On Sat, Jan 5, 2013 at 5:35 AM, Ralph Aichinger <ra...@pangea.at> wrote: > Ralph Aichinger <ra...@pangea.at> wrote: >> There is no PPS device: > > Solved, I did not load the ktimer module. Loading > it gave me a working pps device. > > /ralph > > _______________________________________________ > questions mailing list > questions@lists.ntp.org > http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/questions
Ralph, you should not need to load the ktimer module to get your PPS working. That is the debug module and fakes PPS to the kernel. Verify that the kernel you installed was an uncompressed kernel. Did you compile it yourself or did you get it off the net? The kernels that come as part of the Raspberry Pi Linux distributions are not able to do PPS and must modified and then recompiled. You can check if your running kernel supports the PPS_GPIO by looking in the /proc/config.gz file (zcat /proc/config.gz | less ) and search for CONFIG_PPS_CLIENT_GPIO it is probably equal to 'm'. If it "is not set" or doesn't exist then the kernel you are running can not support PPS on the RPi. james _______________________________________________ questions mailing list questions@lists.ntp.org http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/questions