Add a new change type and use it when an unexpected time jump is
detected in the scheduler to reset reference times, offset and slewing,
NCR instances (with their polling interval), synchronization status, and
drop all sourcestats, manual, refclock and RTC samples.
This should make the recovery more graceful if the estimated jump has a
large error (e.g. select didn't timeout, or after system suspend).
There is no need to try to correct offsets below the specified minimum
(1 nanosecond), let the clock drift away after crossing zero offset and
avoid unnecessary updates.
With the generic driver, the maxslewrate directive sets the maximum
frequency offset that the driver is allowed to use to slew the time. By
default, it's set to 83333.333 (1/12). This is identical to what Linux
fast slewing used to use.
This driver is intended to complete system-specific drivers that don't
have implemented all required driver functionality. Currently, it
implements offset functions working on top of system-specific frequency
functions. Offsets are corrected by changing frequency, similarly to
fast slewing implemented in the Linux driver.