This commit updates the FAQ with a new entry.
chronyd's Linux RTC driver (rtc_linux.c) requires the following ioctl
requests to be functional:
RTC_UIE_ON
RTC_UIE_OFF
However, a Linux system's RTC driver does not necessarily implement them,
as noted in these previous commits:
d66b2f2b24
rtc: handle RTCs that don't support interrupts
Tue Dec 10 17:45:28 2019 +0100
bff3f51d13
rtc: extend check for RTCs that don't support interrupts
Thu Dec 12 12:50:19 2019 +0100
Fortunately, the Linux kernel can be built with software emulation of
these hardware requests, by enabling the following config variable:
CONFIG_RTC_INTF_DEV_UIE_EMUL
Provides an emulation for RTC_UIE if the underlying rtc chip
driver does not expose RTC_UIE ioctls. Those requests generate
once-per-second update interrupts, used for synchronization.
The emulation code will read the time from the hardware
clock several times per second, please enable this option
only if you know that you really need it.
This commit records these facts for the benefit of the user.
Change default minsamples to 6 and polltarget to 8. This should improve
stability with extremely small jitters (e.g. HW timestamping) and not
decrease time accuracy at minimum polling interval too much.
This is an incompatible change in the output of the tracking command,
which may break some scripts, but it's necessary to avoid confusion with
IPv4 addresses when synchronised to an IPv6 server or reference clock.
Enable the PRV_Name2IPAddress() function with seccomp support and start
the helper process before loading the seccomp filter (but after dropping
root privileges). This will move the getaddrinfo() call outside the
seccomp filter and should make it more reliable as the list of required
system calls won't depend on what glibc NSS modules are used on the
system.