Martin,
Sorry for the late answer. And excuse me if i'm way off because i can't search for the thread right now. | When network is up, I add a at job to handle chrony at a later time. | Background: My DSL router my take some time to initialize the DSL An additional measurement is, to trigger initialization as soon as possible, eg. by pinging the timeserver right when the interface is set up, and do the time call later. That's for booting. If we talk about daily time updates, you still could ping the timeserver on a regular schedule, so the DSL connection won't get idle. You're really sure it needs chrony for that ? Perhaps it may be sufficient to update time via ntp-client (package ntpdate) say once a day ? If the clock is running wild, anyway, i'd also have a look at the clock battery, usually a CR2032 or something smaller. They are finished after 3 - 5 years. ( * You're aware that only setting up the laptop network interface doesn't trigger the assignment of a new outbound WAN-IP, which may need some 10 seconds, depending on your provider, nor does it necessarily relaunch this modem interface at all, depending on your setting. A continuous ping leaves you on the safe side anyway) -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]

