table of contents
TIMEMASTER(8) | System Manager's Manual | TIMEMASTER(8) |
NAME¶
timemaster - run NTP with PTP as reference clocks
SYNOPSIS¶
timemaster [ -nmqv ] [ -l print-level ] -f file
DESCRIPTION¶
timemaster is a program that uses ptp4l and phc2sys in combination with chronyd or ntpd to synchronize the system clock to NTP and PTP time sources. The PTP time is provided by phc2sys and ptp4l via SOCK reference clock to chronyd or SHM reference clock to ntpd, which can compare all time sources and use the best sources to synchronize the system clock.
On start, timemaster reads a configuration file that specifies the NTP and PTP time sources, checks which network interfaces have and share a PTP hardware clock (PHC), generates configuration files for ptp4l and chronyd/ntpd, and start the ptp4l, phc2sys, chronyd/ntpd processes as needed. Then, it waits for a signal to kill the processes, remove the generated configuration files and exit.
OPTIONS¶
- -f file
- Specify the path to the timemaster configuration file.
- -n
- Don't start the programs, only print their configuration files and the commands that would be executed if this option wasn't specified.
- -l level
- Set the maximum syslog level of messages which should be printed or sent to the system logger. The default value is 6 (LOG_INFO).
- -m
- Print messages to the standard output.
- -q
- Don't send messages to the system logger.
- -v
- Print the software version and exit.
- -h
- Display a help message and exit.
CONFIGURATION FILE¶
The configuration file is divided into sections. Each section starts with a line containing its name enclosed in brackets and it follows with settings. Each setting is placed on a separate line, it contains the name of the option and the value separated by whitespace characters. Empty lines and lines starting with # are ignored.
Sections that can used in the configuration file and options that can be set in them are described below.
[timemaster]¶
- ntp_program
- Select which NTP implementation should be used. Possible values are chronyd and ntpd. The default value is chronyd. Limitations of the implementations relevant to the timemaster configuration are listed in NOTES.
- rundir
- Specify the directory where should be generated chronyd, ntpd and ptp4l configuration files and sockets. The directory will be created if it doesn't exist. The default value is /var/run/timemaster.
- first_shm_segment
- Specify the first number in a sequence of SHM segments that will be used by ptp4l and phc2sys. The default value is 0. Increasing the number can be useful to avoid conflicts with time sources that are not started by timemaster, e.g. gpsd using segments number 0 and 1.
- restart_processes
- Enable or disable restarting of processes started by timemaster. If the option is set to a non-zero value, all processes except chronyd and ntpd will be automatically restarted when terminated and timemaster is running for at least one second (i.e. the process did not terminate due to a configuration error). If a process was terminated and is not started again, timemaster will kill the other processes and exit with a non-zero status. The default value is 1 (enabled).
- use_vclocks
- Enable or disable synchronization with virtual clocks. If enabled, timemaster will create virtual clocks running on top of physical clocks needed by configured PTP domains. This enables hardware time stamping for multiple ptp4l instances using the same network interface. The default value is -1, which enables the virtual clocks if running on Linux 5.18 or later.
[ntp_server address]¶
The ntp_server section specifies an NTP server that should be used as a time source. The address of the server is included in the name of the section.
- minpoll
- maxpoll
- Specify the minimum and maximum NTP polling interval as powers of two in seconds. The default values are 6 (64 seconds) and 10 (1024 seconds) respectively. Shorter polling intervals usually improve the accuracy significantly, but they should be used only when allowed by the operators of the NTP service (public NTP servers generally don't allow too frequent queries). If the NTP server is located on the same LAN, polling intervals around 4 (16 seconds) might give best accuracy.
- iburst
- Enable or disable sending a burst of NTP packets on start to speed up the initial synchronization. Possible values are 1 and 0. The default value is 0 (disabled).
- ntp_options
- Specify extra options that should be added for this source to the server directive in the configuration file of the selected NTP implementation. No extra options are added by default.
[ptp_domain number]¶
The ptp_domain section specifies a PTP domain that should be used as a time source. The PTP domain number is included in the name of the section. The ptp4l instances are configured to run in the clientOnly mode. In this section at least the interfaces option needs to be set, other options are optional.
- interfaces
- Specify which network interfaces should be used for this PTP domain. A separate ptp4l instance will be started for each group of interfaces sharing the same PHC and for each interface that supports only SW time stamping. HW time stamping is enabled automatically. If an interface with HW time stamping is specified also in other PTP domains and virtual clocks are disabled, only the ptp4l instance from the first PTP domain will be using HW time stamping.
- ntp_poll
- Specify the polling interval of the SOCK/SHM reference clock reading samples from ptp4l or phc2sys. It's specified as a power of two in seconds. The default value is 2 (4 seconds).
- phc2sys_poll
- Specify the polling interval used by phc2sys to read a PTP clock synchronized by ptp4l and update the SOCK/SHM sample for chronyd/ntpd. It's specified as a power of two in seconds. The default value is 0 (1 second).
- delay
- Specify the maximum assumed roundtrip delay to the primary source of the time in this PTP domain. This value is included in the distance used by chronyd in the source selection algorithm to detect falsetickers and assign weights for source combining. The default value is 1e-4 (100 microseconds). With ntpd, the tos mindist command can be used to set a limit with similar purpose globally for all time sources.
- ntp_options
- Specify extra options that should be added for this source to the refclock or server directives in the configuration file of the selected NTP implementation. No extra options are added by default.
- ptp4l_option
- Specify an extra ptp4l option specific to this PTP domain that should be added to the configuration files generated for ptp4l. This option may be used multiple times in one ptp_domain section.
[chronyd]¶
[chrony.conf]¶
Settings specified in this section are copied directly to the configuration file generated for chronyd. If this section is not present in the timemaster configuration file, the following setting will be added:
makestep 1 3
This configures chronyd to step the system clock in the first three updates if the offset is larger than 1 second.
[ntpd]¶
[ntp.conf]¶
Settings specified in this section are copied directly to the configuration file generated for ntpd. If this section is not present in the timemaster configuration file, the following settings will be added:
restrict default nomodify notrap nopeer noquery restrict 127.0.0.1 restrict ::1
This configures ntpd to use safe default restrictions.
[phc2sys]¶
[ptp4l]¶
[ptp4l.conf]¶
Settings specified in this section are copied directly to the global section of the configuration files generated for all ptp4l instances. There is no default content of this section.
Other sections (e.g. [unicast_master_table]) may be specified here, but lines beginning with the bracket need to be prefixed with the > character to prevent timemaster from parsing it as a beginning of another section.
NOTES¶
For best accuracy, chronyd is usually preferred over ntpd, it also synchronizes the system clock faster. Both NTP implementations, however, have some limitations that need to be considered before choosing the one to be used in a given timemaster configuration.
The chronyd limitations are:
Using polling intervals (minpoll, maxpoll, ntp_poll options) shorter than 2 (4 seconds) is not recommended with versions before 1.30. With 1.30 and later values of 0 or 1 can be used for NTP sources and negative values for PTP sources (ntp_poll) to specify a subsecond interval.
The ntpd limitations are:
The shortest polling interval for all sources is 3 (8 seconds).
Nanosecond resolution in the SHM refclock driver is supported in version 4.2.7p303 and later, older versions have only microsecond resolution.
EXAMPLES¶
A minimal configuration file using one NTP source and two PTP sources would be:
[ntp_server 10.1.1.1] [ptp_domain 0] interfaces eth0 [ptp_domain 1] interfaces eth1
A more complex example using all timemaster options would be:
[ntp_server 10.1.1.1] minpoll 3 maxpoll 4 iburst 1 ntp_options key 12 [ptp_domain 0] interfaces eth0 eth1 ntp_poll 0 phc2sys_poll -2 delay 10e-6 ntp_options prefer ptp4l_option clock_servo linreg ptp4l_option delay_mechanism P2P [timemaster] ntp_program chronyd rundir /var/run/timemaster first_shm_segment 1 restart_processes 0 use_vclocks 0 [chronyd] path /usr/sbin/chronyd options [chrony.conf] makestep 1 3 logchange 0.5 rtcsync driftfile /var/lib/chrony/drift [ntpd] path /usr/sbin/ntpd options -u ntp:ntp [ntp.conf] restrict default nomodify notrap nopeer noquery restrict 127.0.0.1 restrict ::1 driftfile /var/lib/ntp/drift [phc2sys] path /usr/sbin/phc2sys options -l 5 [ptp4l] path /usr/sbin/ptp4l options [ptp4l.conf] logging_level 5
SEE ALSO¶
chronyd(8), ntpd(8), phc2sys(8), ptp4l(8)
January 2021 | linuxptp |