From b2d2d555a704148968cb7e566735a2a1b1a2f189 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2024 14:48:01 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 4.5. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- doc/chronyd.adoc | 235 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 235 insertions(+) create mode 100644 doc/chronyd.adoc (limited to 'doc/chronyd.adoc') diff --git a/doc/chronyd.adoc b/doc/chronyd.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..887be48 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/chronyd.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,235 @@ +// This file is part of chrony +// +// Copyright (C) Richard P. Curnow 1997-2003 +// Copyright (C) Miroslav Lichvar 2009-2017 +// +// This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify +// it under the terms of version 2 of the GNU General Public License as +// published by the Free Software Foundation. +// +// This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but +// WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of +// MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU +// General Public License for more details. +// +// You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along +// with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., +// 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA. + += chronyd(8) +:doctype: manpage +:man manual: System Administration +:man source: chrony @CHRONY_VERSION@ + +== NAME + +chronyd - chrony daemon + +== SYNOPSIS + +*chronyd* [_OPTION_]... [_DIRECTIVE_]... + +== DESCRIPTION + +*chronyd* is a daemon for synchronisation of the system clock. It can +synchronise the clock with NTP servers, reference clocks (e.g. a GPS receiver), +and manual input using wristwatch and keyboard via *chronyc*. It can also +operate as an NTPv4 (RFC 5905) server and peer to provide a time service to +other computers in the network. + +If no configuration directives are specified on the command line, *chronyd* +will read them from a configuration file. The compiled-in default location of +the file is _@SYSCONFDIR@/chrony.conf_. + +Informational messages, warnings, and errors will be logged to syslog. + +== OPTIONS + +*-4*:: +With this option hostnames will be resolved only to IPv4 addresses and only +IPv4 sockets will be created. + +*-6*:: +With this option hostnames will be resolved only to IPv6 addresses and only +IPv6 sockets will be created. + +*-f* _file_:: +This option can be used to specify an alternate location for the configuration +file. The compiled-in default value is _@SYSCONFDIR@/chrony.conf_. + +*-n*:: +When run in this mode, the program will not detach itself from the terminal. + +*-d*:: +When run in this mode, the program will not detach itself from the terminal, +and all messages will be written to the terminal instead of syslog. If +*chronyd* was compiled with enabled support for debugging, this option can be +used twice to enable debug messages. + +*-l* _file_:: +This option enables writing of log messages to a file instead of syslog or the +terminal. + +*-L* _level_:: +This option specifies the minimum severity level of messages to be written to +the log file, syslog, or terminal. The following levels can be specified: -1 +(debug, if compiled with enabled support for debugging), 0 (informational), 1 +(warning), 2 (non-fatal error), and 3 (fatal error). The default value is 0. + +*-p*:: +When run in this mode, *chronyd* will print the configuration and exit. It will +not detach from the terminal. This option can be used to verify the syntax of +the configuration and get the whole configuration, even if it is split into +multiple files and read by the *include* or *confdir* directive. + +*-q*:: +When run in this mode, *chronyd* will set the system clock once and exit. It +will not detach from the terminal. + +*-Q*:: +This option is similar to the *-q* option, except it only prints the offset +without making any corrections of the clock and disables server ports to allow +*chronyd* to be started without root privileges, assuming the configuration +does not have any directives which would require them (e.g. *refclock*, +*hwtimestamp*, *rtcfile*, etc). + +*-r*:: +This option will try to reload and then delete files containing sample +histories for each of the servers and reference clocks being used. The +files are expected to be in the directory specified by the +<> +directive in the configuration file. This option is useful if you want to stop +and restart *chronyd* briefly for any reason, e.g. to install a new version. +However, it should be used only on systems where the kernel can maintain clock +compensation whilst not under *chronyd*'s control (i.e. Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, +illumos, and macOS 10.13 or later). + +*-R*:: +When this option is used, the <> +directive and the <> directive used with +a positive limit will be ignored. This option is useful when restarting +*chronyd* and can be used in conjunction with the *-r* option. + +*-s*:: +This option will set the system clock from the computer's real-time clock (RTC) +or to the last modification time of the file specified by the +<> directive. Real-time clocks are +supported only on Linux. ++ +If used in conjunction with the *-r* flag, *chronyd* will attempt to preserve +the old samples after setting the system clock from the RTC. This can be used +to allow *chronyd* to perform long term averaging of the gain or loss rate +across system reboots, and is useful for systems with intermittent access to +network that are shut down when not in use. For this to work well, it relies +on *chronyd* having been able to determine accurate statistics for the +difference between the RTC and system clock last time the computer was on. ++ +If the last modification time of the drift file is later than both the current +time and the RTC time, the system time will be set to it to restore the time +when *chronyd* was previously stopped. This is useful on computers that have no +RTC or the RTC is broken (e.g. it has no battery). + +*-t* _timeout_:: +This option sets a timeout (in seconds) after which *chronyd* will exit. If the +clock is not synchronised, it will exit with a non-zero status. This is useful +with the *-q* or *-Q* option to shorten the maximum time waiting for +measurements, or with the *-r* option to limit the time when *chronyd* is +running, but still allow it to adjust the frequency of the system clock. + +*-u* _user_:: +This option sets the name of the system user to which *chronyd* will switch +after start in order to drop root privileges. It overrides the +<> directive. The compiled-in default value is +_@DEFAULT_USER@_. ++ +On Linux, *chronyd* needs to be compiled with support for the *libcap* library. +On macOS, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and illumos *chronyd* forks into two processes. +The child process retains root privileges, but can only perform a very limited +range of privileged system calls on behalf of the parent. + +*-U*:: +This option disables a check for root privileges to allow *chronyd* to be +started under a non-root user, assuming the process will have all capabilities +(e.g. provided by the service manager) and access to all files, directories, +and devices, needed to operate correctly in the specified configuration. Note +that different capabilities might be needed with different configurations and +different Linux kernel versions. Starting *chronyd* under a non-root user is +not recommended when the configuration is not known, or at least limited to +specific directives. + +*-F* _level_:: +This option configures system call filters loaded by *chronyd* processes if it +was compiled with support for the Linux secure computing (seccomp) facility. +Three levels are defined: 0, 1, 2. The filters are disabled at level 0. At +levels 1 and 2, *chronyd* will be killed if it makes a system call which is +blocked by the filters. The level can be specified as a negative number to +trigger the SIGSYS signal instead of SIGKILL, which can be useful for +debugging. The default value is 0. ++ +At level 1, the filters allow only selected system calls that are normally +expected to be made by *chronyd*. Other system calls are blocked. This level is +recommended only if it is known to work on the version of the system where +*chrony* is installed. The filters need to allow also system calls made by +libraries that *chronyd* is using (e.g. libc), but different versions or +implementations of the libraries might make different system calls. If the +filters are missing a system call, *chronyd* could be killed even in normal +operation. ++ +At level 2, the filters block only a small number of specific system calls +(e.g. fork and exec). This approach should avoid false positives, but the +protection of the system against a compromised *chronyd* process is much more +limited. ++ +The filters cannot be enabled with the *mailonchange* directive. + +*-P* _priority_:: +On Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and illumos this option will select the SCHED_FIFO +real-time scheduler at the specified priority (which must be between 0 and +100). On macOS, this option must have either a value of 0 to disable the thread +time constraint policy or 1 for the policy to be enabled. Other systems do not +support this option. The default value is 0. + +*-m*:: +This option will lock *chronyd* into RAM so that it will never be paged out. +This mode is only supported on Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, and illumos. + +*-x*:: +This option disables the control of the system clock. *chronyd* will not try to +make any adjustments of the clock. It will assume the clock is free running and +still track its offset and frequency relative to the estimated true time. This +option allows *chronyd* to be started without the capability to adjust or set +the system clock (e.g. in some containers) to operate as an NTP server. + +*-v*, *--version*:: +With this option *chronyd* will print version number to the terminal and exit. + +*-h*, *--help*:: +With this option *chronyd* will print a help message to the terminal and exit. + +== ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES + +*LISTEN_FDS*:: +On Linux systems, the systemd service manager may pass file descriptors for +pre-initialised sockets to *chronyd*. The service manager allocates and binds +the file descriptors, and passes a copy to each spawned instance of the +service. This allows for zero-downtime service restarts as the sockets buffer +client requests until the service is able to handle them. The service manager +sets the LISTEN_FDS environment variable to the number of passed file +descriptors. + +== FILES + +_@SYSCONFDIR@/chrony.conf_ + +== SEE ALSO + +<>, <> + +== BUGS + +For instructions on how to report bugs, please visit +https://chrony-project.org/. + +== AUTHORS + +chrony was written by Richard Curnow, Miroslav Lichvar, and others. -- cgit v1.2.3