smlinux/base/chrony
PktSurf 9d657e0a1d Upgraded base/perl to 5.38.0
Renamed .SMBuild files to smbuild for simplicity
Added musl-fts, musl-obstack, glslang, python-glad, libptytty, libmilter, elfutils and fuse to base section build list
Discarded fuse2 and fuse3 from base section
Temporarily discarded slapt-get, syslinux, p7zip, acpid, libelf-compat, gnu-eif, libtirpc, mozilla-nss,
lua53, qpdf, kernel-source and signify from base section build list
Disabled nls and made amends to base/e2fsprogs
Upgraded base/git to 2.46.2
Upgraded extra/gnumeric to 1.12.57
Disabled nls in base/gnutls, extra/dia
Disabled a patch and made amends in base/llvm
Fixed configure.local file in base/mandoc
Upgraded base/rust to 1.79
Fixed a ton of build files to use build prefix as /usr and miscellaneous changes
Discarded extra/bluez,blueman,scrcpy,adafruit-io
Added tomb to extra
Added new build option to extra/libass
Upgraded extra/mpv to 0.37.0
Disabled tests in gtk/gdk-pixbuf
Upgraded gtk/goffice to 0.10.57
Added gtk-doc to gtk section
Fixed build options in gtk/gtk2
Added new patches to gtk/gtk3
Added gtksourceview to gtk section
Added vulkan-headers to xorg section
Upgraded xorg/mesa to 23.1.9
Added libplacebo to xorg section
Fixed build stuff in xorg/glew
2024-10-29 20:25:20 +05:30
..
chrony.conf Initial commit 2022-01-28 23:06:05 +05:30
chrony.conf.rpi Initial commit 2022-01-28 23:06:05 +05:30
chrony.run Replaced busybox hwclock with util-linux hwclock for more functionality 2022-08-01 10:13:41 +05:30
doinst.sh Initial commit 2022-01-28 23:06:05 +05:30
README Initial commit 2022-01-28 23:06:05 +05:30
smbuild Upgraded base/perl to 5.38.0 2024-10-29 20:25:20 +05:30

chrony is a versatile implementation of the Network Time Protocol
(NTP).  It can synchronise the system clock with NTP servers, reference
clocks (e.g.  GPS receiver), and manual input using wristwatch and
keyboard.  It can also operate as an NTPv4 (RFC 5905) server and peer
to provide a time service to other computers in the network.

It is designed to perform well in a wide range of conditions, including
intermittent network connections, heavily congested networks, changing
temperatures (ordinary computer clocks are sensitive to temperature),
and systems that do not run continuously, or run on a virtual machine.

Two programs are included in chrony, chronyd is a daemon that is
started at boot time and chronyc is a command-line interface program
which can be used to monitor chronyd's performance and to change
various operating parameters whilst it is running.

Note 1:
You must have the 'chrony' group and user to run this script:
  $ groupadd -g 354 chrony
  $ useradd -u 354 -d /var/lib/chrony -s /bin/false -g chrony chrony
Feel free to use a different uid and gid if desired, but 354 is
recommended to avoid conflicts with other stuff from SlackBuilds.org.

Note 2:
If you are upgrading from previous version, where the daemon was
running under 'root' user as opposed to 'chrony' user, you need to
ensure correct permissions for /var/run/chrony directory and files
under /var/lib/chrony directory.

If possible (i.e.  you don't have any precious files there), before
starting the daemon, remove /var/run/chrony directory (cronyd will
recreate it) and remove files under /var/lib/chrony directory (cronyd
will recreate them).

Note 3:
The provided configuration file sets up chrony to operate in the most
common scenario, that is NTP client for synchronising local machine
time with the remote NTP server(s) time (using pool.ntp.org by
default).  See the man pages for chronyd and chrony.conf (and the
contrib and examples directories) for more details on possible
configuration options.

Note 4:
The provided /etc/rc.d/rc.chrony script can be used to launch the
daemon at boot and to stop it at shutdown.