Pavel,

Linux has many, many times broken the NTP model compatible with other systems such as Solaris and FreeBSD, among others. I have no trouble with that as long as whatever modifications are required in NTP to make the RTC driver work remain proprietary to Linux and never leak to other systems. I have no idea what the Linux 11-minute process is about, but it probably conflicts with the NTP 1-hour RTC alignment.

If your driver requires the Linux model, whatever modifications are required in the base code (#ifdefs) will not be supported here and may conflict with future developments. On the other hand, it could be, for example, that the RTC provide a 1-second interrupt similar to the PPS signal now. On that assumption the base code might have a feature that supports the RTC in much the same way the NMEA driver does now. That would be a generic solution and nicely fit the NTP.

Dave

Krejci, Pavel wrote:

Hello Dave,
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    From: David L. Mills [mailto:mi...@udel.edu]
    Sent: Wednesday, June 23, 2010 4:42 AM
    To: Krejci, Pavel
    Cc: questions@lists.ntp.org
    Subject: Re: [ntp:questions] Reference clock driver for /dev/rtc

    Pavel,

    It's not as simple as that. Normally, ntpd uses settimeofday()
    once per hour to set the system clock, which has the side effect
    of setting the RTC. Obviously, you don't want that. If the RTC
    refclock is enabled, that has to be disabled, so some kind of
    interlock must be devised. This can be a tricky business and have
    unintended consequences if something or other fails.  The
interlocks with the PPS signal come to mind. Do you mean the 11 minute mode in Linux, when the system time is
    periodically written to the rtc in 11 minute intervals? This is
    triggered by the synch status (time_status variable in the
    kernel). I've solved this by periodically resetting this synch
    status in my refclock driver.

    You are correct in that the RTC has in general far better
    temperature compensation than either the system clock or the
    TSC/PCC counter. However, its resolution is generally far worse.
    Even so, the lowpass character of the clock discipline masks this
    so actual delivered system time should be quite good. Chapter 15
    of my new book due in September contains an extensive discussion
    on these issues.
    Theoretically the worst RTC resolution is 1 second, but usually if
    offers update IRQ whenever the "seconds" counter changes. And this
    gives good resolution for my system. Attached is the /dev/rtc
    peerstats from my qemu guest system. The clock offset keeps
    under 1 milisecond which is enough for our purposes. I will check
    your book when published.
Regards Pavel Dave

    Krejci, Pavel wrote:

Hi,

well, then, do you find it useful? How should I proceed to contribute into ntpd 
project?

Thanks
Pavel

-----Original Message-----
From: unruh [mailto:un...@wormhole.physics.ubc.ca]
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2010 11:48 AM
To: questions@lists.ntp.org
Subject: Re: [ntp:questions] Reference clock driver for /dev/rtc

On 2010-06-16, Krejci, Pavel
<pavel.kre...@siemens-enterprise.com> wrote:
Hi,

-----Original Message-----
From: unruh [mailto:un...@wormhole.physics.ubc.ca]
Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2010 7:15 PM
To: questions@lists.ntp.org
Subject: Re: [ntp:questions] Reference clock driver for /dev/rtc

On 2010-06-15, Krejci, Pavel
<pavel.kre...@siemens-enterprise.com> wrote:
Hi,

since I cannot use kvm-clock as the clock source (older
guest kernel) I am using pit as the clock source. According to my
tests this is the most stable clock source among tsc,hpet
but still
can drift. Since the qemu keeps the /dev/rtc perfectly
synchronized
with the Host's system time it is a good time source for
the ntpd on
the guest. The host itself is then sychronized via NTP with the
external time server. I don't know any other way how to read the
system time from the Host, please offer if you have some.
I do not understand. If you driver can read the rtc, it
can read the
system clock instead.
I am not reading the Host's /dev/rtc. I am reading the
Guest's /dev/rtc, which is synchronized with the Host's system clock.
OK, if that is the way your virtual system works, (Ie it
delivers the system time via /dev/rtc) then so be it. I would
say it is terrible, since it uses a predefined item ( rtc) to
deliver something totally different ( the system time of the
underlying host) rtc has numberous idiosyncracies, not oleast
being that it delivers only times with one second precision.
It also delivers an interrupt on one second boundaries, is
written by a displacement of .5 sec (Ie if you write the time
x to it, that time refers to the time of the rtc .5 sec in
the future. ) I assume that your /dev/rtc does not have all
thoese peculiarities.


And virtual systems are terrible things to use ntpd on.
ntpd cannot
control something where the clock varies by more than 500PPM, and
virtual systems, since they are shut down for variable lengths of
time by the host, tend to have terrible clocks.
Yes the clocks like hpet or tsc are drifting very very much
and the ntpd cannot improve the resulting stability. But the
pit keeps quite well. With additional ntpd the resulting long
period clock stability is good - no exact measures done yet...

OK. Not sure what the pit refers to in the case of the virtual system.

The rtc can only be read in one second chunks.
This does not matter, some radio clocks allow the same.

The only disadvantage is that when the step time back must
be done on the Host, the /dev/rtc gets stuck (it is a monotonic
clock) and the qemu must be restarted.

rtc is not a monotonic clock. It can be set to whatever time you
want.
Unless your hardware is different than what I am imagining.
This comes from the implementation of the /dev/rtc by the
qemu. I haven't investigated why.
Regards
Pavel

Regards
Pavel

-----Original Message-----
From: unruh [mailto:un...@wormhole.physics.ubc.ca]
Sent: Tuesday, June 15, 2010 2:23 AM
To: questions@lists.ntp.org
Subject: Re: [ntp:questions] Reference clock driver for /dev/rtc

On 2010-06-14, Krejci, Pavel
<pavel.kre...@siemens-enterprise.com> wrote:
Hello,

I have written the reference clock driver for /dev/rtc on
Linux. We use it to synchronize the guest Linux system
running in the
qemu with the Host clock. If this is useful to someone
else I would
like to contribute to the NTP project.
How should I proceed?
Why would you want to do that? The rtc is almost certainly
worse than
the system clock. Why not have the guest just read the
host's system
clock, rather than the rtc.




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