Installs, configures, and manages the NTP service.
The ntp module handles installing, configuring, and running NTP. For Ubuntu 18.04 by default uses systemd-timesync. To use NTPD instead, just set force_ntpd to true
- NTP config file: /etc/ntp.conf
- ntp package
- ntp service
This module requires pluginsync enabled
This module setups NTP to use a given set of servers (it also has some default servers).
If this module is used on a VM, by default, it will set tinker panic to 0
basic usage:
class { 'ntp':
servers = [
'1.ie.pool.ntp.org',
'0.europe.pool.ntp.org',
'3.europe.pool.ntp.org'
]
}
- driftfile: File to use to record the frequency offset of the local clock oscillator
- tinker: Enables or disables system variables used by the clock discipline algorithm.
- tinker_panic: Specifies the panic threshold in seconds. If set to zero, the panic sanity check is disabled and a clock offset of any value will be accepted.
- servers:: List of servers to use
- iburst: When the server is unreachable, send a burst of eight packets instead of the usual one (default: true)
- management options:
- manage_package: Package management (default: true)
- package_ensure: Package status: (default: installed)
- manage_service: Service management (default: true)
- manage_docker_service: Service management on docker containers (default: true)
- service_ensure: Service status: (default: running)
- service_enable: Service enabled on startup: (default: true)
Tested on:
- CentOS 5
- CentOS 6
- CentOS 7
- Ubunutu 14.04
- SLES 11 SP3
We are pushing to have acceptance testing in place, so any new feature should have some test to check both presence and absence of any feature
Nothing yet
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request