chrony vs. systemd-timesyncd – What are the differences and use cases as NTP clients?ntpd vs....

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chrony vs. systemd-timesyncd – What are the differences and use cases as NTP clients?

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chrony vs. systemd-timesyncd – What are the differences and use cases as NTP clients?


ntpd vs. systemd-timesyncd - How to achieve reliable NTP syncing?What are the pros/cons of Upstart and systemd?What are possible reasons for erratic NTP synchronistation?What is the recommended way to synchronize time using NTP?Automatically update hwclock at bootCentOS 7.2 Minimal Time synchronization timedated and/or ntpd/chronyntpd vs. systemd-timesyncd - How to achieve reliable NTP syncing?NTP Servers not Sync with other machinesNTP not syncing time even with `tinker panic 0` in /etc/ntp.conf in Centos 7.3 -Resuming VM from paused statesystemd: start openvpn.service after time has syncedDifference between suspend by echo “mem” > /sys/power/state and by suspend in XFCE?













7















Somehow but not quite building upon the older question "ntpd vs. systemd-timesyncd - How to achieve reliable NTP syncing?", I'd like to ask about the differences between chrony and systemd-timesyncd in terms of an NTP client.



I know that systemd-timesyncd is a more or less minimal ntp client implementation whereas chrony is a full fledged NTP daemon solution that happens to include an NTP client.



The ubuntu Bionic Beaver release notes state the following:




For simple time sync needs the base system already comes with systemd-timesyncd. Chrony is only needed to act as a time server or if you want the advertised more accurate and efficient syncing.




I like the idea of using a minimal preinstalled tool to do the job and I am pretty sure systemd-timesyncd will do the job for my use cases, still I am curious:




  • What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?

  • What are the differences in efficiency?

  • What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?










share|improve this question



























    7















    Somehow but not quite building upon the older question "ntpd vs. systemd-timesyncd - How to achieve reliable NTP syncing?", I'd like to ask about the differences between chrony and systemd-timesyncd in terms of an NTP client.



    I know that systemd-timesyncd is a more or less minimal ntp client implementation whereas chrony is a full fledged NTP daemon solution that happens to include an NTP client.



    The ubuntu Bionic Beaver release notes state the following:




    For simple time sync needs the base system already comes with systemd-timesyncd. Chrony is only needed to act as a time server or if you want the advertised more accurate and efficient syncing.




    I like the idea of using a minimal preinstalled tool to do the job and I am pretty sure systemd-timesyncd will do the job for my use cases, still I am curious:




    • What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?

    • What are the differences in efficiency?

    • What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?










    share|improve this question

























      7












      7








      7








      Somehow but not quite building upon the older question "ntpd vs. systemd-timesyncd - How to achieve reliable NTP syncing?", I'd like to ask about the differences between chrony and systemd-timesyncd in terms of an NTP client.



      I know that systemd-timesyncd is a more or less minimal ntp client implementation whereas chrony is a full fledged NTP daemon solution that happens to include an NTP client.



      The ubuntu Bionic Beaver release notes state the following:




      For simple time sync needs the base system already comes with systemd-timesyncd. Chrony is only needed to act as a time server or if you want the advertised more accurate and efficient syncing.




      I like the idea of using a minimal preinstalled tool to do the job and I am pretty sure systemd-timesyncd will do the job for my use cases, still I am curious:




      • What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?

      • What are the differences in efficiency?

      • What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?










      share|improve this question














      Somehow but not quite building upon the older question "ntpd vs. systemd-timesyncd - How to achieve reliable NTP syncing?", I'd like to ask about the differences between chrony and systemd-timesyncd in terms of an NTP client.



      I know that systemd-timesyncd is a more or less minimal ntp client implementation whereas chrony is a full fledged NTP daemon solution that happens to include an NTP client.



      The ubuntu Bionic Beaver release notes state the following:




      For simple time sync needs the base system already comes with systemd-timesyncd. Chrony is only needed to act as a time server or if you want the advertised more accurate and efficient syncing.




      I like the idea of using a minimal preinstalled tool to do the job and I am pretty sure systemd-timesyncd will do the job for my use cases, still I am curious:




      • What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?

      • What are the differences in efficiency?

      • What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?







      systemd ntp chrony






      share|improve this question













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      share|improve this question










      asked 6 hours ago









      wediwedi

      1363




      1363






















          2 Answers
          2






          active

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          6














          As the other answer correctly states, chrony implements NTP and systemd-timesyncd SNTP.



          From the point of view of a time service client:



          SNTP is a much more simple protocol to implement;

          NTP allows for step-by-step increments/corrections on time. One major advantage of NTP is that it also takes on account the RTT of the answer to get a more exact time.



          From https://www.meinbergglobal.com/english/faq/faq_37.htm




          While a full featured NTP server or client reaches a very high level
          of accuracy and avoids abrupt time steps as much as possible by using
          different mathematical and statistical methods and smooth clock speed
          adjustments, SNTP can only be recommended for simple applications,
          where the requirements for accuracy and reliability are not too
          demanding. By disregarding drift values and using simplified ways of
          system clock adjustment methods (often simple time stepping), SNTP
          achieves only a low quality time synchronisation when compared with a
          full NTP implementation.



          SNTP adopts a much simpler approach. Many of the complexities of the
          NTP algorithm are removed. Rather than skewing time, many SNTP clients
          step time. This is fine for many applications where a simple
          time-stamp is required. Additionally, SNTP lacks the ability to
          monitor and filter multiple NTP servers. Often a simple round-robin
          approach is used, where if one server fails, the next one in a list is
          used




          From https://www.masterclock.com/company/masterclock-inc-blog/ntp-vs-sntp




          NTP is far more accurate and precise than SNTP, and this makes it the
          de facto winner in most enterprise applications. On the other hand,
          the simplicity of SNTP makes it more appropriate for things like IP
          cameras, DVRs and some network switches. These types of hardware lack
          the processing resources to handle more complex protocols, but as
          connected devices become increasingly powerful, that may change.



          One major weak point of SNTP is that you can't make it more accurate
          by retrieving time from multiple sources like Network Time Protocol does by default.




          One other major point I can see SNTP implementations giving more problems than NTP is in virtualisation, when you have both the hypervisor and NTP daemon trying to change the VM time. Specially with them not agreeing on time with some misconfiguration, it will cause big problems. (Whilst competent system administrators will try to disable the former, it can happen they are both active).



          P.S. Obviously systemd-timesyncd is not an alternative when not using systemd.






          share|improve this answer

































            3














            The announcement of systemd-timesyncd in the systemd NEWS file does a good job of explaining the differences of this tool in comparison with Chrony and tools like it. (emphasis mine):




            A new "systemd-timesyncd" daemon has been added for
            synchronizing the system clock across the network. It
            implements an SNTP client. In contrast to NTP
            implementations such as chrony or the NTP reference server
            this only implements a client side, and does not bother with
            the full NTP complexity, focusing only on querying time from
            one remote server and synchronizing the local clock to
            it
            . Unless you intend to serve NTP to networked clients or
            want to connect to local hardware clocks this simple NTP
            client should be more than appropriate for most
            installations. [...]




            This setup is a common use case for most hosts in a server fleet. They will usually get synchronized from local NTP servers, which themselves get synchronized from multiple sources, possibly including hardware. systemd-timesyncd tries to provide an easy-to-use solution for that common use case.





            Trying to address your specific questions:




            What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?




            I believe you can get higher accuracy by getting synchronization data from multiple sources, which is specifically not a supported use case for systemd-timesyncd. But when you're using it to get synchronization data from central NTP servers connected to your reliable internal network, using multiple sources isn't really that relevant and you get good accuracy from a single source.




            What are the differences in efficiency?




            Getting synchronization from a single source is much simpler than getting it from multiple sources, since you don't have to make decisions about which sources are better than others and possibly combine information from multiple sources. The algorithms are much simpler and will require less CPU load for the simple case.




            What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?




            That's addressed in the quote above, but in any case these are use cases for Chrony that are not covered by systemd-timesyncd:




            • running NTP server (so that other hosts can use this host as a source for synchrnoization);

            • getting NTP synchronization information from multiple sources (which is important for hosts getting that information from public servers on the Internet); and

            • getting synchronization information from the local clock, which usually involves specialized hardware such as GPS devices which can get accurate time information from satellites.


            These use cases require Chrony or ntpd or similar.






            share|improve this answer























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              6














              As the other answer correctly states, chrony implements NTP and systemd-timesyncd SNTP.



              From the point of view of a time service client:



              SNTP is a much more simple protocol to implement;

              NTP allows for step-by-step increments/corrections on time. One major advantage of NTP is that it also takes on account the RTT of the answer to get a more exact time.



              From https://www.meinbergglobal.com/english/faq/faq_37.htm




              While a full featured NTP server or client reaches a very high level
              of accuracy and avoids abrupt time steps as much as possible by using
              different mathematical and statistical methods and smooth clock speed
              adjustments, SNTP can only be recommended for simple applications,
              where the requirements for accuracy and reliability are not too
              demanding. By disregarding drift values and using simplified ways of
              system clock adjustment methods (often simple time stepping), SNTP
              achieves only a low quality time synchronisation when compared with a
              full NTP implementation.



              SNTP adopts a much simpler approach. Many of the complexities of the
              NTP algorithm are removed. Rather than skewing time, many SNTP clients
              step time. This is fine for many applications where a simple
              time-stamp is required. Additionally, SNTP lacks the ability to
              monitor and filter multiple NTP servers. Often a simple round-robin
              approach is used, where if one server fails, the next one in a list is
              used




              From https://www.masterclock.com/company/masterclock-inc-blog/ntp-vs-sntp




              NTP is far more accurate and precise than SNTP, and this makes it the
              de facto winner in most enterprise applications. On the other hand,
              the simplicity of SNTP makes it more appropriate for things like IP
              cameras, DVRs and some network switches. These types of hardware lack
              the processing resources to handle more complex protocols, but as
              connected devices become increasingly powerful, that may change.



              One major weak point of SNTP is that you can't make it more accurate
              by retrieving time from multiple sources like Network Time Protocol does by default.




              One other major point I can see SNTP implementations giving more problems than NTP is in virtualisation, when you have both the hypervisor and NTP daemon trying to change the VM time. Specially with them not agreeing on time with some misconfiguration, it will cause big problems. (Whilst competent system administrators will try to disable the former, it can happen they are both active).



              P.S. Obviously systemd-timesyncd is not an alternative when not using systemd.






              share|improve this answer






























                6














                As the other answer correctly states, chrony implements NTP and systemd-timesyncd SNTP.



                From the point of view of a time service client:



                SNTP is a much more simple protocol to implement;

                NTP allows for step-by-step increments/corrections on time. One major advantage of NTP is that it also takes on account the RTT of the answer to get a more exact time.



                From https://www.meinbergglobal.com/english/faq/faq_37.htm




                While a full featured NTP server or client reaches a very high level
                of accuracy and avoids abrupt time steps as much as possible by using
                different mathematical and statistical methods and smooth clock speed
                adjustments, SNTP can only be recommended for simple applications,
                where the requirements for accuracy and reliability are not too
                demanding. By disregarding drift values and using simplified ways of
                system clock adjustment methods (often simple time stepping), SNTP
                achieves only a low quality time synchronisation when compared with a
                full NTP implementation.



                SNTP adopts a much simpler approach. Many of the complexities of the
                NTP algorithm are removed. Rather than skewing time, many SNTP clients
                step time. This is fine for many applications where a simple
                time-stamp is required. Additionally, SNTP lacks the ability to
                monitor and filter multiple NTP servers. Often a simple round-robin
                approach is used, where if one server fails, the next one in a list is
                used




                From https://www.masterclock.com/company/masterclock-inc-blog/ntp-vs-sntp




                NTP is far more accurate and precise than SNTP, and this makes it the
                de facto winner in most enterprise applications. On the other hand,
                the simplicity of SNTP makes it more appropriate for things like IP
                cameras, DVRs and some network switches. These types of hardware lack
                the processing resources to handle more complex protocols, but as
                connected devices become increasingly powerful, that may change.



                One major weak point of SNTP is that you can't make it more accurate
                by retrieving time from multiple sources like Network Time Protocol does by default.




                One other major point I can see SNTP implementations giving more problems than NTP is in virtualisation, when you have both the hypervisor and NTP daemon trying to change the VM time. Specially with them not agreeing on time with some misconfiguration, it will cause big problems. (Whilst competent system administrators will try to disable the former, it can happen they are both active).



                P.S. Obviously systemd-timesyncd is not an alternative when not using systemd.






                share|improve this answer




























                  6












                  6








                  6







                  As the other answer correctly states, chrony implements NTP and systemd-timesyncd SNTP.



                  From the point of view of a time service client:



                  SNTP is a much more simple protocol to implement;

                  NTP allows for step-by-step increments/corrections on time. One major advantage of NTP is that it also takes on account the RTT of the answer to get a more exact time.



                  From https://www.meinbergglobal.com/english/faq/faq_37.htm




                  While a full featured NTP server or client reaches a very high level
                  of accuracy and avoids abrupt time steps as much as possible by using
                  different mathematical and statistical methods and smooth clock speed
                  adjustments, SNTP can only be recommended for simple applications,
                  where the requirements for accuracy and reliability are not too
                  demanding. By disregarding drift values and using simplified ways of
                  system clock adjustment methods (often simple time stepping), SNTP
                  achieves only a low quality time synchronisation when compared with a
                  full NTP implementation.



                  SNTP adopts a much simpler approach. Many of the complexities of the
                  NTP algorithm are removed. Rather than skewing time, many SNTP clients
                  step time. This is fine for many applications where a simple
                  time-stamp is required. Additionally, SNTP lacks the ability to
                  monitor and filter multiple NTP servers. Often a simple round-robin
                  approach is used, where if one server fails, the next one in a list is
                  used




                  From https://www.masterclock.com/company/masterclock-inc-blog/ntp-vs-sntp




                  NTP is far more accurate and precise than SNTP, and this makes it the
                  de facto winner in most enterprise applications. On the other hand,
                  the simplicity of SNTP makes it more appropriate for things like IP
                  cameras, DVRs and some network switches. These types of hardware lack
                  the processing resources to handle more complex protocols, but as
                  connected devices become increasingly powerful, that may change.



                  One major weak point of SNTP is that you can't make it more accurate
                  by retrieving time from multiple sources like Network Time Protocol does by default.




                  One other major point I can see SNTP implementations giving more problems than NTP is in virtualisation, when you have both the hypervisor and NTP daemon trying to change the VM time. Specially with them not agreeing on time with some misconfiguration, it will cause big problems. (Whilst competent system administrators will try to disable the former, it can happen they are both active).



                  P.S. Obviously systemd-timesyncd is not an alternative when not using systemd.






                  share|improve this answer















                  As the other answer correctly states, chrony implements NTP and systemd-timesyncd SNTP.



                  From the point of view of a time service client:



                  SNTP is a much more simple protocol to implement;

                  NTP allows for step-by-step increments/corrections on time. One major advantage of NTP is that it also takes on account the RTT of the answer to get a more exact time.



                  From https://www.meinbergglobal.com/english/faq/faq_37.htm




                  While a full featured NTP server or client reaches a very high level
                  of accuracy and avoids abrupt time steps as much as possible by using
                  different mathematical and statistical methods and smooth clock speed
                  adjustments, SNTP can only be recommended for simple applications,
                  where the requirements for accuracy and reliability are not too
                  demanding. By disregarding drift values and using simplified ways of
                  system clock adjustment methods (often simple time stepping), SNTP
                  achieves only a low quality time synchronisation when compared with a
                  full NTP implementation.



                  SNTP adopts a much simpler approach. Many of the complexities of the
                  NTP algorithm are removed. Rather than skewing time, many SNTP clients
                  step time. This is fine for many applications where a simple
                  time-stamp is required. Additionally, SNTP lacks the ability to
                  monitor and filter multiple NTP servers. Often a simple round-robin
                  approach is used, where if one server fails, the next one in a list is
                  used




                  From https://www.masterclock.com/company/masterclock-inc-blog/ntp-vs-sntp




                  NTP is far more accurate and precise than SNTP, and this makes it the
                  de facto winner in most enterprise applications. On the other hand,
                  the simplicity of SNTP makes it more appropriate for things like IP
                  cameras, DVRs and some network switches. These types of hardware lack
                  the processing resources to handle more complex protocols, but as
                  connected devices become increasingly powerful, that may change.



                  One major weak point of SNTP is that you can't make it more accurate
                  by retrieving time from multiple sources like Network Time Protocol does by default.




                  One other major point I can see SNTP implementations giving more problems than NTP is in virtualisation, when you have both the hypervisor and NTP daemon trying to change the VM time. Specially with them not agreeing on time with some misconfiguration, it will cause big problems. (Whilst competent system administrators will try to disable the former, it can happen they are both active).



                  P.S. Obviously systemd-timesyncd is not an alternative when not using systemd.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 4 hours ago

























                  answered 5 hours ago









                  Rui F RibeiroRui F Ribeiro

                  41k1479137




                  41k1479137

























                      3














                      The announcement of systemd-timesyncd in the systemd NEWS file does a good job of explaining the differences of this tool in comparison with Chrony and tools like it. (emphasis mine):




                      A new "systemd-timesyncd" daemon has been added for
                      synchronizing the system clock across the network. It
                      implements an SNTP client. In contrast to NTP
                      implementations such as chrony or the NTP reference server
                      this only implements a client side, and does not bother with
                      the full NTP complexity, focusing only on querying time from
                      one remote server and synchronizing the local clock to
                      it
                      . Unless you intend to serve NTP to networked clients or
                      want to connect to local hardware clocks this simple NTP
                      client should be more than appropriate for most
                      installations. [...]




                      This setup is a common use case for most hosts in a server fleet. They will usually get synchronized from local NTP servers, which themselves get synchronized from multiple sources, possibly including hardware. systemd-timesyncd tries to provide an easy-to-use solution for that common use case.





                      Trying to address your specific questions:




                      What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?




                      I believe you can get higher accuracy by getting synchronization data from multiple sources, which is specifically not a supported use case for systemd-timesyncd. But when you're using it to get synchronization data from central NTP servers connected to your reliable internal network, using multiple sources isn't really that relevant and you get good accuracy from a single source.




                      What are the differences in efficiency?




                      Getting synchronization from a single source is much simpler than getting it from multiple sources, since you don't have to make decisions about which sources are better than others and possibly combine information from multiple sources. The algorithms are much simpler and will require less CPU load for the simple case.




                      What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?




                      That's addressed in the quote above, but in any case these are use cases for Chrony that are not covered by systemd-timesyncd:




                      • running NTP server (so that other hosts can use this host as a source for synchrnoization);

                      • getting NTP synchronization information from multiple sources (which is important for hosts getting that information from public servers on the Internet); and

                      • getting synchronization information from the local clock, which usually involves specialized hardware such as GPS devices which can get accurate time information from satellites.


                      These use cases require Chrony or ntpd or similar.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        3














                        The announcement of systemd-timesyncd in the systemd NEWS file does a good job of explaining the differences of this tool in comparison with Chrony and tools like it. (emphasis mine):




                        A new "systemd-timesyncd" daemon has been added for
                        synchronizing the system clock across the network. It
                        implements an SNTP client. In contrast to NTP
                        implementations such as chrony or the NTP reference server
                        this only implements a client side, and does not bother with
                        the full NTP complexity, focusing only on querying time from
                        one remote server and synchronizing the local clock to
                        it
                        . Unless you intend to serve NTP to networked clients or
                        want to connect to local hardware clocks this simple NTP
                        client should be more than appropriate for most
                        installations. [...]




                        This setup is a common use case for most hosts in a server fleet. They will usually get synchronized from local NTP servers, which themselves get synchronized from multiple sources, possibly including hardware. systemd-timesyncd tries to provide an easy-to-use solution for that common use case.





                        Trying to address your specific questions:




                        What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?




                        I believe you can get higher accuracy by getting synchronization data from multiple sources, which is specifically not a supported use case for systemd-timesyncd. But when you're using it to get synchronization data from central NTP servers connected to your reliable internal network, using multiple sources isn't really that relevant and you get good accuracy from a single source.




                        What are the differences in efficiency?




                        Getting synchronization from a single source is much simpler than getting it from multiple sources, since you don't have to make decisions about which sources are better than others and possibly combine information from multiple sources. The algorithms are much simpler and will require less CPU load for the simple case.




                        What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?




                        That's addressed in the quote above, but in any case these are use cases for Chrony that are not covered by systemd-timesyncd:




                        • running NTP server (so that other hosts can use this host as a source for synchrnoization);

                        • getting NTP synchronization information from multiple sources (which is important for hosts getting that information from public servers on the Internet); and

                        • getting synchronization information from the local clock, which usually involves specialized hardware such as GPS devices which can get accurate time information from satellites.


                        These use cases require Chrony or ntpd or similar.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          3












                          3








                          3







                          The announcement of systemd-timesyncd in the systemd NEWS file does a good job of explaining the differences of this tool in comparison with Chrony and tools like it. (emphasis mine):




                          A new "systemd-timesyncd" daemon has been added for
                          synchronizing the system clock across the network. It
                          implements an SNTP client. In contrast to NTP
                          implementations such as chrony or the NTP reference server
                          this only implements a client side, and does not bother with
                          the full NTP complexity, focusing only on querying time from
                          one remote server and synchronizing the local clock to
                          it
                          . Unless you intend to serve NTP to networked clients or
                          want to connect to local hardware clocks this simple NTP
                          client should be more than appropriate for most
                          installations. [...]




                          This setup is a common use case for most hosts in a server fleet. They will usually get synchronized from local NTP servers, which themselves get synchronized from multiple sources, possibly including hardware. systemd-timesyncd tries to provide an easy-to-use solution for that common use case.





                          Trying to address your specific questions:




                          What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?




                          I believe you can get higher accuracy by getting synchronization data from multiple sources, which is specifically not a supported use case for systemd-timesyncd. But when you're using it to get synchronization data from central NTP servers connected to your reliable internal network, using multiple sources isn't really that relevant and you get good accuracy from a single source.




                          What are the differences in efficiency?




                          Getting synchronization from a single source is much simpler than getting it from multiple sources, since you don't have to make decisions about which sources are better than others and possibly combine information from multiple sources. The algorithms are much simpler and will require less CPU load for the simple case.




                          What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?




                          That's addressed in the quote above, but in any case these are use cases for Chrony that are not covered by systemd-timesyncd:




                          • running NTP server (so that other hosts can use this host as a source for synchrnoization);

                          • getting NTP synchronization information from multiple sources (which is important for hosts getting that information from public servers on the Internet); and

                          • getting synchronization information from the local clock, which usually involves specialized hardware such as GPS devices which can get accurate time information from satellites.


                          These use cases require Chrony or ntpd or similar.






                          share|improve this answer













                          The announcement of systemd-timesyncd in the systemd NEWS file does a good job of explaining the differences of this tool in comparison with Chrony and tools like it. (emphasis mine):




                          A new "systemd-timesyncd" daemon has been added for
                          synchronizing the system clock across the network. It
                          implements an SNTP client. In contrast to NTP
                          implementations such as chrony or the NTP reference server
                          this only implements a client side, and does not bother with
                          the full NTP complexity, focusing only on querying time from
                          one remote server and synchronizing the local clock to
                          it
                          . Unless you intend to serve NTP to networked clients or
                          want to connect to local hardware clocks this simple NTP
                          client should be more than appropriate for most
                          installations. [...]




                          This setup is a common use case for most hosts in a server fleet. They will usually get synchronized from local NTP servers, which themselves get synchronized from multiple sources, possibly including hardware. systemd-timesyncd tries to provide an easy-to-use solution for that common use case.





                          Trying to address your specific questions:




                          What are the real world differences between the two in terms of accuracy?




                          I believe you can get higher accuracy by getting synchronization data from multiple sources, which is specifically not a supported use case for systemd-timesyncd. But when you're using it to get synchronization data from central NTP servers connected to your reliable internal network, using multiple sources isn't really that relevant and you get good accuracy from a single source.




                          What are the differences in efficiency?




                          Getting synchronization from a single source is much simpler than getting it from multiple sources, since you don't have to make decisions about which sources are better than others and possibly combine information from multiple sources. The algorithms are much simpler and will require less CPU load for the simple case.




                          What are a "non simple" time sync needs aka the use-cases for chrony as NTP client?




                          That's addressed in the quote above, but in any case these are use cases for Chrony that are not covered by systemd-timesyncd:




                          • running NTP server (so that other hosts can use this host as a source for synchrnoization);

                          • getting NTP synchronization information from multiple sources (which is important for hosts getting that information from public servers on the Internet); and

                          • getting synchronization information from the local clock, which usually involves specialized hardware such as GPS devices which can get accurate time information from satellites.


                          These use cases require Chrony or ntpd or similar.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 5 hours ago









                          filbrandenfilbranden

                          10.3k21645




                          10.3k21645






























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