- Configuring PTP Using ptp4l
Configuring PTP Using ptp4l
Introduction to PTP
The Precision Time Protocol (PTP) is a protocol used to synchronize clocks in a network. When used in conjunction with hardware support, PTP
is capable of sub-microsecond accuracy, which is far better than is normally obtainable with NTP
. PTP
support is divided between the kernel and user space. The kernel in Fedora includes support for PTP
clocks, which are provided by network drivers. The actual implementation of the protocol is known as linuxptp, a PTPv2
implementation according to the IEEE standard 1588 for Linux.
The linuxptp package includes the ptp4l and phc2sys programs for clock synchronization. The ptp4l program implements the PTP
boundary clock and ordinary clock. With hardware time stamping, it is used to synchronize the PTP
hardware clock to the master clock, and with software time stamping it synchronizes the system clock to the master clock. The phc2sys program is needed only with hardware time stamping, for synchronizing the system clock to the PTP
hardware clock on the network interface card (NIC).
Understanding PTP
The clocks synchronized by PTP
are organized in a master-slave hierarchy. The slaves are synchronized to their masters which may be slaves to their own masters. The hierarchy is created and updated automatically by the best master clock (BMC) algorithm, which runs on every clock. When a clock has only one port, it can be master or slave, such a clock is called an ordinary clock (OC). A clock with multiple ports can be master on one port and slave on another, such a clock is called a boundary clock (BC). The top-level master is called the grandmaster clock, which can be synchronized by using a Global Positioning System (GPS) time source. By using a GPS-based time source, disparate networks can be synchronized with a high-degree of accuracy.
Figure 1. PTP grandmaster, boundary, and slave Clocks
Advantages of PTP
One of the main advantages that PTP
has over the Network Time Protocol (NTP) is hardware support present in various network interface controllers (NIC) and network switches. This specialized hardware allows PTP
to account for delays in message transfer, and greatly improves the accuracy of time synchronization. While it is possible to use non-PTP enabled hardware components within the network, this will often cause an increase in jitter or introduce an asymmetry in the delay resulting in synchronization inaccuracies, which add up with multiple non-PTP aware components used in the communication path. To achieve the best possible accuracy, it is recommended that all networking components between PTP
clocks are PTP
hardware enabled. Time synchronization in larger networks where not all of the networking hardware supports PTP
might be better suited for NTP
.
With hardware PTP
support, the NIC has its own on-board clock, which is used to time stamp the received and transmitted PTP
messages. It is this on-board clock that is synchronized to the PTP
master, and the computer’s system clock is synchronized to the PTP
hardware clock on the NIC. With software PTP
support, the system clock is used to time stamp the PTP
messages and it is synchronized to the PTP
master directly. Hardware PTP
support provides better accuracy since the NIC can time stamp the PTP
packets at the exact moment they are sent and received while software PTP
support requires additional processing of the PTP
packets by the operating system.
Using PTP
In order to use PTP
, the kernel network driver for the intended interface has to support either software or hardware time stamping capabilities.
Checking for Driver and Hardware Support
In addition to hardware time stamping support being present in the driver, the NIC must also be capable of supporting this functionality in the physical hardware. The best way to verify the time stamping capabilities of a particular driver and NIC is to use the ethtool utility to query the interface as follows:
~]# ethtool -T em3
Time stamping parameters for em3:
Capabilities:
hardware-transmit (SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_HARDWARE)
software-transmit (SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE)
hardware-receive (SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RX_HARDWARE)
software-receive (SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RX_SOFTWARE)
software-system-clock (SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SOFTWARE)
hardware-raw-clock (SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE)
PTP Hardware Clock: 0
Hardware Transmit Timestamp Modes:
off (HWTSTAMP_TX_OFF)
on (HWTSTAMP_TX_ON)
Hardware Receive Filter Modes:
none (HWTSTAMP_FILTER_NONE)
all (HWTSTAMP_FILTER_ALL)
Where em3 is the interface you want to check.
For software time stamping support, the parameters list should include:
SOF_TIMESTAMPING_SOFTWARE
SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_SOFTWARE
SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RX_SOFTWARE
For hardware time stamping support, the parameters list should include:
SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RAW_HARDWARE
SOF_TIMESTAMPING_TX_HARDWARE
SOF_TIMESTAMPING_RX_HARDWARE
Installing PTP
The kernel in Fedora includes support for PTP
. User space support is provided by the tools in the linuxptp package. To install linuxptp, issue the following command as root
:
~]# dnf install linuxptp
This will install ptp4l and phc2sys.
Do not run more than one service to set the system clock’s time at the same time. If you intend to serve PTP
time using NTP
, see Serving PTP Time with NTP.
Starting ptp4l
The ptp4l program can be started from the command line or it can be started as a service. When running as a service, options are specified in the /etc/sysconfig/ptp4l
file. Options required for use both by the service and on the command line should be specified in the /etc/ptp4l.conf
file. The /etc/sysconfig/ptp4l
file includes the -f /etc/ptp4l.conf command line option, which causes the ptp4l
program to read the /etc/ptp4l.conf
file and process the options it contains. The use of the /etc/ptp4l.conf
is explained in Specifying a Configuration File. More information on the different ptp4l options and the configuration file settings can be found in the ptp4l(8)
man page.
Starting ptp4l as a Service
To start ptp4l as a service, issue the following command as root
:
~]# systemctl start ptp4l
Using ptp4l From The Command Line
The ptp4l program tries to use hardware time stamping by default. To use ptp4l with hardware time stamping capable drivers and NICs, you must provide the network interface to use with the -i
option. Enter the following command as root
:
~]# ptp4l -i em3 -m
Where em3 is the interface you want to configure. Below is example output from ptp4l when the PTP
clock on the NIC is synchronized to a master:
~]# ptp4l -i em3 -m
selected em3 as PTP clock
port 1: INITIALIZING to LISTENING on INITIALIZE
port 0: INITIALIZING to LISTENING on INITIALIZE
port 1: new foreign master 00a069.fffe.0b552d-1
selected best master clock 00a069.fffe.0b552d
port 1: LISTENING to UNCALIBRATED on RS_SLAVE
master offset -23947 s0 freq +0 path delay 11350
master offset -28867 s0 freq +0 path delay 11236
master offset -32801 s0 freq +0 path delay 10841
master offset -37203 s1 freq +0 path delay 10583
master offset -7275 s2 freq -30575 path delay 10583
port 1: UNCALIBRATED to SLAVE on MASTER_CLOCK_SELECTED
master offset -4552 s2 freq -30035 path delay 10385
The master offset value is the measured offset from the master in nanoseconds. The s0
, s1
, s2
strings indicate the different clock servo states: s0
is unlocked, s1
is clock step and s2
is locked. Once the servo is in the locked state (s2
), the clock will not be stepped (only slowly adjusted) unless the pi_offset_const
option is set to a positive value in the configuration file (described in the ptp4l(8)
man page). The adj
value is the frequency adjustment of the clock in parts per billion (ppb). The path delay value is the estimated delay of the synchronization messages sent from the master in nanoseconds. Port 0 is a Unix domain socket used for local PTP
management. Port 1 is the em3
interface (based on the example above.) INITIALIZING, LISTENING, UNCALIBRATED and SLAVE are some of possible port states which change on the INITIALIZE, RS_SLAVE, MASTER_CLOCK_SELECTED events. In the last state change message, the port state changed from UNCALIBRATED to SLAVE indicating successful synchronization with a PTP
master clock.
The ptp4l program can also be started as a service by running:
~]# systemctl start ptp4l
When running as a service, options are specified in the /etc/sysconfig/ptp4l
file. More information on the different ptp4l options and the configuration file settings can be found in the ptp4l(8)
man page.
By default, messages are sent to /var/log/messages
. However, specifying the -m
option enables logging to standard output which can be useful for debugging purposes.
To enable software time stamping, the -S
option needs to be used as follows:
~]# ptp4l -i em3 -m -S
Selecting a Delay Measurement Mechanism
There are two different delay measurement mechanisms and they can be selected by means of an option added to the ptp4l command as follows:
-P
The -P
selects the peer-to-peer (P2P) delay measurement mechanism.
The P2P mechanism is preferred as it reacts to changes in the network topology faster, and may be more accurate in measuring the delay, than other mechanisms. The P2P mechanism can only be used in topologies where each port exchanges PTP messages with at most one other P2P port. It must be supported and used by all hardware, including transparent clocks, on the communication path.
-E
The -E
selects the end-to-end (E2E) delay measurement mechanism. This is the default.
The E2E mechanism is also referred to as the delay “request-response” mechanism.
-A
The -A
enables automatic selection of the delay measurement mechanism.
The automatic option starts ptp4l in E2E mode. It will change to P2P mode if a peer delay request is received.
All clocks on a single
|
Specifying a Configuration File
The command line options and other options, which cannot be set on the command line, can be set in an optional configuration file.
No configuration file is read by default, so it needs to be specified at runtime with the -f
option. For example:
~]# ptp4l -f /etc/ptp4l.conf
A configuration file equivalent to the -i em3 -m -S options shown above would look as follows:
~]# cat /etc/ptp4l.conf
[global]
verbose 1
time_stamping software
[em3]
Using the PTP Management Client
The PTP
management client, pmc, can be used to obtain additional information from ptp4l as follows:
~]# pmc -u -b 0 'GET CURRENT_DATA_SET'
sending: GET CURRENT_DATA_SET
90e2ba.fffe.20c7f8-0 seq 0 RESPONSE MANAGMENT CURRENT_DATA_SET
stepsRemoved 1
offsetFromMaster -142.0
meanPathDelay 9310.0
~]# pmc -u -b 0 'GET TIME_STATUS_NP'
sending: GET TIME_STATUS_NP
90e2ba.fffe.20c7f8-0 seq 0 RESPONSE MANAGMENT TIME_STATUS_NP
master_offset 310
ingress_time 1361545089345029441
cumulativeScaledRateOffset +1.000000000
scaledLastGmPhaseChange 0
gmTimeBaseIndicator 0
lastGmPhaseChange 0x0000'0000000000000000.0000
gmPresent true
gmIdentity 00a069.fffe.0b552d
Setting the -b
option to zero
limits the boundary to the locally running ptp4l instance. A larger boundary value will retrieve the information also from PTP
nodes further from the local clock. The retrievable information includes:
stepsRemoved
is the number of communication paths to the grandmaster clock.offsetFromMaster
and master_offset is the last measured offset of the clock from the master in nanoseconds.meanPathDelay
is the estimated delay of the synchronization messages sent from the master in nanoseconds.if
gmPresent
is true, thePTP
clock is synchronized to a master, the local clock is not the grandmaster clock.gmIdentity
is the grandmaster’s identity.
For a full list of pmc commands, type the following as root
:
~]# pmc help
Additional information is available in the pmc(8)
man page.
Synchronizing the Clocks
The phc2sys program is used to synchronize the system clock to the PTP
hardware clock (PHC) on the NIC. The phc2sys service is configured in the /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
configuration file. The default setting in the /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
file is as follows:
OPTIONS="-a -r"
The -a
option causes phc2sys to read the clocks to be synchronized from the ptp4l application. It will follow changes in the PTP
port states, adjusting the synchronization between the NIC hardware clocks accordingly. The system clock is not synchronized, unless the -r
option is also specified. If you want the system clock to be eligible to become a time source, specify the -r
option twice.
After making changes to /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
, restart the phc2sys service from the command line by issuing a command as root
:
~]# systemctl restart phc2sys
Under normal circumstances, use systemctl commands to start, stop, and restart the phc2sys service.
When you do not want to start phc2sys as a service, you can start it from the command line. For example, enter the following command as root
:
~]# phc2sys -a -r
The -a
option causes phc2sys to read the clocks to be synchronized from the ptp4l application. If you want the system clock to be eligible to become a time source, specify the -r
option twice.
Alternately, use the -s
option to synchronize the system clock to a specific interface’s PTP
hardware clock. For example:
~]# phc2sys -s em3 -w
The -w
option waits for the running ptp4l application to synchronize the PTP
clock and then retrieves the TAI to UTC offset from ptp4l.
Normally, PTP
operates in the International Atomic Time (TAI) timescale, while the system clock is kept in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). The current offset between the TAI and UTC timescales is 35 seconds. The offset changes when leap seconds are inserted or deleted, which typically happens every few years. The -O
option needs to be used to set this offset manually when the -w
is not used, as follows:
~]# phc2sys -s em3 -O -35
Once the phc2sys servo is in a locked state, the clock will not be stepped, unless the -S
option is used. This means that the phc2sys program should be started after the ptp4l program has synchronized the PTP
hardware clock. However, with -w
, it is not necessary to start phc2sys after ptp4l as it will wait for it to synchronize the clock.
The phc2sys program can also be started as a service by running:
~]# systemctl start phc2sys
When running as a service, options are specified in the /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
file. More information on the different phc2sys options can be found in the phc2sys(8)
man page.
Note that the examples in this section assume the command is run on a slave system or slave port.
Verifying Time Synchronization
When PTP
time synchronization is working properly, new messages with offsets and frequency adjustments will be printed periodically to the ptp4l and phc2sys (if hardware time stamping is used) outputs. These values will eventually converge after a short period of time. These messages can be seen in /var/log/messages
file. An example of the output follows:
ptp4l[352.359]: selected /dev/ptp0 as PTP clock
ptp4l[352.361]: port 1: INITIALIZING to LISTENING on INITIALIZE
ptp4l[352.361]: port 0: INITIALIZING to LISTENING on INITIALIZE
ptp4l[353.210]: port 1: new foreign master 00a069.fffe.0b552d-1
ptp4l[357.214]: selected best master clock 00a069.fffe.0b552d
ptp4l[357.214]: port 1: LISTENING to UNCALIBRATED on RS_SLAVE
ptp4l[359.224]: master offset 3304 s0 freq +0 path delay 9202
ptp4l[360.224]: master offset 3708 s1 freq -29492 path delay 9202
ptp4l[361.224]: master offset -3145 s2 freq -32637 path delay 9202
ptp4l[361.224]: port 1: UNCALIBRATED to SLAVE on MASTER_CLOCK_SELECTED
ptp4l[362.223]: master offset -145 s2 freq -30580 path delay 9202
ptp4l[363.223]: master offset 1043 s2 freq -29436 path delay 8972
ptp4l[364.223]: master offset 266 s2 freq -29900 path delay 9153
ptp4l[365.223]: master offset 430 s2 freq -29656 path delay 9153
ptp4l[366.223]: master offset 615 s2 freq -29342 path delay 9169
ptp4l[367.222]: master offset -191 s2 freq -29964 path delay 9169
ptp4l[368.223]: master offset 466 s2 freq -29364 path delay 9170
ptp4l[369.235]: master offset 24 s2 freq -29666 path delay 9196
ptp4l[370.235]: master offset -375 s2 freq -30058 path delay 9238
ptp4l[371.235]: master offset 285 s2 freq -29511 path delay 9199
ptp4l[372.235]: master offset -78 s2 freq -29788 path delay 9204
An example of the phc2sys output follows:
phc2sys[526.527]: Waiting for ptp4l...
phc2sys[527.528]: Waiting for ptp4l...
phc2sys[528.528]: phc offset 55341 s0 freq +0 delay 2729
phc2sys[529.528]: phc offset 54658 s1 freq -37690 delay 2725
phc2sys[530.528]: phc offset 888 s2 freq -36802 delay 2756
phc2sys[531.528]: phc offset 1156 s2 freq -36268 delay 2766
phc2sys[532.528]: phc offset 411 s2 freq -36666 delay 2738
phc2sys[533.528]: phc offset -73 s2 freq -37026 delay 2764
phc2sys[534.528]: phc offset 39 s2 freq -36936 delay 2746
phc2sys[535.529]: phc offset 95 s2 freq -36869 delay 2733
phc2sys[536.529]: phc offset -359 s2 freq -37294 delay 2738
phc2sys[537.529]: phc offset -257 s2 freq -37300 delay 2753
phc2sys[538.529]: phc offset 119 s2 freq -37001 delay 2745
phc2sys[539.529]: phc offset 288 s2 freq -36796 delay 2766
phc2sys[540.529]: phc offset -149 s2 freq -37147 delay 2760
phc2sys[541.529]: phc offset -352 s2 freq -37395 delay 2771
phc2sys[542.529]: phc offset 166 s2 freq -36982 delay 2748
phc2sys[543.529]: phc offset 50 s2 freq -37048 delay 2756
phc2sys[544.530]: phc offset -31 s2 freq -37114 delay 2748
phc2sys[545.530]: phc offset -333 s2 freq -37426 delay 2747
phc2sys[546.530]: phc offset 194 s2 freq -36999 delay 2749
For ptp4l there is also a directive, summary_interval
, to reduce the output and print only statistics, as normally it will print a message every second or so. For example, to reduce the output to every 1024
seconds, add the following line to the /etc/ptp4l.conf
file:
summary_interval 10
An example of the ptp4l output, with summary_interval 6
, follows:
ptp4l: [615.253] selected /dev/ptp0 as PTP clock
ptp4l: [615.255] port 1: INITIALIZING to LISTENING on INITIALIZE
ptp4l: [615.255] port 0: INITIALIZING to LISTENING on INITIALIZE
ptp4l: [615.564] port 1: new foreign master 00a069.fffe.0b552d-1
ptp4l: [619.574] selected best master clock 00a069.fffe.0b552d
ptp4l: [619.574] port 1: LISTENING to UNCALIBRATED on RS_SLAVE
ptp4l: [623.573] port 1: UNCALIBRATED to SLAVE on MASTER_CLOCK_SELECTED
ptp4l: [684.649] rms 669 max 3691 freq -29383 ± 3735 delay 9232 ± 122
ptp4l: [748.724] rms 253 max 588 freq -29787 ± 221 delay 9219 ± 158
ptp4l: [812.793] rms 287 max 673 freq -29802 ± 248 delay 9211 ± 183
ptp4l: [876.853] rms 226 max 534 freq -29795 ± 197 delay 9221 ± 138
ptp4l: [940.925] rms 250 max 562 freq -29801 ± 218 delay 9199 ± 148
ptp4l: [1004.988] rms 226 max 525 freq -29802 ± 196 delay 9228 ± 143
ptp4l: [1069.065] rms 300 max 646 freq -29802 ± 259 delay 9214 ± 176
ptp4l: [1133.125] rms 226 max 505 freq -29792 ± 197 delay 9225 ± 159
ptp4l: [1197.185] rms 244 max 688 freq -29790 ± 211 delay 9201 ± 162
To reduce the output from the phc2sys, it can be called it with the -u
option as follows:
~]# phc2sys -u summary-updates
Where summary-updates is the number of clock updates to include in summary statistics. An example follows:
~]# phc2sys -s em3 -w -m -u 60
phc2sys[700.948]: rms 1837 max 10123 freq -36474 ± 4752 delay 2752 ± 16
phc2sys[760.954]: rms 194 max 457 freq -37084 ± 174 delay 2753 ± 12
phc2sys[820.963]: rms 211 max 487 freq -37085 ± 185 delay 2750 ± 19
phc2sys[880.968]: rms 183 max 440 freq -37102 ± 164 delay 2734 ± 91
phc2sys[940.973]: rms 244 max 584 freq -37095 ± 216 delay 2748 ± 16
phc2sys[1000.979]: rms 220 max 573 freq -36666 ± 182 delay 2747 ± 43
phc2sys[1060.984]: rms 266 max 675 freq -36759 ± 234 delay 2753 ± 17
Serving PTP Time with NTP
The ntpd
daemon can be configured to distribute the time from the system clock synchronized by ptp4l or phc2sys by using the LOCAL reference clock driver. To prevent ntpd
from adjusting the system clock, the ntp.conf
file must not specify any NTP
servers. The following is a minimal example of ntp.conf
:
~]# cat /etc/ntp.conf
server 127.127.1.0
fudge 127.127.1.0 stratum 0
When the |
Serving NTP Time with PTP
NTP
to PTP
synchronization in the opposite direction is also possible. When ntpd
is used to synchronize the system clock, ptp4l can be configured with the priority1
option (or other clock options included in the best master clock algorithm) to be the grandmaster clock and distribute the time from the system clock via PTP
:
~]# cat /etc/ptp4l.conf
[global]
priority1 127
[em3]
# ptp4l -f /etc/ptp4l.conf
With hardware time stamping, phc2sys needs to be used to synchronize the PTP
hardware clock to the system clock. If running phc2sys as a service, edit the /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
configuration file. The default setting in the /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
file is as follows:
OPTIONS="-a -r"
As root
, edit that line as follows:
~]# vi /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
OPTIONS="-a -r -r"
The -r
option is used twice here to allow synchronization of the PTP
hardware clock on the NIC from the system clock. Restart the phc2sys service for the changes to take effect:
~]# systemctl restart phc2sys
To prevent quick changes in the PTP
clock’s frequency, the synchronization to the system clock can be loosened by using smaller P
(proportional) and I
(integral) constants for the PI servo:
~]# phc2sys -a -r -r -P 0.01 -I 0.0001
Synchronize to PTP or NTP Time Using timemaster
When there are multiple PTP
domains available on the network, or fallback to NTP
is needed, the timemaster program can be used to synchronize the system clock to all available time sources. The PTP
time is provided by phc2sys and ptp4l via shared memory driver (SHM reference clocks to chronyd
or ntpd
(depending on the NTP
daemon that has been configured on the system). The NTP
daemon can then compare all time sources, both PTP
and NTP
, 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 their own or share a PTP
hardware clock (PHC), generates configuration files for ptp4l and chronyd
or ntpd
, and starts the ptp4l, phc2sys, and chronyd
or ntpd
processes as needed. It will remove the generated configuration files on exit. It writes configuration files for chronyd
, ntpd
, and ptp4l to /var/run/timemaster/
.
Starting timemaster as a Service
To start timemaster as a service, issue the following command as root
:
~]# systemctl start timemaster
This will read the options in /etc/timemaster.conf
.
Understanding the timemaster Configuration File
Fedora provides a default /etc/timemaster.conf
file with a number of sections containing default options. The section headings are enclosed in brackets.
To view the default configuration, issue a command as follows:
~]$ less /etc/timemaster.conf
# Configuration file for timemaster
#[ntp_server ntp-server.local]
#minpoll 4
#maxpoll 4
#[ptp_domain 0]
#interfaces eth0
[timemaster]
ntp_program chronyd
[chrony.conf]
include /etc/chrony.conf
[ntp.conf]
includefile /etc/ntp.conf
[ptp4l.conf]
[chronyd]
path /usr/sbin/chronyd
options -u chrony
[ntpd]
path /usr/sbin/ntpd
options -u ntp:ntp -g
[phc2sys]
path /usr/sbin/phc2sys
[ptp4l]
path /usr/sbin/ptp4l
Notice the section named as follows:
[ntp_server address]
This is an example of an NTP
server section, “ntp-server.local” is an example of a host name for an NTP
server on the local LAN. Add more sections as required using a host name or IP
address as part of the section name. Note that the short polling values in that example section are not suitable for a public server, see Configuring NTP Using ntpd for an explanation of suitable minpoll
and maxpoll
values.
Notice the section named as follows:
[ptp_domain number]
A “PTP domain” is a group of one or more PTP
clocks that synchronize to each other. They may or may not be synchronized to clocks in another domain. Clocks that are configured with the same domain number make up the domain. This includes a PTP
grandmaster clock. The domain number in each “PTP domain” section needs to correspond to one of the PTP
domains configured on the network.
An instance of ptp4l is started for every interface which has its own PTP
clock and hardware time stamping is enabled automatically. Interfaces that support hardware time stamping have a PTP
clock (PHC) attached, however it is possible for a group of interfaces on a NIC to share a PHC. A separate ptp4l instance will be started for each group of interfaces sharing the same PHC and for each interface that supports only software time stamping. All ptp4l instances are configured to run as a slave. If an interface with hardware time stamping is specified in more than one PTP
domain, then only the first ptp4l instance created will have hardware time stamping enabled.
Notice the section named as follows:
[timemaster]
The default timemaster configuration includes the system ntpd
and chrony configuration (/etc/ntp.conf
or /etc/chronyd.conf
) in order to include the configuration of access restrictions and authentication keys. That means any NTP
servers specified there will be used with timemaster too.
The section headings are as follows:
[ntp_server ntp-server.local]
— Specify polling intervals for this server. Create additional sections as required. Include the host name orIP
address in the section heading.[ptp_domain 0]
— Specify interfaces that havePTP
clocks configured for this domain. Create additional sections with, the appropriate domain number, as required.[timemaster]
— Specify theNTP
daemon to be used. Possible values arechronyd
andntpd
.[chrony.conf]
— Specify any additional settings to be copied to the configuration file generated forchronyd
.[ntp.conf]
— Specify any additional settings to be copied to the configuration file generated forntpd
.[ptp4l.conf]
— Specify options to be copied to the configuration file generated for ptp4l.[chronyd]
— Specify any additional settings to be passed on the command line tochronyd
.[ntpd]
— Specify any additional settings to be passed on the command line tontpd
.[phc2sys]
— Specify any additional settings to be passed on the command line to phc2sys.[ptp4l]
— Specify any additional settings to be passed on the command line to all instances of ptp4l.
The section headings and there contents are explained in detail in the timemaster(8)
manual page.
Configuring timemaster Options
Editing the timemaster Configuration File
- To change the default configuration, open the
/etc/timemaster.conf
file for editing asroot
:
~]# vi /etc/timemaster.conf
For each
NTP
server you want to control using timemaster, create[ntp_server *address*]
sections . Note that the short polling values in the example section are not suitable for a public server, see Configuring NTP Using ntpd for an explanation of suitableminpoll
andmaxpoll
values.To add interfaces that should be used in a domain, edit the
#[ptp_domain 0]
section and add the interfaces. Create additional domains as required. For example:
[ptp_domain 0]
interfaces eth0
[ptp_domain 1]
interfaces eth1
If required to use
ntpd
as theNTP
daemon on this system, change the default entry in the[timemaster]
section fromchronyd
tontpd
. See Configuring NTP Using the chrony Suite for information on the differences between ntpd and chronyd.If using
chronyd
as theNTP
server on this system, add any additional options below the defaultinclude /etc/chrony.conf
entry in the[chrony.conf]
section. Edit the defaultinclude
entry if the path to/etc/chrony.conf
is known to have changed.If using
ntpd
as theNTP
server on this system, add any additional options below the defaultinclude /etc/ntp.conf
entry in the[ntp.conf]
section. Edit the defaultinclude
entry if the path to/etc/ntp.conf
is known to have changed.In the
[ptp4l.conf]
section, add any options to be copied to the configuration file generated for ptp4l. This chapter documents common options and more information is available in theptp4l(8)
manual page.In the
[chronyd]
section, add any command line options to be passed tochronyd
when called by timemaster. See Configuring NTP Using the chrony Suite for information on usingchronyd
.In the
[ntpd]
section, add any command line options to be passed tontpd
when called by timemaster. See Configuring NTP Using ntpd for information on usingntpd
.In the
[phc2sys]
section, add any command line options to be passed to phc2sys when called by timemaster. This chapter documents common options and more information is available in thephy2sys(8)
manual page.In the
[ptp4l]
section, add any command line options to be passed to ptp4l when called by timemaster. This chapter documents common options and more information is available in theptp4l(8)
manual page.Save the configuration file and restart timemaster by issuing the following command as
root
:
~]# systemctl restart timemaster
Improving Accuracy
Previously, test results indicated that disabling the tickless kernel capability could significantly improve the stability of the system clock, and thus improve the PTP
synchronization accuracy (at the cost of increased power consumption). The kernel tickless mode can be disabled by adding nohz=off
to the kernel boot option parameters. However, recent improvements applied to kernel-3.10.0-197.fc21
have greatly improved the stability of the system clock and the difference in stability of the clock with and without nohz=off
should be much smaller now for most users.
The ptp4l and phc2sys applications can be configured to use a new adaptive servo. The advantage over the PI servo is that it does not require configuration of the PI constants to perform well. To make use of this for ptp4l, add the following line to the /etc/ptp4l.conf
file:
clock_servo linreg
After making changes to /etc/ptp4l.conf
, restart the ptp4l service from the command line by issuing the following command as root
:
~]# systemctl restart ptp4l
To make use of this for phc2sys, add the following line to the /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
file:
-E linreg
After making changes to /etc/sysconfig/phc2sys
, restart the phc2sys service from the command line by issuing the following command as root
:
~]# systemctl restart phc2sys
Additional Resources
The following sources of information provide additional resources regarding PTP
and the ptp4l tools.
Installed Documentation
ptp4l(8)
man page — Describes ptp4l options including the format of the configuration file.pmc(8)
man page — Describes thePTP
management client and its command options.phc2sys(8)
man page — Describes a tool for synchronizing the system clock to aPTP
hardware clock (PHC).timemaster(8)
man page — Describes a program that uses ptp4l and phc2sys to synchronize the system clock usingchronyd
orntpd
.
Useful Websites
http://linuxptp.sourceforge.net/
The Linux PTP project.
https://www.nist.gov/el/isd/ieee/ieee1588.cfm
The IEEE 1588 Standard.