The Linux ETR support only applies to Linux running in an LPAR. Getting
this to work for Linuxrunning in virtual machines will require VM to
accept and virtualize the new ETR signals.
Rick Barlow
Sr. z/VM Systems Programmer
Nationwide Services Co.,
On Wed, 21 May 2008 19:30:10 -0400, Alan Altmark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
On Wednesday, 05/21/2008 at 07:25 EDT, dave [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
To recap:
1) VM (actually, CP) does not participate in the new SNT,
once CP has it's hardware TOD clock set from either the HMC
or the Operator,
I don't think that IBM has announced the ability for z/VM to update its
clock on the fly with input from an STP/NTP service. SLES10, however, can
use an external NTP source to update its own clock (separate from the z/V
M
supervisor). I do this because our hobbit server will complain (softly bu
t
/VM's hardware TOD clock?
Or am I completely missing the point here about what STP and
NTP client features are supposed to provide?
DJ
- Original Message Follows -
From: Thomas Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU
Subject: Re: z/VM, NTP, and the z/10.
Date: Wed, 21 May 2008
are supposed to provide?
DJ
- Original Message Follows -
From: Thomas Kern [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU
Subject: Re: z/VM, NTP, and the z/10.
Date: Wed, 21 May 2008 11:49:55 -0500
I don't think that IBM has announced the ability for z/VM
to update its clock
Rick,
Now I'm confused. You write:
Running the NTP server is a whole lot better than even a daily 'ntpdate'
via CRON.
and
The spiffy thing about time on System z is that the clock is incredibly
stable.
So which is it?
We wrote about having one server running the full xntpd to a reliable
Now I'm confused. You write:
Running the NTP server is a whole lot better than even a daily
'ntpdate' via CRON.
and
The spiffy thing about time on System z is that the clock is
incredibly stable.
So which is it?
Both are true - the key problem is that if the operator is off when he
The overhead isn't too much. We have a script in /etc/cron.daily that run
s
the ntpd program once and goes away. If I was concerned about the overhea
d,
I would do this at IPL and once a week since we don't drift more than a
second every year, but our HMC clock is off by 3 seconds. I got the scrip
On Wednesday, 05/21/2008 at 12:45 EDT, Dave Jones
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A client has just installed a z10 system, with the STP server and NTP
client
support enabled. In one LPAR there is z/OS 1.9 running and exploiting an
external time reference to keep it's LPAR time accurate.
With STP,
On Wed, May 21, 2008 at 8:53 PM, Richard Troth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The spiffy thing about time on System z is that the clock is incredibly
stable. (Ticks at the right rate, though may be off by several minutes.
It's always off by the same several minutes to great precision.) If we
We've been running NTP for every with no ill effects. Our
authentication product requires it be there (to active directory so
presumably Kerberos is the reason).
Now.. Funny this topic should come up. I was about to ask about this
which came out the SLES 10 SP2 Release notes:
Hi, Mike, ...
Two things seem to have gotten run together in my post.
I meant to say that running the NTP server on all guests
is better in terms of impact to the VM host than running a
poorly scheduled MULTIPLICITY of 'ntpdate' jobs nightly.
At my shop, we introduced an arbitrary staggering of
On Wednesday, 05/21/2008 at 02:43 EDT, dave [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
My question is: what
happens if z/VM is running on one of those LPARs and PR/SM,
under the covers, keeps updating z/VM's hardware TOD clock?
As CP perceives time, nothing happens. The clock keeps on ticking. But
to the
R; wrote:
It's not that it doesn't work, it's just that we found the cost of
changing
from the Linux norm to be greater than the advantage.
Exactly. There's enough other different areas that generate enough
quizzical looks. Plus the unix security baseline here says it has to be
run and I
a good one.
DJ
- Original Message Follows -
From: Alan Altmark [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU
Subject: Re: z/VM, NTP, and the z/10.
Date: Wed, 21 May 2008 19:08:05 -0400
On Wednesday, 05/21/2008 at 02:43 EDT, dave
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My question is: what
happens
On Wednesday, 05/21/2008 at 07:25 EDT, dave [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
To recap:
1) VM (actually, CP) does not participate in the new SNT,
once CP has it's hardware TOD clock set from either the HMC
or the Operator, that's it, no changes to the h/w TOD clock.
Disagree. See my previous posts.
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