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diff --git a/contrib/ntp/html/driver27.htm b/contrib/ntp/html/driver27.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..686e985 --- /dev/null +++ b/contrib/ntp/html/driver27.htm @@ -0,0 +1,634 @@ +<HTML> +<HEAD> + <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> + <META NAME="GENERATOR" CONTENT="Mozilla/4.01 [en] (Win95; I) [Netscape]"> + <TITLE>Arcron MSF Receiver +</TITLE> +</HEAD> +<BODY> + +<H3> +Arcron MSF Receiver</H3> + +<HR> +<H4> +Synopsis</H4> +Address: 127.127.27.<I>u</I> +<BR>Reference ID: <TT>MSFa</TT> +<BR>Driver ID: <TT>MSF_ARCRON</TT> +<BR>Serial Port: <TT>/dev/arc<I>u</I></TT>; 300 baud, 8-bits, 2-stop, no +parity +<BR>Features: <TT>tty_clk</TT> +<H4> +Description</H4> +This driver supports the Arcron MSF receiver, and would probably also support +the DCF77 variant of the same clock. The clock reports its ID as ``<TT>MSFa</TT>'' +to indicate MSF as a source and the use of the ARCRON driver. + +<P>This documentation describes version V1.1 (1997/06/23) of the source +and has been tested (amongst others) against ntpd3-5.90 on Solaris-1 (SunOS +4.1.3_U1 on an SS1 serving as a router and firewall) and against ntpd3-5.90 +on Solaris-2.5 (on a SS1+ and TurboSPARC 170MHz). This code will probably +work, and show increased stability, reduced jitter and more efficiency +(fewer context switches) with the <TT>tty_clk</TT> discipline/STREAMS module +installed, but this has not been tested. For a to-do list see the comments +at the start of the code. + +<P>This code has been significantly slimmed down since the V1.0 version, +roughly halving the memory footprint of its code and data. + +<P>This driver is designed to allow the unit to run from batteries as designed, +for something approaching the 2.5 years expected in the usual stand-alone +mode, but no battery-life measurements have been taken. + +<P>Much of this code is originally from the other refclock driver files +with thanks. The code was originally made to work with the clock by <A HREF="mailto:derek@toybox.demon.co.uk">Derek +Mulcahy</A>, with modifications by <A HREF="mailto:d@hd.org">Damon Hart-Davis</A>. +Thanks also to <A HREF="mailto:lyndond@sentinet.co.uk">Lyndon David</A> +for some of the specifications of the clock. + +<P>There is support for a Tcl/Tk monitor written by Derek Mulcahy that +examines the output stats; see the <A HREF="http://www2.exnet.com/NTP/ARC/ARC.htm">ARC +Rugby MSF Receiver</A> page for more details and the code. + +<P>Look at the notes at the start of the code for further information; +some of the more important details follow. + +<P>The driver interrogates the clock at each poll (ie every 64s by default) +for a timestamp. The clock responds at the start of the next second (with +the start bit of the first byte being on-time). The time is in `local' +format, including the daylight savings adjustment when it is in effect. +The driver code converts the time back to UTC. + +<P>The clock claims to be accurate to within about 20ms of the MSF-broadcast +time, and given the low data transmission speed from clock to host, and +the fact that the clock is not in continuous sync with MSF, it seems sensible +to set the `precision' of this clock to -5 or -4, -4 being used in this +code, which builds in a reported dispersion of over 63ms (ie says ``This +clock is not very good.''). You can improve the reported precision to -4 +(and thus reduce the base dispersion to about 31ms) by setting the fudge +<TT>flag3</TT> to <TT>1</TT>. + +<P>Even a busy and slow IP link can yield lower dispersions than this from +polls of primary time servers on the Internet, which reinforces the idea +that this clock should be used as a backup in case of problems with such +an IP link, or in the unfortunate event of failure of more accurate sources +such as GPS. + +<P>By default this clock reports itself to be at stratum 2 rather than +the usual stratum 0 for a refclock, because it is not really suited to +be used as other than a backup source. The stratum reported can be changed +with the <TT>fudge</TT> directive to be whatever you like. After careful +monitoring of your clock, and appropriate choice of the <TT>time1</TT> +fudge factor to remove systematic errors in the clock's reported time, +you might fudge the clock to stratum 1 to allow a stratum-2 secondary server +to sync to it. + +<P>The driver code arranges to resync the clock to MSF at intervals of +a little less than an hour (deliberately avoiding the same time each hour +to avoid any systematic problems with the signal or host). Whilst resyncing, +the driver supplements the normal polls for time from the clock with polls +for the reception signal quality reported by the clock. If the signal quality +is too low (0--2 out of a range of 0--5), we chose not to trust the clock +until the next resync (which we bring forward by about half an hour). If +we don't catch the resync, and so don't know the signal quality, we do +trust the clock (because this would generally be when the signal is very +good and a resync happens quickly), but we still bring the next resync +forward and reduce the reported precision (and thus increase reported dispersion). + +<P>If we force resyncs to MSF too often we will needlessly exhaust the +batteries the unit runs from. During clock resync this driver tries to +take enough time samples to avoid <TT>ntpd</TT> losing sync in case this +clock is the current peer. By default the clock would only resync to MSF +about once per day, which would almost certainly not be acceptable for +NTP purposes. + +<P>The driver does not force an immediate resync of the clock to MSF when +it starts up to avoid excessive battery drain in case <TT>ntpd</TT> is +going to be repeatedly restarted for any reason, and also to allow enough +samples of the clock to be taken for <TT>ntpd</TT> to sync immediately +to this clock (and not remain unsynchronised or to sync briefly to another +configured peer, only to hop back in a few poll times, causing unnecessary +disturbance). This behaviour should not cause problems because the driver +will not accept the timestamps from the clock if the status flag delivered +with the time code indicates that the last resync attempt was unsuccessful, +so the initial timestamps will be close to reality, even if with up to +a day's clock drift in the worst case (the clock by default resyncs to +MSF once per day). + +<P>The clock has a peculiar RS232 arrangement where the transmit lines +are powered from the receive lines, presumably to minimise battery drain. +This arrangement has two consequences: +<UL> +<LI> +Your RS232 interface must drive both +ve and -ve</LI> + +<LI> +You must (in theory) wait for an echo and a further 10ms between characters</LI> +</UL> +This driver, running on standard Sun hardware, seems to work fine; note +the use of the <TT>send_slow()</TT> routine to queue up command characters +to be sent once every two seconds. + +<P>Three commands are sent to the clock by this driver. Each command consists +of a single letter (of which only the bottom four bits are significant), +followed by a CR (ASCII 13). Each character sent to the clock should be +followed by a delay to allow the unit to echo the character, and then by +a further 10ms. Following the echo of the command string, there may be +a response (ie in the cae of the <TT>g</TT> and <TT>o</TT> commands below), +which in the case of the <TT>o</TT> command may be delayed by up to 1 second +so as the start bit of the first byte of the response can arrive on time. +The commands and their responses are: +<DL> +<DT> +<TT>g</TT> CR</DT> + +<DD> +Request for signal quality. Answer only valid during (late part of) resync +to MSF signal. The response consists of two characters as follows:</DD> + +<OL> +<DL compact> +<DT> +bit 7</DT> + +<DD> +parity</DD> + +<DT> +bit 6</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 5</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 4</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 3</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 2</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 1</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 0</DT> + +<DD> += 0 if no reception attempt at the moment, = 1 if reception attempt (ie +resync) in progress</DD> +</DL> + +<DL compact> +<DT> +bit 7</DT> + +<DD> +parity</DD> + +<DT> +bit 6</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 5</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 4</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 3</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 2--0</DT> + +<DD> +reception signal quality in the range 0--5 (very poor to very good); if +in the range 0--2 no successful reception is to be expected. The reported +value drops to zero when not resyncing, ie when first returned byte is +not `3'.</DD> +</DL> +</OL> + +<DT> +<TT>h</TT> CR</DT> + +<DD> +Request to resync to MSF. Can take up from about 30s to 360s. Drains batteries +so should not be used excessively. After this the clock time and date should +be correct and the phase within 20ms of time as transmitted from Rugby +MSF (remember to allow for propagation time). By default the clock resyncs +once per day shortly after 2am (presumably to catch transitions to/from +daylight saving time quickly). With this driver code we resync at least +once per hour to minimise clock wander.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>o</TT> CR</DT> + +<DD> +Request timestamp. Start bit of first byte of response is on-time, so may +be delayed up to 1 second. Note that when the BST mode is in effect the +time is GMT/UTC +0100, ie an hour ahead of UTC to reflect local time in +the UK. The response data is as follows:</DD> + +<OL> +<LI> +hours tens (hours range from 00 to 23)</LI> + +<LI> +hours units</LI> + +<LI> +minutes tens (minutes range from 00 to 59)</LI> + +<LI> +minutes units</LI> + +<LI> +seconds tens (seconds presumed to range from 00 to 60 to allow for leap +second)</LI> + +<LI> +seconds units</LI> + +<LI> +day of week 1 (Monday) to 7 (Sunday)</LI> + +<LI> +day of month tens (day ranges from 01 to 31)</LI> + +<LI> +day of month units</LI> + +<LI> +month tens (months range from 01 to 12)</LI> + +<LI> +month units</LI> + +<LI> +year tens (years range from 00 to 99)</LI> + +<LI> +year units</LI> + +<LI> +BST/UTC status</LI> + +<DL compact> +<DT> +bit 7</DT> + +<DD> +parity</DD> + +<DT> +bit 6</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 5</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 4</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 3</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 2</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if UTC is in effect (reverse of bit 1)</DD> + +<DT> +bit 1</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if BST is in effect (reverse of bit 2)</DD> + +<DT> +bit 0</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if BST/UTC change pending</DD> +</DL> + +<LI> +clock status</LI> + +<DL compact> +<DT> +bit 7</DT> + +<DD> +parity</DD> + +<DT> +bit 6</DT> + +<DD> +always 0</DD> + +<DT> +bit 5</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 4</DT> + +<DD> +always 1</DD> + +<DT> +bit 3</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if low battery is detected</DD> + +<DT> +bit 2</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if last resync failed (though officially undefined for the MSF clock)</DD> + +<DT> +bit 1</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if at least one reception attempt since 0230 for the MSF clock was +successful (0300 for the DCF77 clock)</DD> + +<DT> +bit 0</DT> + +<DD> += 1 if the clock has valid time---reset to zero when clock is reset (eg +at power-up), and set to 1 after first successful resync attempt.</DD> +</DL> +</OL> +The driver only accepts time from the clock if the bottom three bits of +the status byte are <TT>011</TT>. The leap-year logic for computing day-in-year +is only valid until 2099, and the clock will ignore stamps from the clock +that claim BST is in effect in the first hour of each year. If the UK parliament +decides to move us to +0100/+0200 time as opposed to the current +0000/+0100 +time, it is not clear what effect that will have on the time broadcast +by MSF, and therefore on this driver's usefulness.</DL> +A typical <TT>ntp.conf</TT> configuration file for this driver might be: +<PRE># hostname(n) means we expect (n) to be the stratum at which hostname runs. + +#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ +# SYNCHRONISATION PARTNERS +# ======================== + +# Our betters... +server 127.127.27.0 # ARCRON MSF radio clock(1). +# Fudge stratum and other features as required. +# ADJUST time1 VALUE FOR YOUR HOST, CLOCK AND LOCATION! +fudge 127.127.27.0 stratum 1 time1 0.016 flag3 1 flag4 1 + +peer 11.22.33.9 # tick(1--2). +peer 11.22.33.4 # tock(3), boot/NFS server. + +# This shouldn't get swept away unless left untouched for a long time. +driftfile /var/tmp/ntp.drift + +#------------------------------------------------------------------------------ +# RESTRICTIONS +# ============ + +# By default, don't trust and don't allow modifications. Ignore in fact. +restrict default ignore notrust nomodify + +# Allow others in our subnet to check us out... +restrict 11.22.33.0 mask 255.255.255.0 nomodify notrust + +# Trust our peers for time. Don't trust others in case they are insane. +restrict 127.127.27.0 nomodify +restrict 11.22.33.4 nomodify +restrict 11.22.33.9 nomodify + +# Allow anything from the local host. +restrict 127.0.0.1</PRE> +There are a few <TT>#define</TT>s in the code that you might wish to play +with: +<DL> +<DT> +<TT>ARCRON_KEEN</TT></DT> + +<DD> +With this defined, the code is relatively trusting of the clock, and assumes +that you will have the clock as one of a few time sources, so will bend +over backwards to use the time from the clock when available and avoid +<TT>ntpd</TT> dropping sync from the clock where possible. You may wish +to undefine this, especially if you have better sources of time or your +reception is ropey. However, there are many checks built in even with this +flag defined.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>ARCRON_OWN_FILTER</TT></DT> + +<DD> +When defined, the code uses its own median-filter code rather than that +available in <TT>ntp_refclock.c</TT> since the latter seems to have a minor +bug, at least in version 3-5.90. If this bug goes away this flag should +be turned off to avoid duplication of code. (The bug, if that's what it +is, causes the last raw offset to be used rather than the median offset.)</DD> + + +<P>Without this defined (and without <TT>ARCRON_MULTIPLE_SAMPLES</TT> below) +a typical set of offsets reported and used to drive the clock-filter algorithm +is (oldest last): +<PRE>filtoffset= -4.32 -34.82 -0.78 0.89 2.76 4.58 -3.92 -2.17</PRE> +Look at that spike! + +<P>With this defined a typical set of offsets is: +<PRE>filtoffset= -7.06 -7.06 -2.91 -2.91 -2.91 -1.27 -9.54 -6.70</PRE> +with the repeated values being some evidence of outlyers being discarded. +<DT> +<TT>ARCRON_MULTIPLE_SAMPLES</TT></DT> + +<DD> +When is defined, we regard each character in the returned timecode as at +a known delay from the start of the second, and use the smallest (most +negative) offset implied by any such character, ie with the smallest kernel-induced +display, and use that. This helps to reduce jitter and spikes.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>ARCRON_LEAPSECOND_KEEN</TT></DT> + +<DD> +When is defined, we try to do a resync to MSF as soon as possible in the +first hour of the morning of the first day of the first and seventh months, +ie just after a leap-second insertion or deletion would happen if it is +going to. This should help compensate for the fact that this clock does +not continuously sample MSF, which compounds the fact that MSF itself gives +no warning of an impending leap-second event. This code did not seem functional +at the leap-second insertion of 30th June 1997 so is by default disabled.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>PRECISION</TT></DT> + +<DD> +Currently set to <TT>-4</TT>, but you may wish to set it to <TT>-5</TT> +if you are more conservative, or to <TT>-6</TT> if you have particularly +good experience with the clock and you live on the edge. Note that the +<TT>flag3</TT> fudge value will improve the reported dispersion one notch +if clock signal quality is known good. So maybe just leave this alone. +B^)</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>NSAMPLES</TT></DT> + +<DD> +Should be at least 3 to help smooth out sampling jitters. Can be more, +but if made too long can make <TT>ntpd</TT> overshoot on clock corrections +and can hold onto bad samples longer than you would like. With this set +to 4 and <TT>NKEEP</TT> set to 3 this allows the occasional bad sample +(in my experience less than 1 value in 10) to be dropped. (Note that there +seems to be some sort of `beat' effect in the offset with a periodicity +of about 7 samples as of this writing (1997/05/11) still under investigation; +a filter of approximately this length should be able to almost completely +suppress this effect.) Note that if the fudge-factor <TT>flag3</TT> is +set to 1, a larger <TT>NSAMPLES</TT> is used.</DD> +</DL> + +<H4> +Monitor Data</H4> +Each timecode is written to the <TT>clockstats</TT> file with a signal +quality value appended (`0'--`5' as reported by the clock, or `6' for unknown). + +<P>Each resync and result (plus gaining or losing MSF sync) is logged to +the system log at level <TT>LOG_NOTICE</TT>; note that each resync drains +the unit's batteries, so the syslog entry seems justified. + +<P>Syslog entries are of the form: +<PRE>May 10 10:15:24 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: unit 0: sending resync command +May 10 10:17:32 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: sync finished, signal quality 5: OK, will use clock +May 10 11:13:01 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: unit 0: sending resync command +May 10 11:14:06 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: sync finished, signal quality -1: UNKNOWN, will use clock anyway +May 10 11:41:49 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: unit 0: sending resync command +May 10 11:43:57 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: sync finished, signal quality 5: OK, will use clock +May 10 12:39:26 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: unit 0: sending resync command +May 10 12:41:34 oolong ntpd[615]: ARCRON: sync finished, signal quality 3: OK, will use clock</PRE> + +<H4> +Fudge Factors</H4> + +<DL> +<DT> +<TT>time1 <I>time</I></TT></DT> + +<DD> +Specifies the time offset calibration factor, in seconds and fraction, +with default 0.0. On a Sun SparcStation 1 running SunOS 4.1.3_U1, with +the receiver in London, a value of 0.020 (20ms) seems to be appropriate.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>time2 <I>time</I></TT></DT> + +<DD> +Not currently used by this driver.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>stratum <I>number</I></TT></DT> + +<DD> +Specifies the driver stratum, in decimal from 0 to 15, with default 0. +It is suggested that the clock be fudged to stratum 1 so this it is used +a backup time source rather than a primary when more accurate sources are +available.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>refid <I>string</I></TT></DT> + +<DD> +Specifies the driver reference identifier, an ASCII string from one to +four characters, with default <TT>MSFa</TT>.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>flag1 0 | 1</TT></DT> + +<DD> +Not used by this driver.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>flag2 0 | 1</TT></DT> + +<DD> +Not used by this driver.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>flag3 0 | 1</TT></DT> + +<DD> +If set to 1, better precision is reported (and thus lower dispersion) while +clock's received signal quality is known to be good.</DD> + +<DT> +<TT>flag4 0 | 1</TT></DT> + +<DD> +If set to 1, a longer-than-normal (8-stage rather than 4-stage) median +filter is used, to provide some extra smoothing of clock output and reduction +in jitter, at the cost of extra clock overshoot. Probably not advisable +unless the server using this clock has other sources it can use to help +mitigate the overshoot.</DD> +</DL> + +<H4> +Additional Information</H4> +<A HREF="refclock.htm">Reference Clock Drivers</A> + +<P><A HREF="http://www2.exnet.com/NTP/ARC/ARC.htm">ARC Rugby MSF Receiver</A> +page +<HR> +<ADDRESS> +Damon Hart-Davis (d@hd.org)</ADDRESS> + +</BODY> +</HTML> |