Carlos E. R. wrote:
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The Friday 2007-12-07 at 00:05 +1100, Basil Chupin wrote:
Carlos,
I haven't been paying too much attention to what you have written re the problem, what result do you get when you try setting the time manually, as root, from the command line? You know, the old
ntpdate -u <IP-address-of-time-server>
It works, of course. That's what I'm doing every time NTP quits.
The problem is that NTP can't keep the system clock disciplined, it strays off as soon as NTP looses the network peers, and not a second or two, but several minutes.
It seems a kernel problem, not an NTP problem.
Your logs says that when NTP looses the network connection, it is syncing to the CMOS clock. From another one of your posts: + + + Don't you understand that NTP can not adjust my system + clock and quits? + + 27 Nov 15:31:56 ntpd[12905]: synchronized to 91.121...., stratum 2 + 27 Nov 15:38:31 ntpd[12905]: synchronized to 192.33...., stratum 2 + 27 Nov 15:39:25 ntpd[12905]: synchronized to 195.55...., stratum 2 + 27 Nov 15:39:40 ntpd[12905]: synchronized to LOCAL(0), stratum 10 + 27 Nov 16:22:22 ntpd[12905]: synchronized to 84.88...., stratum 2 + 27 Nov 16:22:22 ntpd[12905]: time correction of 1678 seconds + exceeds sanity limit (1000); set clock manually to the correct + UTC time. + + -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org