Network Working Group                                           D. Mills
Request for Comments: 1589                        University of Delaware
Category: Informational                                       March 1994


               A Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping

Status of this Memo

  This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
  does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
  this memo is unlimited.

Overview

  This memorandum describes an engineering model which implements a
  precision time-of-day function for a generic operating system. The
  model is based on the principles of disciplined oscillators and
  phase-lock loops (PLL) often found in the engineering literature. It
  has been implemented in the Unix kernel for several workstations,
  including those made by Sun Microsystems and Digital Equipment. The
  model changes the way the system clock is adjusted in time and
  frequency, as well as provides mechanisms to discipline its frequency
  to an external precision timing source. The model incorporates a
  generic system-call interface for use with the Network Time Protocol
  (NTP) or similar time synchronization protocol. The NTP Version 3
  daemon xntpd operates with this model to provide synchronization
  limited in principle only by the accuracy and stability of the
  external timing source.

  This memorandum does not obsolete or update any RFC. It does not
  propose a standard protocol, specification or algorithm. It is
  intended to provoke comment, refinement and alternative
  implementations. While a working knowledge of NTP is not required for
  an understanding of the design principles or implementation of the
  model, it may be helpful in understanding how the model behaves in a
  fully functional timekeeping system. The architecture and design of
  NTP is described in [1], while the current NTP Version 3 protocol
  specification is given in RFC-1305 [2] and a subset of the protocol,
  the Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP), in RFC-1361 [4].

  The model has been implemented in three Unix kernels for Sun
  Microsystems and Digital Equipment workstations. In addition, for the
  Digital machines the model provides improved precision to one
  microsecond (us). Since these specific implementations involve
  modifications to licensed code, they cannot be provided directly.
  Inquiries should be directed to the manufacturer's representatives.
  However, the engineering model for these implementations, including a



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


  simulator with code segments almost identical to the implementations,
  but not involving licensed code, is available via anonymous FTP from
  host louie.udel.edu in the directory pub/ntp and compressed tar
  archive kernel.tar.Z. The NTP Version 3 distribution can be obtained
  via anonymous ftp from the same host and directory in the compressed
  tar archive xntp3.3g.tar.Z, where the version number shown as 3.3g
  may be adjusted for new versions as they occur.

1. Introduction

  This memorandum describes a model and programming interface for
  generic operating system software that manages the system clock and
  timer functions. The model provides improved accuracy and stability
  for most workstations and servers using the Network Time Protocol
  (NTP) or similar time synchronization protocol. This memorandum
  describes the principles of design and implementation of the model.
  Related technical reports discuss the design approach, engineering
  analysis and performance evaluation of the model as implemented in
  Unix kernels for Sun Microsystems and Digital Equipment workstations.
  The NTP Version 3 daemon xntpd operates with these implementations to
  provide improved accuracy and stability, together with diminished
  overhead in the operating system and network. In addition, the model
  supports the use of external timing sources, such as precision
  pulse-per-second (PPS) signals and the industry standard IRIG timing
  signals. The NTP daemon automatically detects the presence of the new
  features and utilizes them when available.

  There are three prototype implementations of the model presented in
  this memorandum, one each for the Sun Microsystems SPARCstation with
  the SunOS 4.1.x kernel, Digital Equipment DECstation 5000 with the
  Ultrix 4.x kernel and Digital Equipment 3000 AXP Alpha with the OSF/1
  V1.x kernel. In addition, for the DECstation 5000/240 and 3000 AXP
  Alpha machines, a special feature provides improved precision to 1 us
  (Sun 4.1.x kernels already do provide 1-us precision). Other than
  improving the system clock accuracy, stability and precision, these
  implementations do not change the operation of existing Unix system
  calls which manage the system clock, such as gettimeofday(),
  settimeofday() and adjtime(); however, if the new features are in
  use, the operations of gettimeofday() and adjtime() can be controlled
  instead by new system calls ntp_gettime() and ntp_adjtime() as
  described below.

  A detailed description of the variables and algorithms is given in
  the hope that similar functionality can be incorporated in Unix
  kernels for other machines. The algorithms involve only minor changes
  to the system clock and interval timer routines and include
  interfaces for application programs to learn the system clock status
  and certain statistics of the time synchronization process. Detailed



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


  installation instructions are given in a specific README files
  included in the kernel distributions.

  In this memorandum, NTP Version 3 and the Unix implementation xntp3
  are used as an example application of the new system calls for use by
  a synchronization daemon. In principle, the new system calls can be
  used by other protocols and implementations as well. Even in cases
  where the local time is maintained by periodic exchanges of messages
  at relatively long intervals, such as using the NIST Automated
  Computer Time Service, the ability to precisely adjust the system
  clock frequency simplifies the synchronization procedures and allows
  the telephone call frequency to be considerably reduced.

2. Design Approach

  While not strictly necessary for an understanding or implementation
  of the model, it may be helpful to briefly describe how NTP operates
  to control the system clock in a client workstation. As described in
  [1], the NTP protocol exchanges timestamps with one or more peers
  sharing a synchronization subnet to calculate the time offsets
  between peer clocks and the local clock. These offsets are processed
  by several algorithms which refine and combine the offsets to produce
  an ensemble average, which is then used to adjust the local clock
  time and frequency. The manner in which the local clock is adjusted
  represents the main topic of this memorandum. The goal in the
  enterprise is the most accurate and stable system clock possible with
  the available kernel software and workstation hardware.

  In order to understand how the new software works, it is useful to
  review how most Unix kernels maintain the system time. In the Unix
  design a hardware counter interrupts the kernel at a fixed rate: 100
  Hz in the SunOS kernel, 256 Hz in the Ultrix kernel and 1024 Hz in
  the OSF/1 kernel. Since the Ultrix timer interval (reciprocal of the
  rate) does not evenly divide one second in microseconds, the Ultrix
  kernel adds 64 microseconds once each second, so the timescale
  consists of 255 advances of 3906 us plus one of 3970 us. Similarly,
  the OSF/1 kernel adds 576 us once each second, so its timescale
  consists of 1023 advances of 976 us plus one of 1552 us.

  2.1. Mechanisms to Adjust Time and Frequency

     In most Unix kernels it is possible to slew the system clock to a
     new offset relative to the current time by using the adjtime()
     system call. To do this the clock frequency is changed by adding
     or subtracting a fixed amount (tickadj) at each timer interrupt
     (tick) for a calculated number of ticks. Since this calculation
     involves dividing the requested offset by tickadj, it is possible
     to slew to a new offset with a precision only of tickadj, which is



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     usually in the neighborhood of 5 us, but sometimes much more. This
     results in a roundoff error which can accumulate to an
     unacceptable degree, so that special provisions must be made in
     the clock adjustment procedures of the synchronization daemon.

     In order to implement a frequency-discipline function, it is
     necessary to provide time offset adjustments to the kernel at
     regular adjustment intervals using the adjtime() system call. In
     order to reduce the system clock jitter to the regime considered
     in this memorandum, it is necessary that the adjustment interval
     be relatively small, in the neighborhood of 1 s. However, the Unix
     adjtime() implementation requires each offset adjustment to
     complete before another one can be begun, which means that large
     adjustments must be amortized in possibly many adjustment
     intervals. The requirement to implement the adjustment interval
     and compensate for roundoff error considerably complicates the
     synchronizing daemon implementation.

     In the new model this scheme is replaced by another that
     represents the system clock as a multiple-word, precision-time
     variable in order to provide very precise clock adjustments. At
     each timer interrupt a precisely calibrated quantity is added to
     the kernel time variable and overflows propagated as required. The
     quantity is computed as in the NTP local clock model described in
     [3], which operates as an adaptive-parameter, first-order, type-II
     phase-lock loop (PLL). In principle, this PLL design can provide
     precision control of the system clock oscillator within 1 us and
     frequency to within parts in 10^11. While precisions of this order
     are surely well beyond the capabilities of the CPU clock
     oscillator used in typical workstations, they are appropriate
     using precision external oscillators as described below.

     The PLL design is identical to the one originally implemented in
     NTP and described in [3]. In this design the software daemon
     simulates the PLL using the adjtime() system call; however, the
     daemon implementation is considerably complicated by the
     considerations described above. The modified kernel routines
     implement the PLL in the kernel using precision time and frequency
     representions, so that these complications are avoided. A new
     system call ntp_adjtime() is called only as each new time update
     is determined, which in NTP occurs at intervals of from 16 s to
     1024 s. In addition, doing frequency compensation in the kernel
     means that the system time runs true even if the daemon were to
     cease operation or the network paths to the primary
     synchronization source fail.

     In the new model the new ntp_adjtime() operates in a way similar
     to the original adjtime() system call, but does so independently



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     of adjtime(), which continues to operate in its traditional
     fashion. When used with NTP, it is the design intent that
     settimeofday() or adjtime() be used only for system time
     adjustments greater than +-128 ms, although the dynamic range of
     the new model is much larger at +-512 ms. It has been the Internet
     experience that the need to change the system time in increments
     greater than +-128 ms is extremely rare and is usually associated
     with a hardware or software malfunction or system reboot.

     The easiest way to set the time is with the settimeofday() system
     call; however, this can under some conditions cause the clock to
     jump backward. If this cannot be tolerated, adjtime() can be used
     to slew the clock to the new value without running backward or
     affecting the frequency discipline process. Once the system clock
     has been set within +-128 ms, the ntp_adjtime() system call is
     used to provide periodic updates including the time offset,
     maximum error, estimated error and PLL time constant. With NTP the
     update interval depends on the measured dispersion and time
     constant; however, the scheme is quite forgiving and neither
     moderate loss of updates nor variations in the update interval are
     serious.

  2.2 Daemon and Application Interface

     Unix application programs can read the system clock using the
     gettimeofday() system call, which returns only the system time and
     timezone data. For some applications it is useful to know the
     maximum error of the reported time due to all causes, including
     clock reading errors, oscillator frequency errors and accumulated
     latencies on the path to a primary synchronization source.
     However, in the new model the PLL adjusts the system clock to
     compensate for its intrinsic frequency error, so that the time
     errors expected in normal operation will usually be much less than
     the maximum error. The programming interface includes a new system
     call ntp_gettime(), which returns the system time, as well as the
     maximum error and estimated error. This interface is intended to
     support applications that need such things, including distributed
     file systems, multimedia teleconferencing and other real-time
     applications. The programming interface also includes the new
     system call ntp_adjtime() mentioned previously, which can be used
     to read and write kernel variables for time and frequency
     adjustment, PLL time constant, leap-second warning and related
     data.

     In addition, the kernel adjusts the maximum error to grow by an
     amount equal to the oscillator frequency tolerance times the
     elapsed time since the last update. The default engineering
     parameters have been optimized for update intervals in the order



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     of 64 s. For other intervals the PLL time constant can be adjusted
     to optimize the dynamic response over intervals of 16-1024 s.
     Normally, this is automatically done by NTP. In any case, if
     updates are suspended, the PLL coasts at the frequency last
     determined, which usually results in errors increasing only to a
     few tens of milliseconds over a day using room-temperature quartz
     oscillators of typical modern workstations.

     While any synchronization daemon can in principle be modified to
     use the new system calls, the most likely will be users of the NTP
     Version 3 daemon xntpd. The xntpd code determines whether the new
     system calls are implemented and automatically reconfigures as
     required. When implemented, the daemon reads the frequency offset
     from a file and provides it and the initial time constant via
     ntp_adjtime(). In subsequent calls to ntp_adjtime(), only the time
     offset and time constant are affected. The daemon reads the
     frequency from the kernel using ntp_adjtime() at intervals of
     about one hour and writes it to a system file. This information is
     recovered when the daemon is restarted after reboot, for example,
     so the sometimes extensive training period to learn the frequency
     separately for each system can be avoided.

  2.3. Precision Clocks for DECstation 5000/240 and 3000 AXP Alpha

     The stock microtime() routine in the Ultrix kernel returns system
     time to the precision of the timer interrupt interval, which is in
     the 1-4 ms range. However, in the DECstation 5000/240 and possibly
     other machines of that family, there is an undocumented IOASIC
     hardware register that counts system bus cycles at a rate of 25
     MHz. The new microtime() routine for the Ultrix kernel uses this
     register to interpolate system time between timer interrupts. This
     results in a precision of 1 us for all time values obtained via
     the gettimeofday() and ntp_gettime() system calls. For the Digital
     Equipment 3000 AXP Alpha, the architecture provides a hardware
     Process Cycle Counter and a machine instruction rpcc to read it.
     This counter operates at the fundamental frequency of the CPU
     clock or some submultiple of it, 133.333 MHz for the 3000/400 for
     example. The new microtime() routine for the OSF/1 kernel uses
     this counter in the same fashion as the Ultrix routine.

     In both the Ultrix and OSF/1 kernels the gettimeofday() and
     ntp_gettime() system call use the new microtime() routine, which
     returns the actual interpolated value, but does not change the
     kernel time variable. Therefore, other routines that access the
     kernel time variable directly and do not call either
     gettimeofday(), ntp_gettime() or microtime() will continue their
     present behavior. The microtime() feature is independent of other
     features described here and is operative even if the kernel PLL or



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     new system calls have not been implemented.

     The SunOS kernel already includes a system clock with 1-us
     resolution; so, in principle, no microtime() routine is necessary.
     An existing kernel routine uniqtime() implements this function,
     but it is coded in the C language and is rather slow at 42-85 us
     per call. A replacement microtime() routine coded in assembler
     language is available in the NTP Version 3 distribution and is
     much faster at about 3 us per call.

  2.4. External Time and Frequency Discipline

     The overall accuracy of a time synchronization subnet with respect
     to Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) depends on the accuracy and
     stability of the primary synchronization source, usually a radio
     or satellite receiver, and the system clock oscillator of the
     primary server. As discussed in [5], the traditional interface
     using an RS232 protocol and serial port precludes the full
     accuracy of the radio clock. In addition, the poor stability of
     typical CPU clock oscillators limits the accuracy, whether or not
     precision time sources are available. There are, however, several
     ways in which the system clock accuracy and stability can be
     improved to the degree limited only by the accuracy and stability
     of the synchronization source and the jitter of the operating
     system.

     Many radio clocks produce special signals that can be used by
     external equipment to precisely synchronize time and frequency.
     Most produce a pulse-per-second (PPS) signal that can be read via
     a modem-control lead of a serial port and some produce a special
     IRIG signal that can be read directly by a bus peripheral, such as
     the KSI/Odetics TPRO IRIG SBus interface, or indirectly via the
     audio codec of some workstations, as described in [5]. In the NTP
     Version 3 distribution, the PPS signal can be used to augment the
     less precise ASCII serial timecode to improve accuracy to the
     order of microseconds. Support is also included in the
     distribution for the TPRO interface as well as the audio codec;
     however, the latter requires a modified kernel audio driver
     contained in the bsd_audio.tar.Z distribution in the same host and
     directory as the NTP Version 3 distribution mentioned previously.

     2.4.1. PPS Signal

        The NTP Version 3 distribution includes a special ppsclock
        module for the SunOS 4.1.x kernel that captures the PPS signal
        presented via a modem-control lead of a serial port. Normally,
        the ppsclock module produces a timestamp at each transition of
        the PPS signal and provides it to the synchronization daemon



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        for integration with the serial ASCII timecode, also produced
        by the radio clock. With the conventional PLL implementation in
        either the daemon or the kernel as described above, the
        accuracy of this scheme is limited by the intrinsic stability
        of the CPU clock oscillator to a millisecond or two, depending
        on environmental temperature variations.

        The ppsclock module has been modified to in addition call a new
        kernel routine hardpps() once each second. The kernel routine
        compares the timestamp with a sample of the CPU clock
        oscillator to develop a frequency offset estimate. This offset
        is used to discipline the oscillator frequency, nominally to
        within a few parts in 10^8, which is about two orders of
        magnitude better than the undisciplined oscillator. The new
        feature is conditionally compiled in the code described below
        only if the PPS_SYNC option is used in the kernel configuration
        file.

        When using the PPS signal to adjust the time, there is a
        problem with the SunOS implementation which is very delicate to
        fix. The Sun serial port interrupt routine operates at
        interrupt priority level 12, while the timer interrupt routine
        operates at priority 10. Thus, it is possible that the PPS
        signal interrupt can occur during the timer interrupt routine,
        with result that a tick increment can be missed and the
        returned time early by one tick. It may happen that, if the CPU
        clock oscillator is within a few ppm of the PPS oscillator,
        this condition can persist for two or more successive PPS
        interrupts. A useful workaround has been to use a median filter
        to process the PPS sample offsets. In this filter the sample
        offsets in a window of 20 samples are sorted by offset and the
        six highest and six lowest outlyers discarded. The average of
        the eight samples remaining becomes the output of the filter.

        The problem is not nearly so serious when using the PPS signal
        to discipline the frequency of the CPU clock oscillator. In
        this case the quantity of interest is the contents of the
        microseconds counter only, which does not depend on the kernel
        time variable.

     2.4.2. External Clocks

        It is possible to replace the system clock function with an
        external bus peripheral. The TPRO device mentioned previously
        can be used to provide IRIG-synchronized time with a precision
        of 1 us. A driver for this device tprotime.c and header file
        tpro.h are included in the kernel.tar.Z distribution mentioned
        previously. Using this device the system clock is read directly



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        from the interface; however, the device does not record the
        year, so special provisions have to be made to obtain the year
        from the kernel time variable and initialize the driver
        accordingly. This feature is conditionally compiled in the code
        described below only if the EXT_CLOCK option is used in the
        kernel configuration file.

        While the system clock function is provided directly by the
        microtime() routine in the driver, the kernel time variable
        must be disciplined as well, since not all system timing
        functions use the microtime() routine. This is done by
        measuring the difference between the microtime() clock and
        kernel time variable and using the difference to adjust the
        kernel PLL as if the adjustment were provided by an external
        peer and NTP.

        A good deal of error checking is done in the TPRO driver, since
        the system clock is vulnerable to a misbehaving radio clock,
        IRIG signal source, interface cables and TPRO device itself.
        Unfortunately, there is no easy way to utilize the extensive
        diversity and redundancy capabilities available in the NTP
        synchronization daemon. In order to avoid disruptions that
        might occur if the TPRO time is far different from the kernel
        time variable, the latter is used instead of the former if the
        difference between the two exceeds 1000 s; presumably in that
        case operator intervention is required.

     2.4.3. External Oscillators

        Even if a source of PPS or IRIG signals is not available, it is
        still possible to improve the stability of the system clock
        through the use of a specialized bus peripheral. In order to
        explore the benefits of such an approach, a special SBus
        peripheral caled HIGHBALL has been constructed. The device
        includes a pair of 32-bit hardware counters in Unix timeval
        format, together with a precision, oven-controlled quartz
        oscillator with a stability of a few parts in 10^9. A driver
        for this device hightime.c and header file high.h are included
        in the kernel.tar.Z distribution mentioned previously. This
        feature is conditionally compiled in the code described below
        only if the EXT_CLOCK and HIGHBALL options are used in the
        kernel configuration file.

        Unlike the external clock case, where the system clock function
        is provided directly by the microtime() routine in the driver,
        the HIGHBALL counter offsets with respect to UTC must be
        provided first.  This is done using the ordinary kernel PLL,
        but controlling the counter offsets directly, rather than the



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        kernel time variable. At first, this might seem to defeat the
        purpose of the design, since the jitter and wander of the
        synchronization source will affect the counter offsets and thus
        the accuracy of the time. However, the jitter is much reduced
        by the PLL and the wander is small, especially if using a radio
        clock or another primary server disciplined in the same way.
        In practice, the scheme works to reduce the incidental wander
        to a few parts in 10^8, or about the same as using the PPS
        signal.

        As in the previous case, the kernel time variable must be
        disciplined as well, since not all system timing functions use
        the microtime() routine. However, the kernel PLL cannot be used
        for this, since it is already in use providing offsets for the
        HIGHBALL counters. Therefore, a special correction is
        calculated from the difference between the microtime() clock
        and the kernel time variable and used to adjust the kernel time
        variable at the next timer interrupt. This somewhat roundabout
        approach is necessary in order that the adjustment does not
        cause the kernel time variable to jump backwards and possibly
        lose or duplicate a timer event.

  2.5 Other Features

     It is a design feature of the NTP architecture that the system
     clocks in a synchronization subnet are to read the same or nearly
     the same values before during and after a leap-second event, as
     declared by national standards bodies. The new model is designed
     to implement the leap event upon command by an ntp_adjtime()
     argument. The intricate and sometimes arcane details of the model
     and implementation are discussed in [3] and [5]. Further details
     are given in the technical summary later in this memorandum.

3. Technical Summary

  In order to more fully understand the workings of the model, a stand-
  alone simulator kern.c and header file timex.h are included in the
  kernel.tar.Z distribution mentioned previously. In addition, a
  complete C program kern_ntptime.c which implements the ntp_gettime()
  and ntp_adjtime() functions is provided, but with the vendor-specific
  argument-passing code deleted. Since the distribution is somewhat
  large, due to copious comments and ornamentation, it is impractical
  to include a listing of these programs in this memorandum. In any
  case, implementors may choose to snip portions of the simulator for
  use in new kernel designs, but, due to formatting conventions, this
  would be difficult if included in this memorandum.





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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


  The kern.c program is an implementation of an adaptive-parameter,
  first-order, type-II phase-lock loop. The system clock is implemented
  using a set of variables and algorithms defined in the simulator and
  driven by explicit offsets generated by a driver program also
  included in the program. The algorithms include code fragments almost
  identical to those in the machine-specific kernel implementations and
  operate in the same way, but the operations can be understood
  separately from any licensed source code into which these fragments
  may be integrated. The code fragments themselves are not derived from
  any licensed code. The following discussion assumes that the
  simulator code is available for inspection.

  3.1. PLL Simulation

     The simulator operates in conformance with the analytical model
     described in [3]. The main() program operates as a driver for the
     fragments hardupdate(), hardclock(), second_overflow(), hardpps()
     and microtime(), although not all functions implemented in these
     fragments are simulated. The program simulates the PLL at each
     timer interrupt and prints a summary of critical program variables
     at each time update.

     There are three defined options in the kernel configuration file
     specific to each implementation. The PPS_SYNC option provides
     support for a pulse-per-second (PPS) signal, which is used to
     discipline the frequency of the CPU clock oscillator. The
     EXT_CLOCK option provides support for an external kernel-readable
     clock, such as the KSI/Odetics TPRO IRIG interface or HIGHBALL
     precision oscillator, both for the SBus. The TPRO option provides
     support for the former, while the HIGHBALL option provides support
     for the latter. External clocks are implemented as the microtime()
     clock driver, with the specific source code selected by the kernel
     configuration file.

     3.1.1. The hardupdate() Fragment

        The hardupdate() fragment is called by ntp_adjtime() as each
        update is computed to adjust the system clock phase and
        frequency. Note that the time constant is in units of powers of
        two, so that multiplies can be done by simple shifts. The phase
        variable is computed as the offset divided by the time
        constant. Then, the time since the last update is computed and
        clamped to a maximum (for robustness) and to zero if
        initializing. The offset is multiplied (sorry about the ugly
        multiply) by the result and divided by the square of the time
        constant and then added to the frequency variable. Note that
        all shifts are assumed to be positive and that a shift of a
        signed quantity to the right requires a little dance.



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        With the defines given, the maximum time offset is determined
        by the size in bits of the long type (32 or 64) less the
        SHIFT_UPDATE scale factor (12) or at least 20 bits (signed).
        The scale factor is chosen so that there is no loss of
        significance in later steps, which may involve a right shift up
        to SHIFT_UPDATE bits. This results in a time adjustment range
        over +-512 ms. Since time_constant must be greater than or
        equal to zero, the maximum frequency offset is determined by
        the SHIFT_USEC scale factor (16) or at least 16 bits (signed).
        This results in a frequency adjustment range over +-31,500 ppm.

        In the addition step, the value of offset * mtemp is not
        greater than MAXPHASE * MAXSEC = 31 bits (signed), which will
        not overflow a long add on a 32-bit machine. There could be a
        loss of precision due to the right shift of up to 12 bits,
        since time_constant is bounded at 6. This results in a net
        worst-case frequency resolution of about .063 ppm, which is not
        significant for most quartz oscillators. The worst case could
        be realized only if the NTP peer misbehaves according to the
        protocol specification.

        The time_offset value is clamped upon entry. The time_phase
        variable is an accumulator, so is clamped to the tolerance on
        every call. This helps to damp transients before the oscillator
        frequency has been determined, as well as to satisfy the
        correctness assertions if the time synchronization protocol or
        implementation misbehaves.

     3.1.2. The hardclock() Fragment

        The hardclock() fragment is inserted in the hardware timer
        interrupt routine at the point the system clock is to be
        incremented. Previous to this fragment the time_update variable
        has been initialized to the value computed by the adjtime()
        system call in the stock Unix kernel, normally plus/minus the
        tickadj value, which is usually in the order of 5 us. The
        time_phase variable, which represents the instantaneous phase
        of the system clock, is advanced by time_adj, which is
        calculated in the second_overflow() fragment described below.
        If the value of time_phase exceeds 1 us in scaled units,
        time_update is increased by the (signed) excess and time_phase
        retains the residue.

        Except in the case of an external oscillator such as the
        HIGHBALL interface, the hardclock() fragment advances the
        system clock by the value of tick plus time_update. However, in
        the case of an external oscillator, the system clock is
        obtained directly from the interface and time_update used to



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        discipline that interface instead. However, the system clock
        must still be disciplined as explained previously, so the value
        of clock_cpu computed by the second_overflow() fragment is used
        instead.

     3.1.3. The second_overflow() Fragment

        The second_overflow() fragment is inserted at the point where
        the microseconds field of the system time variable is being
        checked for overflow. Upon overflow the maximum error
        time_maxerror is increased by time_tolerance to reflect the
        maximum time offset due to oscillator frequency error. Then,
        the increment time_adj to advance the kernel time variable is
        calculated from the (scaled) time_offset and time_freq
        variables updated at the last call to the hardclock() fragment.

        The phase adjustment is calculated as a (signed) fraction of
        the time_offset remaining, where the fraction is added to
        time_adj, then subtracted from time_offset. This technique
        provides a rapid convergence when offsets are high, together
        with good resolution when offsets are low. The frequency
        adjustment is the sum of the (scaled) time_freq variable, an
        adjustment necessary when the tick interval does not evenly
        divide one second fixtick and PPS frequency adjustment pps_ybar
        (if configured).

        The scheme of approximating exact multiply/divide operations
        with shifts produces good results, except when an exact
        calculation is required, such as when the PPS signal is being
        used to discipling the CPU clock oscillator frequency, as
        described below. As long as the actual oscillator frequency is
        a power of two in seconds, no correction is required. However,
        in the SunOS kernel the clock frequency is 100 Hz, which
        results in an error factor of 0.78. In this case the code
        increases time_adj by a factor of 1.25, which results in an
        overall error less than three percent.

        On rollover of the day, the leap-second state machine described
        below  determines whether a second is to be inserted or deleted
        in the timescale. The microtime() routine insures that the
        reported time is always monotonically increasing.

     3.1.4. The hardpps() Fragment

        The hardpps() fragment is operative only if the PPS_SYNC option
        is specified in the kernel configuration file. It is called
        from the serial port driver or equivalent interface at the on-
        time transition of the PPS signal. The fragment operates as a



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        first-order, type-I frequency-lock loop (FLL) controlled by the
        difference between the frequency represented by the pps_ybar
        variable and the frequency of the hardware clock oscillator.

        In order to avoid calling the microtime() routine more than
        once for each PPS transition, the interface requires the
        calling program to capture the system time and hardware counter
        contents at the on-time transition of the PPS signal and
        provide a pointer to the timestamp (Unix timeval) and counter
        contents as arguments to the hardpps() call. The hardware
        counter contents can be determined by saving the microseconds
        field of the system time, calling the microtime() routine, and
        subtracting the saved value. If a counter overflow has occured
        during the process, the resulting microseconds value will be
        negative, in which case the caller adds 1000000 to normalize
        the microseconds field.

        The frequency of the hardware oscillator can be determined from
        the difference in hardware counter readings at the beginning
        and end of the calibration interval divided by the duration of
        the interval. However, the oscillator frequency tolerance, as
        much as 100 ppm, may cause the difference to exceed the tick
        value, creating an ambiguity. In order to avoid this ambiguity,
        the hardware counter value at the beginning of the interval is
        increased by the current pps_ybar value once each second, but
        computed modulo the tick value. At the end of the interval, the
        difference between this value and the value computed from the
        hardware counter is used as a control signal sample for the
        FLL.

        Control signal samples which exceed the frequency tolerance are
        discarded, as well as samples resulting from excessive interval
        duration jitter. Surviving samples are then processed by a
        three-stage median filter. The signal which drives the FLL is
        derived from the median sample, while the average of
        differences between the other two samples is used as a measure
        of dispersion. If the dispersion is below the threshold
        pps_dispmax, the median is used to correct the pps_ybar value
        with a weight expressed as a shift PPS_AVG (2). In addition to
        the averaging function, pps_disp is increased by the amount
        pps_dispinc once each second. The result is that, should the
        dispersion be exceptionally high, or if the PPS signal fails
        for some reason, the pps_disp will eventually exceed
        pps_dispmax and raise an alarm.

        Initially, an approximate value for pps_ybar is not known, so
        the duration of the calibration interval must be kept small to
        avoid overflowing the tick. The time difference at the end of



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        the calibration interval is measured. If greater than a
        fraction tick/4, the interval is reduced by half. If less than
        this fraction for four successive calibration intervals, the
        interval is doubled. This design automatically adapts to
        nominal jitter in the PPS signal, as well as the value of tick.
        The duration of the calibration interval is set by the
        pps_shift variable as a shift in powers of two. The minimum
        value PPS_SHIFT (2) is chosen so that with the highest CPU
        oscillator frequency 1024 Hz and frequency tolerance 100 ppm
        the tick will not overflow. The maximum value PPS_SHIFTMAX (8)
        is chosen such that the maximum averaging time is about 1000 s
        as determined by measurements of Allan variance [5].

        Should the PPS signal fail, the current frequency estimate
        pps_ybar continues to be used, so the nominal frequency remains
        correct subject only to the instability of the undisciplined
        oscillator. The procedure to save and restore the frequency
        estimate works as follows. When setting the frequency from a
        file, the time_freq value is set as the file value minus the
        pps_ybar value; when retrieving the frequency, the two values
        are added before saving in the file. This scheme provides a
        seamless interface should the PPS signal fail or the kernel
        configuration change. Note that the frequency discipline is
        active whether or not the synchronization daemon is active.
        Since all Unix systems take some time after reboot to build a
        running system, usually by that time the discipline process has
        already settled down and the initial transients due to
        frequency discipline have damped out.

     3.1.4. External Clock Interface

        The external clock driver interface is implemented with two
        routines, microtime(), which returns the current clock time,
        and clock_set(), which furnishes the apparent system time
        derived from the kernel time variable. The latter routine is
        called only when the clock is set using the settimeofday()
        system call, but can be called from within the driver, such as
        when the year rolls over, for example.

        In the stock SunOS kernel and modified Ultrix and OSF/1
        kernels, the microtime() routine returns the kernel time
        variable plus an interpolation between timer interrupts based
        on the contents of a hardware counter. In the case of an
        external clock, such as described above, the system clock is
        read directly from the hardware clock registers. Examples of
        external clock drivers are in the tprotime.c and hightime.c
        routines included in the kernel.tar.Z distribution.




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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


        The external clock routines return a status code which
        indicates whether the clock is operating correctly and the
        nature of the problem, if not. The return code is interpreted
        by the ntp_gettime() system call, which transitions the status
        state machine to the TIME_ERR state if an error code is
        returned. This is the only error checking implemented for the
        external clock in the present version of the code.

     The simulator has been used to check the PLL operation over the
     design envelope of +-512 ms in time error and +-100 ppm in
     frequency error. This confirms that no overflows occur and that
     the loop initially converges in about 15 minutes for timer
     interrupt rates from 50 Hz to 1024 Hz. The loop has a normal
     overshoot of a few percent and a final convergence time of several
     hours, depending on the initial time and frequency error.

  3.2. Leap Seconds

     It does not seem generally useful in the user application
     interface to provide additional details private to the kernel and
     synchronization protocol, such as stratum, reference identifier,
     reference timestamp and so forth. It would in principle be
     possible for the application to independently evaluate the quality
     of time and project into the future how long this time might be
     "valid." However, to do that properly would duplicate the
     functionality of the synchronization protocol and require
     knowledge of many mundane details of the platform architecture,
     such as the subnet configuration, reachability status and related
     variables. For the curious, the ntp_adjtime() system call can be
     used to reveal some of these mysteries.

     However, the user application may need to know whether a leap
     second is scheduled, since this might affect interval calculations
     spanning the event. A leap-warning condition is determined by the
     synchronization protocol (if remotely synchronized), by the
     timecode receiver (if available), or by the operator (if awake).
     This condition is set by the synchronization daemon on the day the
     leap second is to occur (30 June or 31 December, as announced) by
     specifying in a ntp_adjtime() system call a clock status of either
     TIME_DEL, if a second is to be deleted, or TIME_INS, if a second
     is to be inserted. Note that, on all occasions since the inception
     of the leap-second scheme, there has never been a deletion
     occasion, nor is there likely to be one in future. If the value is
     TIME_DEL, the kernel adds one second to the system time
     immediately following second 23:59:58 and resets the clock status
     to TIME_OK. If the value is TIME_INS, the kernel subtracts one
     second from the system time immediately following second 23:59:59
     and resets the clock status to TIME_OOP, in effect causing system



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     time to repeat second 59. Immediately following the repeated
     second, the kernel resets the clock status to TIME_OK.

     Depending upon the system call implementation, the reported time
     during a leap second may repeat (with the TIME_OOP return code set
     to advertise that fact) or be monotonically adjusted until system
     time "catches up" to reported time. With the latter scheme the
     reported time will be correct before and shortly after the leap
     second (depending on the number of microtime() calls during the
     leap second), but freeze or slowly advance during the leap second
     itself. However, Most programs will probably use the ctime()
     library routine to convert from timeval (seconds, microseconds)
     format to tm format (seconds, minutes,...). If this routine is
     modified to use the ntp_gettime() system call and inspect the
     return code, it could simply report the leap second as second 60.

  3.3. Clock Status State Machine

     The various options possible with the system clock model described
     in this memorandum require a careful examination of the state
     transitions, status indications and recovery procedures should a
     crucial signal or interface fail. In this section is presented a
     prototype state machine designed to support leap second insertion
     and deletion, as well as reveal various kinds of errors in the
     synchronization process. The states of this machine are decoded as
     follows:

     TIME_OK   If an external clock is present, it is working properly
               and the system clock is derived from it. If no external
               clock is present, the synchronization daemon is working
               properly and the system clock is synchronized to a radio
               clock or one or more peers.

     TIME_INS  An insertion of one second in the system clock has been
               declared following the last second of the current day,
               but has not yet been executed.

     TIME_DEL  A deletion of the last second of the current day has
               been declared, but not yet executed.

     TIME_OOP  An insertion of one second in the system clock has been
               declared following the last second of the current day.
               The second is in progress, but not yet completed.
               Library conversion routines should interpret this second
               as 23:59:60.






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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     TIME_BAD  Either (a) the synchronization daemon has declared the
               protocol is not working properly, (b) all sources of
               outside synchronization have been lost or (c) an
               external clock is present and it has just become
               operational following a non-operational condition.

     TIME_ERR  An external clock is present, but is in a non-
               operational condition.

     In all except the TIME_ERR state the system clock is derived from
     either an external clock, if present, or the kernel time variable,
     if not. In the TIME_ERR state the external clock is present, but
     not working properly, so the system clock may be derived from the
     kernel time variable. The following diagram indicates the normal
     transitions of the state machine. Not all valid transitions are
     shown.

         +--------+     +--------+     +--------+     +--------+
         |        |     |        |     |        |     |        |
         |TIME_BAD|---->|TIME_OK |<----|TIME_OOP|<----|TIME_INS|
         |        |     |        |     |        |     |        |
         +--------+     +--------+     +--------+     +--------+
              A              A
              |              |
              |              |
         +--------+     +--------+
         |        |     |        |
         |TIME_ERR|     |TIME_DEL|
         |        |     |        |
         +--------+     +--------+

     The state machine makes a transition once each second at an
     instant where the microseconds field of the kernel time variable
     overflows and one second is added to the seconds field. However,
     this condition is checked at each timer interrupt, which may not
     exactly coincide with the actual instant of overflow. This may
     lead to some interesting anomalies, such as a status indication of
     a leap second in progress (TIME_OOP) when actually the leap second
     had already expired.

     The following state transitions are executed automatically by the
     kernel:

     any state -> TIME_ERR   This transition occurs when an external
                             clock is present and an attempt is made to
                             read it when in a non-operational
                             condition.




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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     TIME_INS -> TIME_OOP    This transition occurs immediately
                             following second 86,400 of the current day
                             when an insert-second event has been
                             declared.

     TIME_OOP -> TIME_OK     This transition occurs immediately
                             following second 86,401 of the current
                             day; that is, one second after entry to
                             the TIME_OOP state.

     TIME_DEL -> TIME_OK     This transition occurs immediately
                             following second 86,399 of the current day
                             when a delete-second event has been
                             declared.

     The following state transitions are executed by specific
     ntp_adjtime() system calls:

     TIME_OK -> TIME_INS     This transition occurs as the result of a
                             ntp_adjtime() system call to declare an
                             insert-second event.

     TIME_OK -> TIME_DEL     This transition occurs as the result of a
                             ntp_adjtime() system call to declare a
                             delete-second event.

     any state -> TIME_BAD   This transition occurs as the result of a
                             ntp_adjtime() system call to declare loss
                             of all sources of synchronization or in
                             other cases of error.

     The following table summarizes the actions just before, during and
     just after a leap-second event. Each line in the table shows the
     UTC and NTP times at the beginning of the second. The left column
     shows the behavior when no leap event is to occur. In the middle
     column the state machine is in TIME_INS at the end of UTC second
     23:59:59 and the NTP time has just reached 400. The NTP time is
     set back one second to 399 and the machine enters TIME_OOP. At the
     end of the repeated second the machine enters TIME_OK and the UTC
     and NTP times are again in correspondence. In the right column the
     state machine is in TIME_DEL at the end of UTC second 23:59:58 and
     the NTP time has just reached 399. The NTP time is incremented,
     the machine enters TIME_OK and both UTC and NTP times are again in
     correspondence.







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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


                  No Leap       Leap Insert    Leap Delete
                  UTC NTP         UTC NTP        UTC NTP
             ---------------------------------------------
             23:59:58|398    23:59:58|398   23:59:58|398
                     |               |              |
             23:59:59|399    23:59:59|399   00:00:00|400
                     |               |              |
             00:00:00|400    23:59:60|399   00:00:01|401
                     |               |              |
             00:00:01|401    00:00:00|400   00:00:02|402
                     |               |              |
             00:00:02|402    00:00:01|401   00:00:03|403
                     |               |              |

     To determine local midnight without fuss, the kernel code simply
     finds the residue of the time.tv_sec (or time.tv_sec + 1) value
     mod 86,400, but this requires a messy divide. Probably a better
     way to do this is to initialize an auxiliary counter in the
     settimeofday() routine using an ugly divide and increment the
     counter at the same time the time.tv_sec is incremented in the
     timer interrupt routine. For future embellishment.

4. Programming Model and Interfaces

  This section describes the programming model for the synchronization
  daemon and user application programs. The ideas are based on
  suggestions from Jeff Mogul and Philip Gladstone and a similar
  interface designed by the latter. It is important to point out that
  the functionality of the original Unix adjtime() system call is
  preserved, so that the modified kernel will work as the unmodified
  one, should the new features not be in use. In this case the
  ntp_adjtime() system call can still be used to read and write kernel
  variables that might be used by a synchronization daemon other than
  NTP, for example.

  4.1. The ntp_gettime() System Call

     The syntax and semantics of the ntp_gettime() call are given in
     the following fragment of the timex.h header file. This file is
     identical, except for the SHIFT_HZ define, in the SunOS, Ultrix
     and OSF/1 kernel distributions. (The SHIFT_HZ define represents
     the logarithm to the base 2 of the clock oscillator frequency
     specific to each system type.) Note that the timex.h file calls
     the syscall.h system header file, which must be modified to define
     the SYS_ntp_gettime system call specific to each system type. The
     kernel distributions include directions on how to do this.





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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     /*
      * This header file defines the Network Time Protocol (NTP)
      * interfaces for user and daemon application programs. These are
      * implemented using private system calls and data structures and
      * require specific kernel support.
      *
      * NAME
      *   ntp_gettime - NTP user application interface
      *
      * SYNOPSIS
      *   #include <sys/timex.h>
      *
      *   int system call(SYS_ntp_gettime, tptr)
      *
      *   int SYS_ntp_gettime     defined in syscall.h header file
      *   struct ntptimeval *tptr pointer to ntptimeval structure
      *
      * NTP user interface - used to read kernel clock values
      * Note: maximum error = NTP synch distance = dispersion + delay /
      * 2
      * estimated error = NTP dispersion.
      */
     struct ntptimeval {
          struct timeval time;    /* current time */
          long maxerror;          /* maximum error (us) */
          long esterror;          /* estimated error (us) */
     };

     The ntp_gettime() system call returns three values in the
     ntptimeval structure: the current time in unix timeval format plus
     the maximum and estimated errors in microseconds. While the 32-bit
     long data type limits the error quantities to something more than
     an hour, in practice this is not significant, since the protocol
     itself will declare an unsynchronized condition well below that
     limit. In the NTP Version 3 specification, if the protocol
     computes either of these values in excess of 16 seconds, they are
     clamped to that value and the system clock declared
     unsynchronized.

     Following is a detailed description of the ntptimeval structure
     members.










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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     struct timeval time;    /* current time */

        This member returns the current system time, expressed as a
        Unix timeval structure. The timeval structure consists of two
        32-bit words; the first returns the number of seconds past 1
        January 1970, while the second returns the number of
        microseconds.

     long maxerror;          /* maximum error (us) */

        This member returns the time_maxerror kernel variable in
        microseconds. See the entry for this variable in section 5 for
        additional information.

     long esterror;          /* estimated error (us) */

        This member returns the time_esterror kernel variable in
        microseconds. See the entry for this variable in section 5 for
        additional information.
































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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


  4.2. The ntp_adjtime() System Call

     The syntax and semantics of the ntp_adjtime() call are given in
     the following fragment of the timex.h header file. Note that, as
     in the ntp_gettime() system call, the syscall.h system header file
     must be modified to define the SYS_ntp_adjtime system call
     specific to each system type.

     /*
      * NAME
      *   ntp_adjtime - NTP daemon application interface
      *
      * SYNOPSIS
      *   #include <sys/timex.h>
      *
      *   int system call(SYS_ntp_adjtime, mode, tptr)
      *
      *   int SYS_ntp_adjtime     defined in syscall.h header file
      *   struct timex *tptr      pointer to timex structure
      *
      * NTP daemon interface - used to discipline kernel clock
      * oscillator
      */
     struct timex {
         int mode;                /* mode selector */
         long offset;             /* time offset (us) */
         long frequency;          /* frequency offset (scaled ppm) */
         long maxerror;           /* maximum error (us) */
         long esterror;           /* estimated error (us) */
         int status;              /* clock command/status */
         long time_constant;      /* pll time constant */
         long precision;          /* clock precision (us) (read only)
                                   */
         long tolerance;          /* clock frequency tolerance (scaled
                                   * ppm) (read only) */
         /*
          * The following read-only structure members are implemented
          * only if the PPS signal discipline is configured in the
          * kernel.
          */
         long ybar;               /* frequency estimate (scaled ppm) */
         long disp;               /* dispersion estimate (scaled ppm)
                                   */
         int shift;               /* interval duration (s) (shift) */
         long calcnt;             /* calibration intervals */
         long jitcnt;             /* jitter limit exceeded */
         long discnt;             /* dispersion limit exceeded */
     };



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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     The ntp_adjtime() system call is used to read and write certain
     time-related kernel variables summarized in this and subsequent
     sections. Writing these variables can only be done in superuser
     mode. To write a variable, the mode structure member is set with
     one or more bits, one of which is assigned each of the following
     variables in turn. The current values for all variables are
     returned in any case; therefore, a mode argument of zero means to
     return these values without changing anything.

     Following is a description of the timex structure members.

     int mode;               /* mode selector */

        This is a bit-coded variable selecting one or more structure
        members, with one bit assigned each member. If a bit is set,
        the value of the associated member variable is copied to the
        corresponding kernel variable; if not, the member is ignored.
        The bits are assigned as given in the following fragment of the
        timex.h header file. Note that the precision and tolerance are
        determined by the kernel and cannot be changed by
        ntp_adjtime().

        /*
         * Mode codes (timex.mode)
         */
        #define ADJ_OFFSET       0x0001    /* time offset */
        #define ADJ_FREQUENCY    0x0002    /* frequency offset */
        #define ADJ_MAXERROR     0x0004    /* maximum time error */
        #define ADJ_ESTERROR     0x0008    /* estimated time error */
        #define ADJ_STATUS       0x0010    /* clock status */
        #define ADJ_TIMECONST    0x0020    /* pll time constant */

     long offset;            /* time offset (us) */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the time_offset
        kernel variable in microseconds. The absolute value must be
        less than MAXPHASE microseconds defined in the timex.h header
        file. See the entry for this variable in section 5 for
        additional information.

        If within range and the PPS signal and/or external oscillator
        are configured and operating properly, the clock status is
        automatically set to TIME_OK.








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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     long time_constant;     /* pll time constant */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the
        time_constant kernel variable. The value must be between zero
        and MAXTC defined in the timex.h header file. See the entry for
        this variable in section 5 for additional information.

     long frequency;         /* frequency offset (scaled ppm) */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the
        time_frequency kernel variable. The value is in ppm, with the
        integer part in the high order 16 bits and fraction in the low
        order 16 bits. The absolute value must be in the range less
        than MAXFREQ ppm defined in the timex.h header file. See the
        entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     long maxerror;          /* maximum error (us) */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the
        time_maxerror kernel variable in microseconds. See the entry
        for this variable in section 5 for additional information.

     long esterror;          /* estimated error (us) */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the
        time_esterror kernel variable in microseconds. See the entry
        for this variable in section 5 for additional information.

     int status;             /* clock command/status */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the time_status
        kernel variable. See the entry for this variable in section 5
        for additional information.

        In order to set this variable by ntp_adjtime(), either (a) the
        current clock status must be TIME_OK or (b) the member value is
        TIME_BAD; that is, the ntp_adjtime() call can always set the
        clock to the unsynchronized state or, if the clock is running
        correctly, can set it to any state. In any case, the
        ntp_adjtime() call always returns the current state in this
        member, so the caller can determine whether or not the request
        succeeded.








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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     long time_constant;     /* pll time constant */

        If selected, this member replaces the value of the
        time_constant kernel variable. The value must be between zero
        and MAXTC defined in the timex.h header file. See the entry for
        this variable in section 5 for additional information.

     long precision;         /* clock precision (us) (read only) */

        This member returns the time_precision kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     long tolerance;         /* clock frequency tolerance (scaled ppm)
                              */

        This member returns the time_tolerance kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     long ybar;              /* frequency estimate (scaled ppm) */

        This member returns the pps_ybar kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     long disp;              /* dispersion estimate (scaled ppm) */

        This member returns the pps_disp kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     int shift;              /* interval duration (s) (shift) */

        This member returns the pps_shift kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.









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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     long calcnt;            /* calibration intervals */

        This member returns the pps_calcnt kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     long jitcnt;            /* jitter limit exceeded */

        This member returns the pps_jittcnt kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.

     long discnt;            /* dispersion limit exceeded */

        This member returns the pps_discnt kernel variable in
        microseconds. The variable can be written only by the kernel.
        See the entry for this variable in section 5 for additional
        information.































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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


  4.3. Command/Status Codes

     The kernel routines use the system clock status variable
     time_status, which records whether the clock is synchronized,
     waiting for a leap second, etc. The value of this variable is
     returned as the result code by both the ntp_gettime() and
     ntp_adjtime() system calls. In addition, it can be explicitly read
     and written using the ntp_adjtime() system call, but can be
     written only in superuser mode. Values presently defined in the
     timex.h header file are as follows:

     /*
      * Clock command/status codes (timex.status)
      */
     #define TIME_OK    0    /* clock synchronized */
     #define TIME_INS   1    /* insert leap second */
     #define TIME_DEL   2    /* delete leap second */
     #define TIME_OOP   3    /* leap second in progress */
     #define TIME_BAD   4    /* kernel clock not synchronized */
     #define TIME_ERR   5    /* external oscillator not
                                synchronized */

     A detailed description of these codes as used by the leap-second
     state machine is given later in this memorandum. In case of a
     negative result code, the kernel has intercepted an invalid
     address or (in case of the ntp_adjtime() system call), a superuser
     violation.

5. Kernel Variables

  This section contains a list of kernel variables and a detailed
  description of their function, initial value, scaling and limits.

  5.1. Interface Variables

     The following variables are read and set by the ntp_adjtime()
     system call. Additional automatic variables are used as
     temporaries as described in the code fragments.

     int time_status = TIME_BAD;

        This variable controls the state machine used to insert or
        delete leap seconds and show the status of the timekeeping
        system, PPS signal and external oscillator, if configured.







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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     long time_offset = 0;

        This variable is used by the PLL to adjust the system time in
        small increments. It is scaled by (1 << SHIFT_UPDATE) (12) in
        microseconds. The maximum value that can be represented is
        about +-512 ms and the minimum value or precision is a few
        parts in 10^10 s.

     long time_constant = 0;      /* pll time constant */

        This variable determines the bandwidth or "stiffness" of the
        PLL. The value is used as a shift between zero and MAXTC (6),
        with the effective PLL time constant equal to a multiple of (1
        << time_constant) in seconds. For room-temperature quartz
        oscillator the recommended default value is 2, which
        corresponds to a PLL time constant of about 900 s and a maximum
        update interval of about 64 s. The maximum update interval
        scales directly with the time constant, so that at the maximum
        time constant of 6, the update interval can be as large as 1024
        s.

        Values of time_constant between zero and 2 can be used if quick
        convergence is necessary; values between 2 and 6 can be used to
        reduce network load, but at a modest cost in accuracy. Values
        above 6 are appropriate only if an external oscillator is
        present.

     long time_tolerance = MAXFREQ; /* frequency tolerance (ppm) */

        This variable represents the maximum frequency error or
        tolerance in ppm of the particular CPU clock oscillator and is
        a property of the architecture; however, in principle it could
        change as result of the presence of external discipline
        signals, for instance. It is expressed as a positive number
        greater than zero in parts-per-million (ppm).

        The recommended value of MAXFREQ is 200 ppm is appropriate for
        room-temperature quartz oscillators used in typical
        workstations. However, it can change due to the operating
        condition of the PPS signal and/or external oscillator. With
        either the PPS signal or external oscillator, the recommended
        value for MAXFREQ is 100 ppm.









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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     long time_precision = 1000000 / HZ; /* clock precision (us) */

        This variable represents the maximum error in reading the
        system clock in microseconds. It is usually based on the number
        of microseconds between timer interrupts, 10000 us for the
        SunOS kernel, 3906 us for the Ultrix kernel, 976 us for the
        OSF/1 kernel. However, in cases where the time can be
        interpolated between timer interrupts with microsecond
        resolution, such as in the unmodified SunOS kernel and modified
        Ultrix and OSF/1 kernels, the precision is specified as 1 us.
        In cases where a PPS signal or external oscillator is
        available, the precision can depend on the operating condition
        of the signal or oscillator. This variable is determined by the
        kernel for use by the synchronization daemon, but is otherwise
        not used by the kernel.

     long time_maxerror = MAXPHASE; /* maximum error */

        This variable establishes the maximum error of the indicated
        time relative to the primary synchronization source in
        microseconds. For NTP, the value is initialized by a
        ntp_adjtime() call to the synchronization distance, which is
        equal to the root dispersion plus one-half the root delay. It
        is increased by a small amount (time_tolerance) each second to
        reflect the clock frequency tolerance. This variable is
        computed by the synchronization daemon and the kernel, but is
        otherwise not used by the kernel.

     long time_esterror = MAXPHASE; /* estimated error */

        This variable establishes the expected error of the indicated
        time relative to the primary synchronization source in
        microseconds. For NTP, the value is determined as the root
        dispersion, which represents the best estimate of the actual
        error of the system clock based on its past behavior, together
        with observations of multiple clocks within the peer group.
        This variable is computed by the synchronization daemon and
        returned in system calls, but is otherwise not used by the
        kernel.












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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


  5.2. Phase-Lock Loop Variables

     The following variables establish the state of the PLL and the
     residual time and frequency offset of the system clock. Additional
     automatic variables are used as temporaries as described in the
     code fragments.

     long time_phase = 0;         /* phase offset (scaled us) */

        The time_phase variable represents the phase of the kernel time
        variable at each tick of the clock. This variable is scaled by
        (1 << SHIFT_SCALE) (23) in microseconds, giving a maximum
        adjustment of about +-256 us/tick and a resolution less than
        one part in 10^12.

     long time_offset = 0;        /* time offset (scaled us) */

        The time_offset variable represents the time offset of the CPU
        clock oscillator. It is recalculated as each update to the
        system clock is received via the hardupdate() routine and at
        each second in the seconds_overflow routine. This variable is
        scaled by (1 << SHIFT_UPDATE) (12) in microseconds, giving a
        maximum adjustment of about +-512 ms and a resolution of a few
        parts in 10^10 s.

     long time_freq = 0;          /* frequency offset (scaled ppm) */

        The time_freq variable represents the frequency offset of the
        CPU clock oscillator. It is recalculated as each update to the
        system clock is received via the hardupdate() routine. It can
        also be set via ntp_adjtime() from a value stored in a file
        when the synchronization daemon is first started. It can be
        retrieved via ntp_adjtime() and written to the file about once
        per hour by the daemon. The time_freq variable is scaled by (1
        << SHIFT_KF) (16) ppm, giving it a maximum value well in excess
        of the limit of +-256 ppm imposed by other constraints. The
        precision of this representation (frequency resolution) is
        parts in 10^11, which is adequate for all but the best external
        oscillators.

     time_adj = 0;                /* tick adjust (scaled 1 / HZ) */

        The time_adj variable is the adjustment added to the value of
        tick at each timer interrupt. It is computed once each second
        from the time_offset, time_freq and, if the PPS signal is
        present, the ps_ybar variable once each second.





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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     long time_reftime = 0;       /* time at last adjustment (s) */

        This variable is the seconds portion of the system time on the
        last update received by the hardupdate() routine. It is used to
        compute the time_freq variable as the time since the last
        update increases.

     int fixtick = 1000000 % HZ;  /* amortization factor */

        In the Ultrix and OSF/1 kernels, the interval between timer
        interrupts does not evenly divide the number of microseconds in
        the second. In order that the clock runs at a precise rate, it
        is necessary to introduce an amortization factor into the local
        timescale. In the original Unix code, the value of fixtick is
        amortized once each second, introducing an additional source of
        jitter; in the new model the value is amortized at each tick of
        the system clock, reducing the jitter by the reciprocal of the
        clock oscillator frequency. This is not a new kernel variable,
        but a new use of an existing kernel variable.

  5.3. Pulse-per-second (PPS) Frequency-Lock Loop Variables

     The following variables are used only if a pulse-per-second (PPS)
     signal is available and connected via a modem-control lead, such
     as produced by the optional ppsclock feature incorporated in the
     serial port driver. They establish the design parameters of the
     PPS frequency-lock loop used to discipline the CPU clock
     oscillator to an external PPS signal. Additional automatic
     variables are used as temporaries as described in the code
     fragments.

     long pps_usec;          /* microseconds at last pps */

        The pps_usec variable is latched from a high resolution counter
        or external oscillator at each PPS interrupt. In determining
        this value, only the hardware counter contents are used, not
        the contents plus the kernel time variable, as returned by the
        microtime() routine.

     long pps_ybar = 0;      /* pps frequency offset estimate */

        The pps_ybar variable is the average CPU clock oscillator
        frequency offset relative to the PPS disciplining signal. It is
        scaled in the same units as the time_freq variable.







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RFC 1589         Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping       March 1994


     pps_disp = MAXFREQ;     /* dispersion estimate (scaled ppm) */

        The pps_disp variable represents the average sample dispersion
        measured over the last three samples. It is scaled in the same
        units as the time_freq variable.

     pps_dispmax = MAXFREQ / 2; /* dispersion threshold */

        The pps_dispmax variable is used as a dispersion threshold. If
        pps_disp is less than this threshold, the median sample is used
        to update the pps_ybar estimate; if not, the sample is
        discarded.

     pps_dispinc = MAXFREQ >> (PPS_SHIFT + 4); /* pps dispersion
     increment/sec */

        The pps_dispinc variable is the increment to add to pps_disp
        once each second. It is computed such that, if no PPS samples
        have arrived for several calibration intervals, the value of
        pps_disp will exceed the pps_dispmax threshold and raise an
        alarm.

     int pps_mf[] = {0, 0, 0};    /* pps median filter */

        The pps-mf[] array is used as a median filter to detect and
        discard jitter in the PPS signal.

     int pps_count = 0;           /* pps calibrate interval counter */

        The pps_count variable measures the length of the calibration
        interval used to calculate the frequency. It normally counts
        from zero to the value 1 << pps_shift.

     pps_shift = PPS_SHIFT;       /* interval duration (s) (shift) */

        The pps_shift variable determines the duration of the
        calibration interval, 1 << pps_shift s.

     pps_intcnt = 0;              /* intervals at current duration */

        The pps_intcnt variable counts the number of calibration
        intervals at the current interval duration. It is reset to zero
        after four intervals and when the interval duration is changed.

     long pps_calcnt = 0;         /* calibration intervals */

        The pps_calcnt variable counts the number of calibration
        intervals.



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     long pps_jitcnt = 0;         /* jitter limit exceeded */

        The pps_jitcnt variable counts the number of resets due to
        excessive jitter or frequency offset. These resets are
        usually due to excessive noise in the PPS signal or
        interface.

     long pps_discnt = 0;         /* dispersion limit exceeded */

        The pps_discnt variable counts the number of calibration
        intervals where the dispersion is above the pps_dispmax
        limit.  These resets are usually due to excessive frequency
        wander in the PPS signal source.






































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  5.4. External Oscillator Variables

     The following variables are used only if an external oscillator
     (HIGHBALL or TPRO) is present. Additional automatic variables are
     used as temporaries as described in the code fragments.

     int clock_count = 0;         /* CPU clock counter */

        The clock_count variable counts the seconds between adjustments
        to the kernel time variable to discipline it to the external
        clock.

     struct timeval clock_offset; /* HIGHBALL clock offset */

        The clock_offset variable defines the offset between system
        time and the HIGHBALL counters.

     long clock_cpu = 0;          /* CPU clock adjust */

        The clock_cpu variable contains the offset between the system
        clock and the HIGHBALL clock for use in disciplining the kernel
        time variable.

6. Architecture Constants

  Following is a list of the important architecture constants that
  establish the response and stability of the PLL and provide maximum
  bounds on behavior in order to satisfy correctness assertions made in
  the protocol specification. Additional definitions are given in the
  timex.h header file.

  6.1. Phase-lock loop (PLL) definitions

     The following defines establish the performance envelope of the
     PLL. They establish the maximum phase error (MAXPHASE), maximum
     frequency error (MAXFREQ), minimum interval between updates
     (MINSEC) and maximum interval between updates (MAXSEC). The intent
     of these bounds is to force the PLL to operate within predefined
     limits in order to satisfy correctness assertions of the
     synchronization protocol. An excursion which exceeds these bounds
     is clamped to the bound and operation proceeds normally. In
     practice, this can occur only if something has failed or is
     operating out of tolerance, but otherwise the PLL continues to
     operate in a stable mode.

     MAXPHASE must be set greater than or equal to CLOCK.MAX (128 ms),
     as defined in the NTP specification. CLOCK.MAX establishes the
     maximum time offset allowed before the system time is reset,



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     rather than incrementally adjusted. Here, the maximum offset is
     clamped to MAXPHASE only in order to prevent overflow errors due
     to defective programming.

     MAXFREQ reflects the manufacturing frequency tolerance of the CPU
     oscillator plus the maximum slew rate allowed by the protocol. It
     should be set to at least the intrinsic frequency tolerance of the
     oscillator plus 100 ppm for vernier frequency adjustments. If the
     kernel frequency discipline code is installed (PPS_SYNC), the CPU
     oscillator frequency is disciplined to an external source,
     presumably with negligible frequency error.

     #define MAXPHASE 512000      /* max phase error (us) */
     #ifdef PPS_SYNC
     #define MAXFREQ 100          /* max frequency error (ppm) */
     #else
     #define MAXFREQ 200          /* max frequency error (ppm) */
     #endif /* PPS_SYNC */
     #define MINSEC 16            /* min interval between updates (s)
                                   */
     #define MAXSEC 1200          /* max interval between updates (s)
                                   */

  6.2. Pulse-per-second (PPS) Frequency-lock Loop (FLL) Definitions

     The following defines and declarations are used only if a pulse-
     per-second (PPS) signal is available and connected via a modem-
     control lead, such as produced by the optional ppsclock feature
     incorporated in the serial port driver. They establish the design
     parameters of the frequency-lock loop (FLL) used to discipline the
     CPU clock oscillator to the PPS oscillator.

     PPS_AVG is the averaging constant used to update the FLL from
     frequency samples measured for each calibration interval.
     PPS_SHIFT and PPS_SHIFTMAX are the minimum and maximem,
     respectively, of the calibration interval represented as a power
     of two. The PPS_DISPINC is the initial increment to pps_disp at
     each second.

     #define PPS_AVG 2            /* pps averaging constant (shift) */
     #define PPS_SHIFT 2          /* min interval duration (s) (shift)
                                   */
     #define PPS_SHIFTMAX 6       /* max interval duration (s) (shift)
                                   */
     #define PPS_DISPINC 0        /* dispersion increment (us/s) */






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  6.3. External Oscillator Definitions

     The following definitions and declarations are used only if an
     external oscillator (HIGHBALL or TPRO) is configured on the
     system.

     #define CLOCK_INTERVAL 30    /* CPU clock update interval (s) */

7. References

  [1] Mills, D., "Internet time synchronization: the Network Time
      Protocol", IEEE Trans. Communications COM-39, 10 (October 1991),
      1482- 1493. Also in: Yang, Z., and T.A. Marsland (Eds.). Global
      States and Time in Distributed Systems, IEEE Press, Los Alamitos,
      CA, 91-102.

  [2] Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3) specification,
      implementation and analysis", RFC 1305, University of Delaware,
      March 1992, 113 pp.

  [3] Mills, D., "Modelling and analysis of computer network clocks",
      Electrical Engineering Department Report 92-5-2, University of
      Delaware, May 1992, 29 pp.

  [4] Mills, D., "Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP)", RFC 1361,
      University of Delaware, August 1992, 10 pp.

  [5] Mills, D., "Precision synchronizatin of computer network clocks",
      Electrical Engineering Department Report 93-11-1, University of
      Delaware, November 1993, 66 pp.

Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Author's Address

  David L. Mills
  Electrical Engineering Department
  University of Delaware
  Newark, DE 19716

  Phone: (302) 831-8247
  EMail: [email protected]







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