On Thu, Dec 01, 2016 at 07:07:53AM -0600, Lonnie Abelbeck wrote: > > How about returning 0 if the clock was in a synchronised state (the > > reference was updated at least once) and 1 if not? With -q that would > > be 0 only if the clock was stepped. > > Yes, that would work for our situation. > > For example using "chronyd -q -u ntp -t 10", if after 5 seconds the clock was > in a synchronized state, it steps the clock and exits 0. Alternatively if > after 10 seconds the clock was not yet in a synchronized state, it would exit > with a non-zero (timeout) return.
The -t option is now in git. If you test it, please let me know if it works for you as expected. -- Miroslav Lichvar -- To unsubscribe email [email protected] with "unsubscribe" in the subject. For help email [email protected] with "help" in the subject. Trouble? Email [email protected].
