Linux uses David L. Mills' clock adjustment algorithm (see RFC 1305).
The system call
adjtimex
reads and optionally sets adjustment parameters for this algorithm.
It takes a pointer to a
timex
structure, updates kernel parameters from field values,
and returns the same structure with current kernel values.
This structure is declared as follows:
struct timex {
int modes; /* mode selector */
long offset; /* time offset (usec) */
long freq; /* frequency offset (scaled ppm) */
long maxerror; /* maximum error (usec) */
long esterror; /* estimated error (usec) */
int status; /* clock command/status */
long constant; /* pll time constant */
long precision; /* clock precision (usec) (read only) */
long tolerance; /* clock frequency tolerance (ppm)
(read only) */
struct timeval time; /* current time (read only) */
long tick; /* usecs between clock ticks */
};
The
modes
field determines which parameters, if any, to set.
It may contain a
bitwise-or
combination of zero or more of the following bits:
#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 */
#define ADJ_TICK 0x4000 /* tick value */
#define ADJ_OFFSET_SINGLESHOT 0x8001 /* old-fashioned adjtime */
Ordinary users are restricted to a zero value for
mode.
Only the superuser may set any parameters.
RETURN VALUE
On success,
adjtimex
returns the clock state:
#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_WAIT 4 /* leap second has occurred */
#define TIME_BAD 5 /* clock not synchronized */
On failure,
adjtimex
returns -1 and sets
errno.
ERRORS
EFAULT
buf
does not point to writable memory.
EPERM
buf.mode
is non-zero and the user is not super-user.
EINVAL
An attempt is made to set
buf.offset
to a value outside the range -131071 to +131071,
or to set
buf.status
to a value other than those listed above,
or to set
buf.tick
to a value outside the range
900000/HZ
to
1100000/HZ,
where
HZ
is the system timer interrupt frequency.
CONFORMING TO
adjtimex is Linux specific and should not be used in programs
intended to be portable. There is a similar but less general call
adjtime in SVr4.