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phc2sys.8
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phc2sys.8
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.TH PHC2SYS 8 "November 2012" "linuxptp"
.SH NAME
phc2sys \- synchronize two or more clocks
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B phc2sys \-a
[
.B \-r
] [
.B \-r
] [ options ]
.br
.B phc2sys
[
.BI \-d " pps-device"
] [
.BI \-s " device"
] [
.BI \-c " device"
] [
.BI \-O " offset"
] [
.BI \-w
] [ options ]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.B phc2sys
is a program which synchronizes two or more clocks in the system. Typically,
it is used to synchronize the system clock to a PTP hardware clock (PHC),
which itself is synchronized by the
.BR ptp4l (8)
program.
With the
.B \-a
option, the clocks to synchronize are fetched from the running
.B ptp4l
daemon and the direction of synchronization automatically follows changes of
the PTP port states.
Manual configuration is also possible. When using manual configuration, two
synchronization modes are supported, one uses a pulse per second (PPS)
signal provided by the source clock and the other mode reads time from the
source clock directly. Some clocks can be used in both modes, the mode which
will synchronize the slave clock with better accuracy depends on hardware
and driver implementation.
.SH OPTIONS
.TP
.BI \-a
Read the clocks to synchronize from running
.B ptp4l
and follow changes in the port states, adjusting the synchronization
direction automatically. The system clock (CLOCK_REALTIME) is not
synchronized, unless the
.B \-r
option is also specified.
.TP
.BI \-r
Only valid together with the
.B \-a
option. Instructs
.B phc2sys
to also synchronize the system clock (CLOCK_REALTIME). By default, the
system clock is not considered as a possible time source. If you want the
system clock to be eligible to become a time source, specify the
.B \-r
option twice.
.TP
.BI \-d " pps-device"
Specify the PPS device of the master clock (e.g. /dev/pps0). With this option
the PPS synchronization mode is used instead of the direct mode. As the PPS
signal does not specify time and only marks start of a second, the slave clock
should be already close to the correct time before
.B phc2sys
is started or the
.B \-s
option should be used too. With the
.B \-s
option the PPS signal of the master clock is enabled automatically, otherwise
it has to be enabled before
.B phc2sys
is started (e.g. by running \f(CWecho 1 > /sys/class/ptp/ptp0/pps_enable\fP).
This option can be used only with the system clock as the slave clock. Not
compatible with the
.B \-a
option.
.TP
.BI \-s " device"
Specify the master clock by device (e.g. /dev/ptp0) or interface (e.g. eth0) or
by name (e.g. CLOCK_REALTIME for the system clock). When this option is used
together with the
.B \-d
option, the master clock is used only to correct the offset by whole number of
seconds, which cannot be fixed with PPS alone. Not compatible with the
.B \-a
option.
.TP
.BI \-i " interface"
Performs the exact same function as
.B \-s
for compatibility reasons. Previously enabled specifying master clock by network
interface. However, this can now be done using
.B \-s
and this option is no longer necessary. As such it has been deprecated, and
should no longer be used.
.TP
.BI \-c " device"
Specify the slave clock by device (e.g. /dev/ptp1) or interface (e.g. eth1) or
by name. The default is CLOCK_REALTIME (the system clock). Not compatible
with the
.B \-a
option.
.TP
.BI \-E " servo"
Specify which clock servo should be used. Valid values are pi for a PI
controller, linreg for an adaptive controller using linear regression, and
ntpshm for the NTP SHM reference clock to allow another process to synchronize
the local clock.
The default is pi.
.TP
.BI \-P " kp"
Specify the proportional constant of the PI controller. The default is 0.7.
.TP
.BI \-I " ki"
Specify the integral constant of the PI controller. The default is 0.3.
.TP
.BI \-S " step"
Specify the step threshold of the servo. It is the maximum offset that
the servo corrects by changing the clock frequency instead of stepping the
clock. The clock is stepped on start regardless of the option if the offset is
larger than 20 microseconds (unless the
.BI \-F
option is used). It's specified in seconds. The value of 0.0 disables stepping
after the start. The default is 0.0.
.TP
.BI \-F " step"
Specify the step threshold applied only on the first update. It is the maximum
offset that is corrected by adjusting clock. It's specified in seconds. The
value of 0.0 disables stepping on start.
The default is 0.00002 (20 microseconds).
.TP
.BI \-R " update-rate"
Specify the slave clock update rate when running in the direct synchronization
mode. The default is 1 per second.
.TP
.BI \-N " phc-num"
Specify the number of master clock readings per one slave clock update. Only
the fastest reading is used to update the slave clock, this is useful to
minimize the error caused by random delays in scheduling and bus utilization.
The default is 5.
.TP
.BI \-O " offset"
Specify the offset between the slave and master times in seconds. Not
compatible with the
.B \-a
option. See
.SM
.B TIME SCALE USAGE
below.
.TP
.BI \-L " freq-limit"
The maximum allowed frequency offset between uncorrected clock and the system
monotonic clock in parts per billion (ppb). This is used as a sanity check of
the synchronized clock. When a larger offset is measured, a warning message
will be printed and the servo will be reset. When set to 0, the sanity check is
disabled. The default is 200000000 (20%).
.TP
.BI \-M " segment"
The number of the SHM segment used by ntpshm servo.
The default is 0.
.TP
.BI \-u " summary-updates"
Specify the number of clock updates included in summary statistics. The
statistics include offset root mean square (RMS), maximum absolute offset,
frequency offset mean and standard deviation, and mean of the delay in clock
readings and standard deviation. The units are nanoseconds and parts per
billion (ppb). If zero, the individual samples are printed instead of the
statistics. The messages are printed at the LOG_INFO level.
The default is 0 (disabled).
.TP
.B \-w
Wait until ptp4l is in a synchronized state. If the
.B \-O
option is not used, also keep the offset between the slave and master
times updated according to the currentUtcOffset value obtained from ptp4l and
the direction of the clock synchronization. Not compatible with the
.B \-a
option.
.TP
.BI \-n " domain-number"
Specify the domain number used by ptp4l. The default is 0.
.TP
.B \-x
When a leap second is announced, don't apply it in the kernel by stepping the
clock, but let the servo correct the one-second offset slowly by changing the
clock frequency (unless the
.B \-S
option is used).
.TP
.BI \-z " uds-address"
Specifies the address of the server's UNIX domain socket.
The default is /var/run/ptp4l.
.TP
.BI \-l " print-level"
Set the maximum syslog level of messages which should be printed or sent to
the system logger. The default is 6 (LOG_INFO).
.TP
.B \-m
Print messages to the standard output.
.TP
.B \-q
Don't send messages to the system logger.
.TP
.BI \-h
Display a help message.
.TP
.B \-v
Prints the software version and exits.
.SH TIME SCALE USAGE
.B Ptp4l
uses either PTP time scale or UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) time
scale. PTP time scale is continuous and shifted against UTC by a few tens of
seconds as PTP time scale does not apply leap seconds.
In hardware time stamping mode,
.B ptp4l
announces use of PTP time scale and PHC
is used for the stamps. That means PHC must follow PTP time scale while system
clock follows UTC. Time offset between these two is maintained by
.BR phc2sys .
.B Phc2sys
acquires the offset value either by reading it from ptp4l when
.B \-a
or
.B \-w
is in effect or from command line when
.B \-O
is supplied. Failure to maintain the correct offset can result in local system
clock being off some seconds to domain master system clock when in slave mode,
or incorect PTP time announced to the network in case the host is the domain
master.
.SH EXAMPLES
Synchronize time automatically according to the current
.B ptp4l
state, synchronize the system clock to the remote master.
.RS
\f(CWphc2sys \-a \-r\fP
.RE
Same as above, but when the host becomes the domain master, synchronize time
in the domain to its system clock.
.RS
\f(CWphc2sys \-a \-rr\fP
.RE
The host is a domain master, PTP clock is synchronized to system clock and the
time offset is obtained from
.BR ptp4l .
.B Phc2sys
waits for
.B ptp4l
to get at least one port in master or slave mode before starting the
synchronization.
.RS
\f(CWphc2sys \-c /dev/ptp0 \-s CLOCK_REALTIME \-w\fP
.RE
Same as above, time offset is provided on command line and
.B phc2sys
does not wait for
.BR ptp4l .
.RS
\f(CWphc2sys \-c /dev/ptp0 \-s CLOCK_REALTIME \-O 35\fP
.RE
The host is in slave mode, system clock is synchronized from PTP clock,
.B phc2sys
waits for
.B ptp4l
and the offset is set automatically.
.RS
\f(CWphc2sys \-s /dev/ptp0 \-w\fP
.RE
Same as above, PTP clock id is read from the network interface, the offset is
provided on command line
.B phc2sys
does not wait.
.RS
\f(CWphc2sys \-s eth0 \-O \-35\fP
.RE
.SH SEE ALSO
.BR ptp4l (8)