Date: Thu, 11 Mar 1999 15:57:06 +0000 (GMT) From: Mark Powell <M.S.Powell@ais.salford.ac.uk> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: NTP problems. This hardware related? Message-ID: <Pine.BSF.4.05.9903111549580.17625-100000@plato.salford.ac.uk>
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Hi, Running xntpd on a new server in just the same was as I do on every other. However, I noticed this machines clock was way out after a few days. The machine does an "ntpdate -b" at bootup, but can't sync the time. From ntp log: Mar 4 11:32:33 mimas xntpd[111]: offset 0.000000 freq 11.708 poll 6 Mar 4 12:32:33 mimas xntpd[111]: offset 0.000000 freq 11.708 poll 6 Mar 4 13:32:33 mimas xntpd[111]: offset 0.000000 freq 11.708 poll 6 Mar 4 14:32:33 mimas xntpd[111]: offset 0.000000 freq 11.708 poll 6 Mar 4 15:32:33 mimas xntpd[111]: offset 0.000000 freq 11.708 poll 6 The offsets are always o and the 11.708, from /etc/ntp.drift never changes. I changed to having "ntpdate <h1> <h2> ..." run from cron. Again from ntp log: ntpdate[6478]: step time server 146.87.255.63 offset -2.495694 ntpdate[6481]: step time server 146.87.255.63 offset -2.495796 ntpdate[6489]: step time server 146.87.255.63 offset -2.498253 This machine is gaining ~2.5s every minute! No wonder xntpd can't sync the time. Am I right here? Is that why it's failing? Looking at the clocks at boot up, it would appear that over 40 reboots, the TSC clock has varied from 126668897 to 132002659, a variance of almost 5%. Is this normal? Could this be causing the time problems, and if so is there anyway I can fiddle with tickadj or something to let xntpd work on this machine? Cheers. Mark Powell - System Administrator (UNIX) - Clifford Whitworth Building A.I.S., University of Salford, Salford, Manchester, UK. Tel: +44 161 295 5936 Fax: +44 161 295 5888 www.pgp.com for PGP key M.S.Powell@ais.salfrd.ac.uk (spell salford correctly to reply to me) To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-questions" in the body of the message
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