Alexander,
First off, CentOS7 came with cronyd. Which was very annoying
because when I tried to remove it, it had 2 prereqs:
anaconda
initial-setup
Now, I don't know why the setup program kept these
2 around. I think CentOS7 needs a bit growing up.
Anyway, I disabled chrony:
systemctl disable time-sync
systemctl stop time-sync
Then I installed ntp. However, when I started it
it seems that it was not compiled with: --enable-all-clocks
So, I downloaded the latest and re-compiled with:
./configure --with-crypto --enable-all-clocks --enable-step-slew
I built it as per the document and everything looks good
-G
On 12/12/2014 04:29 AM, Alexander Dalloz wrote:> Am 11.12.2014 um 21:57 schrieb xaos:
>> Hello everyone,
>>
>> If anyone is interested, I have created a HOWTO
>> on running a Motorola GPS receiver connected to
>> a CentOS 7 box via serial port (com1),
>> with 1PPS over DCD.
>>
>> The trick here is that CentOS 7 uses systemd
>> and setup was a bit different. Anyway,
>> everything works.
>>
>> The result is a highly accurate NTP server, Stratum 1.
>>
>> Here is the documentation.
>>
>> http://www.maximaphysics.com/Centos_7_GPS_Setup.html
>>
>> Let me know if something does not look right.
>>
>> -George, N2FGX
>
> Hello George,
>
> thanks for the interesting article.
>
> Mind you one question: why did you replace the NTPd shipping with
> CentOS 7 by a source compilation? Is the NTPd version provided by
> CentOS lacking some important feature for that usecase?
>
> Regards
>
> Alexander
>
>
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