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Configuring NTP Using the chrony Suite

Accurate time keeping is important for a number of reasons in IT. In networking for example, accurate time stamps in packets and logs are required. In Linux systems, the NTP protocol is implemented by a daemon running in user space.

The user space daemon updates the system clock running in the kernel. The system clock can keep time by using various clock sources. Usually, the Time Stamp Counter (TSC) is used. The TSC is a CPU register which counts the number of cycles since it was last reset. It is very fast, has a high resolution, and there are no interrupts.

There is a choice between the daemons ntpd and chronyd, which are available from the repositories in the ntp and chrony packages respectively. This section describes the use of the chrony suite of utilities to update the system clock on systems that do not fit into the conventional permanently networked, always on, dedicated server category.

Introduction to the chrony Suite

Chrony consists of chronyd, a daemon that runs in user space, and chronyc, a command line program for making adjustments to chronyd. Systems which are not permanently connected, or not permanently powered up, take a relatively long time to adjust their system clocks with ntpd. This is because many small corrections are made based on observations of the clocks drift and offset. Temperature changes, which may be significant when powering up a system, affect the stability of hardware clocks. Although adjustments begin within a few milliseconds of booting a system, acceptable accuracy may take anything from ten seconds from a warm restart to a number of hours depending on your requirements, operating environment and hardware. chrony is a different implementation of the NTP protocol than ntpd, it can adjust the system clock more rapidly.

Differences Between ntpd and chronyd

One of the main differences between ntpd and chronyd is in the algorithms used to control the computer’s clock. Things chronyd can do better than ntpd are:

  • chronyd can work well when external time references are only intermittently accessible, whereas ntpd needs regular polling of time reference to work well.

  • chronyd can perform well even when the network is congested for longer periods of time.

  • chronyd can usually synchronize the clock faster and with better time accuracy.

  • chronyd quickly adapts to sudden changes in the rate of the clock, for example, due to changes in the temperature of the crystal oscillator, whereas ntpd may need a long time to settle down again.

  • In the default configuration, chronyd never steps the time after the clock has been synchronized at system start, in order not to upset other running programs. ntpd can be configured to never step the time too, but it has to use a different means of adjusting the clock, which has some disadvantages.

  • chronyd can adjust the rate of the clock on a Linux system in a larger range, which allows it to operate even on machines with a broken or unstable clock. For example, on some virtual machines.

Things chronyd can do that ntpd cannot do:

  • chronyd provides support for isolated networks where the only method of time correction is manual entry. For example, by the administrator looking at a clock. chronyd can examine the errors corrected at different updates to estimate the rate at which the computer gains or loses time, and use this estimate to trim the computer clock subsequently.

  • chronyd provides support to work out the rate of gain or loss of the real-time clock, the hardware clock, that maintains the time when the computer is turned off. It can use this data when the system boots to set the system time using an adjusted value of the time taken from the real-time clock. This is, at time of writing, only available in Linux.

Things ntpd can do that chronyd cannot do:

  • ntpd fully supports NTP version 4 (RFC 5905), including broadcast, multicast, manycast clients and servers, and the orphan mode. It also supports extra authentication schemes based on public-key cryptography (RFC 5906). chronyd uses NTP version 3 (RFC 1305), which is compatible with version 4.

  • ntpd includes drivers for many reference clocks whereas chronyd relies on other programs, for example gpsd, to access the data from the reference clocks.

Choosing Between NTP Daemons

  • Chrony should be considered for all systems which are frequently suspended or otherwise intermittently disconnected and reconnected to a network. Mobile and virtual systems for example.

  • The NTP daemon (ntpd) should be considered for systems which are normally kept permanently on. Systems which are required to use broadcast or multicast IP, or to perform authentication of packets with the Autokey protocol, should consider using ntpd. Chrony only supports symmetric key authentication using a message authentication code (MAC) with MD5, SHA1 or stronger hash functions, whereas ntpd also supports the Autokey authentication protocol which can make use of the PKI system. Autokey is described in RFC 5906.

Understanding chrony and Its Configuration

Understanding chronyd

The chrony daemon, chronyd, running in user space, makes adjustments to the system clock which is running in the kernel. It does this by consulting external time sources, using the NTP protocol, when ever network access allows it to do so. When external references are not available, chronyd will use the last calculated drift stored in the drift file. It can also be commanded manually to make corrections, by chronyc.

Understanding chronyc

The chrony daemon, chronyd, can be controlled by the command line utility chronyc. This utility provides a command prompt which allows entering of a number of commands to make changes to chronyd. The default configuration is for chronyd to only accept commands from a local instance of chronyc, but chronyc can be used to alter the configuration so that chronyd will allow external control. chronyc can be run remotely after first configuring chronyd to accept remote connections. The IP addresses allowed to connect to chronyd should be tightly controlled.

Understanding the chrony Configuration Commands

The default configuration file for chronyd is /etc/chrony.conf. The -f option can be used to specify an alternate configuration file path. See the chronyd man page for further options. For a complete list of the directives that can be used see https://chrony.tuxfamily.org/manual.html#Configuration-file. Below is a selection of configuration options:

Comments

Comments should be preceded by #, %, ; or !

allow

Optionally specify a host, subnet, or network from which to allow NTP connections to a machine acting as NTP server. The default is not to allow connections. Examples:

  1. [subs="quotes"]

allow server1.example.com

Use this form to specify a particular host, by its host name, to be allowed access.

  1. [subs="quotes"]

allow 192.0.2.0/24

Use this form to specify a particular network to be allowed access.

  1. [subs="quotes"]

allow 2001:db8::/32

Use this form to specify an IPv6 address to be allowed access.

cmdallow

This is similar to the allow directive (see section allow), except that it allows control access (rather than NTP client access) to a particular subnet or host. (By "control access" is meant that chronyc can be run on those hosts and successfully connect to chronyd on this computer.) The syntax is identical. There is also a cmddeny all directive with similar behavior to the cmdallow all directive.

dumpdir

Path to the directory to save the measurement history across restarts of chronyd (assuming no changes are made to the system clock behavior whilst it is not running). If this capability is to be used (via the dumponexit command in the configuration file, or the dump command in chronyc), the dumpdir command should be used to define the directory where the measurement histories are saved.

dumponexit

If this command is present, it indicates that chronyd should save the measurement history for each of its time sources recorded whenever the program exits. (See the dumpdir command above).

local

The local keyword is used to allow chronyd to appear synchronized to real time from the viewpoint of clients polling it, even if it has no current synchronization source. This option is normally used on the "master" computer in an isolated network, where several computers are required to synchronize to one another, and the "master" is kept in line with real time by manual input.

An example of the command is:

local stratum 10

A large value of 10 indicates that the clock is so many hops away from a reference clock that its time is unreliable. If the computer ever has access to another computer which is ultimately synchronized to a reference clock, it will almost certainly be at a stratum less than 10. Therefore, the choice of a high value like 10 for the local command prevents the machine’s own time from ever being confused with real time, were it ever to leak out to clients that have visibility of real servers.

log

The log command indicates that certain information is to be logged. It accepts the following options:

measurements

This option logs the raw NTP measurements and related information to a file called measurements.log.

statistics

This option logs information about the regression processing to a file called statistics.log.

tracking

This option logs changes to the estimate of the system’s gain or loss rate, and any slews made, to a file called tracking.log.

rtc

This option logs information about the system’s real-time clock.

refclocks

This option logs the raw and filtered reference clock measurements to a file called refclocks.log.

tempcomp

This option logs the temperature measurements and system rate compensations to a file called tempcomp.log.

The log files are written to the directory specified by the logdir command.

An example of the command is:

log measurements statistics tracking
logdir

This directive allows the directory where log files are written to be specified.

An example of the use of this directive is:

logdir /var/log/chrony
makestep

Normally chronyd will cause the system to gradually correct any time offset, by slowing down or speeding up the clock as required. In certain situations, the system clock may be so far adrift that this slewing process would take a very long time to correct the system clock. This directive forces chronyd to step system clock if the adjustment is larger than a threshold value, but only if there were no more clock updates since chronyd was started than a specified limit (a negative value can be used to disable the limit). This is particularly useful when using reference clocks, because the initstepslew directive only works with NTP sources.

An example of the use of this directive is:

makestep 1000 10

This would step the system clock if the adjustment is larger than 1000 seconds, but only in the first ten clock updates.

maxchange

This directive sets the maximum allowed offset corrected on a clock update. The check is performed only after the specified number of updates to allow a large initial adjustment of the system clock. When an offset larger than the specified maximum occurs, it will be ignored for the specified number of times and then chronyd will give up and exit (a negative value can be used to never exit). In both cases a message is sent to syslog.

An example of the use of this directive is:

maxchange 1000 1 2

After the first clock update, chronyd will check the offset on every clock update, it will ignore two adjustments larger than 1000 seconds and exit on another one.

maxupdateskew

One of chronyd's tasks is to work out how fast or slow the computer’s clock runs relative to its reference sources. In addition, it computes an estimate of the error bounds around the estimated value.

If the range of error is too large, it indicates that the measurements have not settled down yet, and that the estimated gain or loss rate is not very reliable.

The maxupdateskew parameter is the threshold for determining whether an estimate is too unreliable to be used. By default, the threshold is 1000 ppm.

The format of the syntax is:

maxupdateskew skew-in-ppm

Typical values for skew-in-ppm might be 100 for a dial-up connection to servers over a telephone line, and 5 or 10 for a computer on a LAN.

It should be noted that this is not the only means of protection against using unreliable estimates. At all times, chronyd keeps track of both the estimated gain or loss rate, and the error bound on the estimate. When a new estimate is generated following another measurement from one of the sources, a weighted combination algorithm is used to update the master estimate. So if chronyd has an existing highly-reliable master estimate and a new estimate is generated which has large error bounds, the existing master estimate will dominate in the new master estimate.

noclientlog

This directive, which takes no arguments, specifies that client accesses are not to be logged. Normally they are logged, allowing statistics to be reported using the clients command in chronyc.

reselectdist

When chronyd selects synchronization source from available sources, it will prefer the one with minimum synchronization distance. However, to avoid frequent reselecting when there are sources with similar distance, a fixed distance is added to the distance for sources that are currently not selected. This can be set with the reselectdist option. By default, the distance is 100 microseconds.

The format of the syntax is:

reselectdist dist-in-seconds
stratumweight

The stratumweight directive sets how much distance should be added per stratum to the synchronization distance when chronyd selects the synchronization source from available sources.

The format of the syntax is:

stratumweight dist-in-seconds

By default, dist-in-seconds is 1 second. This means that sources with lower stratum are usually preferred to sources with higher stratum even when their distance is significantly worse. Setting stratumweight to 0 makes chronyd ignore stratum when selecting the source.

rtcfile

The rtcfile directive defines the name of the file in which chronyd can save parameters associated with tracking the accuracy of the system’s real-time clock (RTC).

The format of the syntax is:

rtcfile /var/lib/chrony/rtc

chronyd saves information in this file when it exits and when the writertc command is issued in chronyc. The information saved is the RTC’s error at some epoch, that epoch (in seconds since January 1 1970), and the rate at which the RTC gains or loses time. Not all real-time clocks are supported as their code is system-specific. Note that if this directive is used then the real-time clock should not be manually adjusted as this would interfere with chrony's need to measure the rate at which the real-time clock drifts if it was adjusted at random intervals.

rtcsync

The rtcsync directive is present in the /etc/chrony.conf file by default. This will inform the kernel the system clock is kept synchronized and the kernel will update the real-time clock every 11 minutes.

Security with chronyc

As access to chronyc allows changing chronyd just as editing the configuration files would, access to chronyc should be limited. Passwords can be specified in the key file, written in ASCII or HEX, to restrict the use of chronyc. One of the entries is used to restrict the use of operational commands and is referred to as the command key. In the default configuration, a random command key is generated automatically on start. It should not be necessary to specify or alter it manually.

Other entries in the key file can be used as NTP keys to authenticate packets received from remote NTP servers or peers. The two sides need to share a key with identical ID, hash type and password in their key file. This requires manually creating the keys and copying them over a secure medium, such as SSH. If the key ID was, for example, 10 then the systems that act as clients must have a line in their configuration files in the following format:

server w.x.y.z key 10
peer w.x.y.z key 10

The location of the key file is specified in the /etc/chrony.conf file. The default entry in the configuration file is:

keyfile /etc/chrony.keys

The command key number is specified in /etc/chrony.conf using the commandkey directive, it is the key chronyd will use for authentication of user commands. The directive in the configuration file takes the following form:

commandkey 1

An example of the format of the default entry in the key file, /etc/chrony.keys, for the command key is:

1 SHA1 HEX:A6CFC50C9C93AB6E5A19754C246242FC5471BCDF

Where 1 is the key ID, SHA1 is the hash function to use, HEX is the format of the key, and A6CFC50C9C93AB6E5A19754C246242FC5471BCDF is the key randomly generated when chronyd was started for the first time. The key can be given in hexidecimal or ASCII format (the default).

A manual entry in the key file, used to authenticate packets from certain NTP servers or peers, can be as simple as the following:

20 foobar

Where 20 is the key ID and foobar is the secret authentication key. The default hash is MD5, and ASCII is the default format for the key.

By default, chronyd is configured to listen for commands only from localhost (127.0.0.1 and ::1) on port 323. To access chronyd remotely with chronyc, any bindcmdaddress directives in the /etc/chrony.conf file should be removed to enable listening on all interfaces and the cmdallow directive should be used to allow commands from the remote IP address, network, or subnet. In addition, port 323 has to be opened in the firewall in order to connect from a remote system. Note that the allow directive is for NTP access whereas the cmdallow directive is to enable the receiving of remote commands. It is possible to make these changes temporarily using chronyc running locally. Edit the configuration file to make persistent changes.

The communication between chronyc and chronyd is done over UDP, so it needs to be authorized before issuing operational commands. To authorize, use the authhash and password commands as follows:

chronyc> authhash SHA1
chronyc> password HEX:A6CFC50C9C93AB6E5A19754C246242FC5471BCDF
200 OK

If chronyc is used to configure the local chronyd, the -a option will run the authhash and password commands automatically.

Only the following commands can be used without providing a password:

  • activity

  • authhash

  • dns

  • exit

  • help

  • password

  • quit

  • rtcdata

  • sources

  • sourcestats

  • tracking

  • waitsync

.

Using chrony

Installing chrony

The chrony suite is installed by default on some versions of Fedora. If required, to ensure that it is, run the following command as root:

~]# dnf install chrony

The default location for the chrony daemon is /usr/sbin/chronyd. The command line utility will be installed to /usr/bin/chronyc.

Checking the Status of chronyd

To check the status of chronyd, issue the following command:

~]$ systemctl status chronyd
chronyd.service - NTP client/server
   Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/chronyd.service; enabled)
   Active: active (running) since Wed 2013-06-12 22:23:16 CEST; 11h ago

Starting chronyd

To start chronyd, issue the following command as root:

~]# systemctl start chronyd

To ensure chronyd starts automatically at system start, issue the following command as root:

~]# systemctl enable chronyd

Stopping chronyd

To stop chronyd, issue the following command as root:

~]# systemctl stop chronyd

To prevent chronyd from starting automatically at system start, issue the following command as root:

~]# systemctl disable chronyd

Checking if chrony is Synchronized

To check if chrony is synchronized, make use of the tracking, sources, and sourcestats commands.

Checking chrony Tracking

To check chrony tracking, issue the following command:

~]$ chronyc tracking
Reference ID    : 1.2.3.4 (a.b.c)
Stratum         : 3
Ref time (UTC)  : Fri Feb  3 15:00:29 2012
System time     : 0.000001501 seconds slow of NTP time
Last offset     : -0.000001632 seconds
RMS offset      : 0.000002360 seconds
Frequency       : 331.898 ppm fast
Residual freq   : 0.004 ppm
Skew            : 0.154 ppm
Root delay      : 0.373169 seconds
Root dispersion : 0.024780 seconds
Update interval : 64.2 seconds
Leap status     : Normal

The fields are as follows:

Reference ID

This is the reference ID and name (or IP address) if available, of the server to which the computer is currently synchronized. If this is 127.127.1.1 it means the computer is not synchronized to any external source and that you have the "local" mode operating (via the local command in chronyc, or the local directive in the /etc/chrony.conf file (see section local)).

Stratum

The stratum indicates how many hops away from a computer with an attached reference clock we are. Such a computer is a stratum-1 computer, so the computer in the example is two hops away (that is to say, a.b.c is a stratum-2 and is synchronized from a stratum-1).

Ref time

This is the time (UTC) at which the last measurement from the reference source was processed.

System time

In normal operation, chronyd never steps the system clock, because any jump in the timescale can have adverse consequences for certain application programs. Instead, any error in the system clock is corrected by slightly speeding up or slowing down the system clock until the error has been removed, and then returning to the system clock’s normal speed. A consequence of this is that there will be a period when the system clock (as read by other programs using the gettimeofday() system call, or by the date command in the shell) will be different from chronyd's estimate of the current true time (which it reports to NTP clients when it is operating in server mode). The value reported on this line is the difference due to this effect.

Last offset

This is the estimated local offset on the last clock update.

RMS offset

This is a long-term average of the offset value.

Frequency

The "frequency" is the rate by which the system’s clock would be wrong if chronyd was not correcting it. It is expressed in ppm (parts per million). For example, a value of 1ppm would mean that when the system’s clock thinks it has advanced 1 second, it has actually advanced by 1.000001 seconds relative to true time.

Residual freq

This shows the "residual frequency" for the currently selected reference source. This reflects any difference between what the measurements from the reference source indicate the frequency should be and the frequency currently being used.

The reason this is not always zero is that a smoothing procedure is applied to the frequency. Each time a measurement from the reference source is obtained and a new residual frequency computed, the estimated accuracy of this residual is compared with the estimated accuracy (see skew next) of the existing frequency value. A weighted average is computed for the new frequency, with weights depending on these accuracies. If the measurements from the reference source follow a consistent trend, the residual will be driven to zero over time.

Skew

This is the estimated error bound on the frequency.

Root delay

This is the total of the network path delays to the stratum-1 computer from which the computer is ultimately synchronized.

In certain extreme situations, this value can be negative. (This can arise in a symmetric peer arrangement where the computers’ frequencies are not tracking each other and the network delay is very short relative to the turn-around time at each computer.)

Root dispersion

This is the total dispersion accumulated through all the computers back to the stratum-1 computer from which the computer is ultimately synchronized. Dispersion is due to system clock resolution, statistical measurement variations etc.

Leap status

This is the leap status, which can be Normal, Insert second, Delete second or Not synchronized.

Checking chrony Sources

The sources command displays information about the current time sources that chronyd is accessing.

The optional argument -v can be specified, meaning verbose. In this case, extra caption lines are shown as a reminder of the meanings of the columns.

~]$ chronyc sources
	210 Number of sources = 3
MS Name/IP address         Stratum Poll Reach LastRx Last sample
===============================================================================
#* GPS0                          0   4   377    11   -479ns[ -621ns] +/-  134ns
^? a.b.c                         2   6   377    23   -923us[ -924us] +/-   43ms
^+ d.e.f                         1   6   377    21  -2629us[-2619us] +/-   86ms

The columns are as follows:

M

This indicates the mode of the source. ^ means a server, = means a peer and # indicates a locally connected reference clock.

S

This column indicates the state of the sources. "*" indicates the source to which chronyd is currently synchronized. "+" indicates acceptable sources which are combined with the selected source. "-" indicates acceptable sources which are excluded by the combining algorithm. "?" indicates sources to which connectivity has been lost or whose packets do not pass all tests. "x" indicates a clock which chronyd thinks is a falseticker (its time is inconsistent with a majority of other sources). "~" indicates a source whose time appears to have too much variability. The "?" condition is also shown at start-up, until at least 3 samples have been gathered from it.

Name/IP address

This shows the name or the IP address of the source, or reference ID for reference clocks.

Stratum

This shows the stratum of the source, as reported in its most recently received sample. Stratum 1 indicates a computer with a locally attached reference clock. A computer that is synchronized to a stratum 1 computer is at stratum 2. A computer that is synchronized to a stratum 2 computer is at stratum 3, and so on.

Poll

This shows the rate at which the source is being polled, as a base-2 logarithm of the interval in seconds. Thus, a value of 6 would indicate that a measurement is being made every 64 seconds.

chronyd automatically varies the polling rate in response to prevailing conditions.

Reach

This shows the source’s reach register printed as an octal number. The register has 8 bits and is updated on every received or missed packet from the source. A value of 377 indicates that a valid reply was received for all of the last eight transmissions.

LastRx

This column shows how long ago the last sample was received from the source. This is normally in seconds. The letters m, h, d or y indicate minutes, hours, days or years. A value of 10 years indicates there were no samples received from this source yet.

Last sample

This column shows the offset between the local clock and the source at the last measurement. The number in the square brackets shows the actual measured offset. This may be suffixed by ns (indicating nanoseconds), us (indicating microseconds), ms (indicating milliseconds), or s (indicating seconds). The number to the left of the square brackets shows the original measurement, adjusted to allow for any slews applied to the local clock since. The number following the +/- indicator shows the margin of error in the measurement. Positive offsets indicate that the local clock is ahead of the source.

Checking chrony Source Statistics

The sourcestats command displays information about the drift rate and offset estimation process for each of the sources currently being examined by chronyd.

The optional argument -v can be specified, meaning verbose. In this case, extra caption lines are shown as a reminder of the meanings of the columns.

~]$ chronyc sourcestats
210 Number of sources = 1
Name/IP Address            NP  NR  Span  Frequency  Freq Skew  Offset  Std Dev
===============================================================================
abc.def.ghi                11   5   46m     -0.001      0.045      1us    25us

The columns are as follows:

Name/IP address

This is the name or IP address of the NTP server (or peer) or reference ID of the reference clock to which the rest of the line relates.

NP

This is the number of sample points currently being retained for the server. The drift rate and current offset are estimated by performing a linear regression through these points.

NR

This is the number of runs of residuals having the same sign following the last regression. If this number starts to become too small relative to the number of samples, it indicates that a straight line is no longer a good fit to the data. If the number of runs is too low, chronyd discards older samples and re-runs the regression until the number of runs becomes acceptable.

Span

This is the interval between the oldest and newest samples. If no unit is shown the value is in seconds. In the example, the interval is 46 minutes.

Frequency

This is the estimated residual frequency for the server, in parts per million. In this case, the computer’s clock is estimated to be running 1 part in 109 slow relative to the server.

Freq Skew

This is the estimated error bounds on Freq (again in parts per million).

Offset

This is the estimated offset of the source.

Std Dev

This is the estimated sample standard deviation.

Manually Adjusting the System Clock

To update, or step, the system clock immediately, bypassing any adjustments in progress by slewing the clock, issue the following commands as root:

~]# chronyc
      chrony> password commandkey-password
      200 OK
      chrony> makestep
      200 OK

Where commandkey-password is the command key or password stored in the key file.

If the rtcfile directive is used, the real-time clock should not be manually adjusted. Random adjustments would interfere with chrony's need to measure the rate at which the real-time clock drifts.

If chronyc is used to configure the local chronyd, the -a will run the authhash and password commands automatically. This means that the interactive session illustrated above can be replaced by:

chronyc -a makestep

Setting Up chrony for Different Environments

Setting Up chrony for a System Which is Infrequently Connected

This example is intended for systems which use dial-on-demand connections. The normal configuration should be sufficient for mobile and virtual devices which connect intermittently. First, review and confirm that the default settings in the /etc/chrony.conf are similar to the following:

driftfile /var/lib/chrony/drift
commandkey 1
keyfile /etc/chrony.keys

The command key ID is generated at install time and should correspond with the commandkey value in the key file, /etc/chrony.keys.

Using your editor running as root, add the addresses of four NTP servers as follows:

server 0.pool.ntp.org offline
server 1.pool.ntp.org offline
server 2.pool.ntp.org offline
server 3.pool.ntp.org offline

The offline option can be useful in preventing systems from trying to activate connections. The chrony daemon will wait for chronyc to inform it that the system is connected to the network or Internet.

Setting Up chrony for a System in an Isolated Network

For a network that is never connected to the Internet, one computer is selected to be the master timeserver. The other computers are either direct clients of the master, or clients of clients. On the master, the drift file must be manually set with the average rate of drift of the system clock. If the master is rebooted it will obtain the time from surrounding systems and take an average to set its system clock. Thereafter it resumes applying adjustments based on the drift file. The drift file will be updated automatically when the settime command is used.

On the system selected to be the master, using a text editor running as root, edit the /etc/chrony.conf as follows:

driftfile /var/lib/chrony/drift
commandkey 1
keyfile /etc/chrony.keys
initstepslew 10 client1 client3 client6
local stratum 8
manual
allow 192.0.2.0

Where 192.0.2.0 is the network or subnet address from which the clients are allowed to connect.

On the systems selected to be direct clients of the master, using a text editor running as root, edit the /etc/chrony.conf as follows:

server master
driftfile /var/lib/chrony/drift
logdir /var/log/chrony
log measurements statistics tracking
keyfile /etc/chrony.keys
commandkey 24
local stratum 10
initstepslew 20 master
allow 192.0.2.123

Where 192.0.2.123 is the address of the master, and master is the host name of the master. Clients with this configuration will resynchronize the master if it restarts.

On the client systems which are not to be direct clients of the master, the /etc/chrony.conf file should be the same except that the local and allow directives should be omitted.

Using chronyc

Using chronyc to Control chronyd

To make changes to the local instance of chronyd using the command line utility chronyc in interactive mode, enter the following command as root:

~]# chronyc -a

chronyc must run as root if some of the restricted commands are to be used. The -a option is for automatic authentication using the local keys when configuring chronyd on the local system. See Security with chronyc for more information.

The chronyc command prompt will be displayed as follows:

chronyc>

You can type help to list all of the commands.

The utility can also be invoked in non-interactive command mode if called together with a command as follows:

chronyc command

Changes made using chronyc are not permanent, they will be lost after a chronyd restart. For permanent changes, modify /etc/chrony.conf.

Using chronyc for Remote Administration

To configure chrony to connect to a remote instance of chronyd, issue a command in the following format:

~]$ chronyc -h hostname

Where hostname is the host name to connect to. The default is to connect to the local daemon.

To configure chrony to connect to a remote instance of chronyd on a non-default port, issue a command in the following format:

~]$ chronyc -h hostname -p port

Where port is the port in use for controlling and monitoring by the remote instance of chronyd.

Note that commands issued at the chronyc command prompt are not persistent. Only commands in the configuration file are persistent.

The first command must be the password command at the chronyc command prompt as follows:

chronyc> password password
200 OK

The password should not have any spaces.

If the password is not an MD5 hash, the hashed password must be preceded by the authhash command as follows:

chronyc> authhash SHA1
chronyc> password HEX:A6CFC50C9C93AB6E5A19754C246242FC5471BCDF
200 OK

The password or hash associated with the command key for a remote system is best obtained by SSH. An SSH connection should be established to the remote machine and the ID of the command key from /etc/chrony.conf and the command key in /etc/chrony.keys memorized or stored securely for the duration of the session.

Additional Resources

The following sources of information provide additional resources regarding chrony.

Installed Documentation

  • chrony(1) man page — Introduces the chrony daemon and the command-line interface tool.

  • chronyc(1) man page — Describes the chronyc command-line interface tool including commands and command options.

  • chronyd(1) man page — Describes the chronyd daemon including commands and command options.

  • chrony.conf(5) man page — Describes the chrony configuration file.

  • /usr/share/doc/chrony/chrony.txt — User guide for the chrony suite.

Online Documentation

https://chrony.tuxfamily.org/manual.html

The online user guide for chrony.