On 09/09/2011 06:28 PM, al pat wrote:
We are doing an experiment with kvm-clock to validate its
effectiveness, particularly when running NTP on the host to make sure
the host’s clock stays properly sync.
Our observations leads us to a few unanswered questions, including the
possibility of a b
Hi Phil,
Thanks for an excellent explanation.
Follow up question - " ...additional clock source named "kvmclock",
which uses the host clock and the TSC: The host exports its current system
time (plus some configurable offset) and a snapshot value of TSC register
when doing so. Than the guest can
On 2011-09-13 13:38, al pat wrote:
> Thanks Phillip.
>
> My current source is "kvm-clock".
>
> WHen I start my guest, it is in sync with the host clock.
>
> Then, I chance the time on my host - using "date --set ...". I don't see the
> guest update its time.
> I was expecting that the guest will
Thanks Phillip.
My current source is "kvm-clock".
WHen I start my guest, it is in sync with the host clock.
Then, I chance the time on my host - using "date --set ...". I don't see the
guest update its time.
I was expecting that the guest will detect host time change and change it?
So, when the
Hello Al,
I just debugged a kvmclock bug, so I claim to have some knowledge in this area
now, but please take my answer with a grain of doubt.
On Monday 12 September 2011 15:21:25 al pat wrote:
> Still seeking your guidance on this. Appreciate any pointers you may have.
You have to distiguish b
Hi Folks,
Still seeking your guidance on this. Appreciate any pointers you may have.
Thanks much.
-a
On Fri, Sep 9, 2011 at 11:28 AM, al pat wrote:
>
> We are doing an experiment with kvm-clock to validate its effectiveness,
> particularly when running NTP on the host to make sure the host’s c