Shared Memory Driver

Last update: 8-Aug-2014 19:17 UTC


Synopsis

Address: 127.127.28.u
Reference ID: SHM
Driver ID: SHM

Description

This driver receives its reference clock info from a shared memory-segment. The shared memory-segment is created with owner-only access by default, unless otherwise requested by the mode word for units ≥2. Units 0 and 1 are always created with owner-only access for backward compatibility.

Structure of shared memory-segment

struct shmTime {
        int    mode; /* 0 - if valid is set:
                      *       use values,
                      *       clear valid
                      * 1 - if valid is set:
                      *       if count before and after read of data is equal:
                      *         use values
                      *       clear valid
                      */
        volatile int    count;
        time_t          clockTimeStampSec;
        int             clockTimeStampUSec;
        time_t          receiveTimeStampSec;
        int             receiveTimeStampUSec;
        int             leap;
        int             precision;
        int             nsamples;
        volatile int    valid;
        unsigned        clockTimeStampNSec;     /* Unsigned ns timestamps */
        unsigned        receiveTimeStampNSec;   /* Unsigned ns timestamps */
        int             dummy[8];
};

Operation mode=0

Each second, the value of valid of the shared memory-segment is checked:

If set, the values in the record (clockTimeStampSec, clockTimeStampUSec, receiveTimeStampSec, receiveTimeStampUSec, leap, precision) are passed to NTPD, and valid is cleared and count is bumped.

If not set, count is bumped.

Operation mode=1

Each second, valid in the shared memory-segment is checked:

If set, the count field of the record is remembered, and the values in the record (clockTimeStampSec, clockTimeStampUSec, receiveTimeStampSec, receiveTimeStampUSec, leap, precision) are read. Then, the remembered count is compared to current value of count now in the record. If both are equal, the values read from the record are passed to NTPD. If they differ, another process has modified the record while it was read out (was not able to produce this case), and failure is reported to NTPD. The valid flag is cleared and count is bumped.

If not set, count is bumped

Mode-independent post-processing

After the time stamps have been successfully plucked from the SHM segment, some sanity checks take place:

GPSD

GPSD knows how to talk to many GPS devices. It can work with NTPD through the SHM driver.

The GPSD man page suggests setting minpoll and maxpoll to 4. That was an attempt to reduce jitter. The SHM driver was fixed (ntp-4.2.5p138) to collect data each second rather than once per polling interval so that suggestion is no longer reasonable.

Note: The GPSD client driver (type 46) uses the GPSD client protocol to connect and talk to GPSD, but using the SHM driver is the ancient way to have GPSD talk to NTPD. There are some tricky points when using the SHM interface to interface with GPSD, because GPSD will use two SHM clocks, one for the serial data stream and one for the PPS information when available. Receivers with a loose/sloppy timing between PPS and serial data can easily cause trouble here because NTPD has no way to join the two data streams and correlate the serial data with the PPS events.

Clockstats

If flag4 is set when the driver is polled, a clockstats record is written. The first 3 fields are the normal date, time, and IP address common to all clockstats records.

The 4th field is the number of second ticks since the last poll. The 5th field is the number of good data samples found. The last 64 will be used by NTPD. The 6th field is the number of sample that didn't have valid data ready. The 7th field is the number of bad samples. The 8th field is the number of times the the mode 1 info was update while NTPD was trying to grab a sample.

Here is a sample showing the GPS reception fading out:

54364 84927.157 127.127.28.0  66  65   1   0   0
54364 84990.161 127.127.28.0  63  63   0   0   0
54364 85053.160 127.127.28.0  63  63   0   0   0
54364 85116.159 127.127.28.0  63  62   1   0   0
54364 85180.158 127.127.28.0  64  63   1   0   0
54364 85246.161 127.127.28.0  66  66   0   0   0
54364 85312.157 127.127.28.0  66  50  16   0   0
54364 85375.160 127.127.28.0  63  41  22   0   0
54364 85439.155 127.127.28.0  64  64   0   0   0
54364 85505.158 127.127.28.0  66  36  30   0   0
54364 85569.157 127.127.28.0  64   0  64   0   0
54364 85635.157 127.127.28.0  66   0  66   0   0
54364 85700.160 127.127.28.0  65   0  65   0   0

The 'mode' word

Some aspects of the driver behavior can be adjusted by setting bits of the 'mode' word in the server configuration line:
  server 127.127.28.x mode Y

mode word bits and bit groups
Bit Dec Hex Meaning
0 1 1 The SHM segment is private (mode 0600). This is the fixed default for clock units 0 and 1; clock units >1 are mode 0666 unless this bit is set for the specific unit.
1-31 - - reserved -- do not use

Fudge Factors

time1 time
Specifies the time offset calibration factor, in seconds and fraction, with default 0.0.
time2 time
Maximum allowed difference between remote and local clock, in seconds. Values <1.0 or >86400.0 are ignored, and the default value of 4hrs (14400s) is used instead. See also flag 1.
stratum number
Specifies the driver stratum, in decimal from 0 to 15, with default 0.
refid string
Specifies the driver reference identifier, an ASCII string from one to four characters, with default SHM.
flag1 0 | 1
Skip the difference limit check if set. Useful for systems where the RTC backup cannot keep the time over long periods without power and the SHM clock must be able to force long-distance initial jumps. Check the difference limit if cleared (default).
flag2 0 | 1
Not used by this driver.
flag3 0 | 1
Not used by this driver.
flag4 0 | 1
If flag4 is set, clockstats records will be written when the driver is polled.

Public vs. Private SHM segments

The driver attempts to create a shared memory segment with an identifier depending on the unit number. This identifier (which can be a numeric value or a string) clearly depends on the method used, which in turn depends on the host operating system:

There's no support for POSIX shared memory yet.

NTPD is started as root on most POSIX-like operating systems and uses the setuid/setgid system API to run under reduced rights once the initial setup of the process is done. One consequence out of this is that the allocation of SHM segments must be done early during the clock setup. The actual polling of the clock is done as the run-time user; deferring the creation of the SHM segment to this point will create a SHM segment owned by the runtime-user account. The internal structure of NTPD does not permit the use of a fudge flag if this is to be avoided; this is the reason why a mode bit is used for the configuration of a public segment.

When running under Windows, the chosen user account must be able to create a SHM segment in the global object name space for SHM clocks with public access. Otherwise the session isolation used by Windows kernels after WinXP will get into the way if the client program does not run in the same session.

Additional Information

Reference Clock Drivers