks for jumping in. I'll try any suggestions at this point. :)
I have a number of Gentoo machines. For some reason in the last
week or 10 days my AMD64 machine stopped keeping time. I'd boot it in
the morning and even the day would be off. It was horrible.
With a little help from others I found that, at least in my case, I
needed to start running ntp-client in the default run level. I never
ran this before but there appears to have been change recently that
has made it more important. Either that or I was just lucky before.
This leads me to believe that your issues are related to the initial
step being beyond the 1000 second limit by default. I thought about
this and thought the '-g' switch would override any such limit. I have
also tried your suggestion in my testing. Not specifically by enabling
ntp-client but by running ntpdate from the command line and then
immediately running ntpd -A -d from the command line. Still, no sync.
I've since added ntp-client on all the machines and things are now
dead on as far as I can tell.
One other thing that was recommended to me was to remove the
/etc/adjust file when doing this. I did that also.
I don't seem to have one of these.
Again, if all of this has already been covered I apologize for
taking up too much time.
No, this hasn't been covered and they're good suggestions. I have a bit
of an update. In experimenting, I tried both "broadcastclient" and
"server 192.168.1.2" (my time server machine) in ntp.conf. Neither
worked. However, I read the man page for ntpd and came across the
options of 'burst" and "iburst". I added both of these options so now
my ntp.conf contains the line "server 192.168.1.2 burst iburst". This
seems to work but I don't understand why. One thing I noticed is that
'ntpd -d' output shows a "burst" of many communications between my
Gentoo box and my time server each time it communicates. This results
in a sync most of the time. However my ntp.log file shows entries such
as this:
13 Feb 19:11:20 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:12:10 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:12:24 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:13:13 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:13:27 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:14:16 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:14:32 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:15:22 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:15:36 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:16:27 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:16:41 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:17:31 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:17:45 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:18:34 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:18:48 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:19:39 ntpd[8830]: no servers reachable
13 Feb 19:19:53 ntpd[8830]: synchronized to 192.168.1.2, stratum 2
13 Feb 19:19:01 ntpd[8830]: time reset -52.104173 s
The "no servers reachable" bothers me a bit. Is this indicative of a
network issue and thus, the cause of my trouble? Both my Gentoo box and
my time server are on a 100 mbps LAN and so there should not be a
"reachable" issue.
Just trying to understand...
Thanks,
Drew
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