One of the mentioned network devices is a Firewall which logs verbosely,
i.e. there is a LOT of logs coming in from there and /var/log/firewall
does not show a single time jump.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1429427

Title:
  Unexplainable time jumps in CRON

Status in cron package in Ubuntu:
  New

Bug description:
  On my main server I see unexplainable time jumps backwards in the syslog. 
Those jumps affect CRON.
  Example:

  Feb 10 06:48:01 nostromo CRON[20351]: (root) CMD (    
/storage/exec/checkinternet.sh 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null)
  Feb 10 06:49:01 nostromo CRON[20364]: (root) CMD (    
/storage/exec/checkinternet.sh 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null)
  Feb 10 06:50:01 nostromo CRON[20386]: (root) CMD (    
/storage/exec/status-nostromo.sh >/dev/null 2>&1)
  Feb  7 05:40:01 nostromo CRON[20389]: (root) CMD (    
/storage/exec/checkinternet.sh 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null)
  Feb 10 06:50:01 nostromo CRON[20390]: (root) CMD (    
/storage/exec/checkinternet.sh 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null)
  Feb 10 06:50:01 nostromo CRON[20391]: (root) CMD (    
/storage/exec/checkip.sh 2>/dev/null 1>/dev/null)

  For debugging I did the following:
  Start xclock and watch xclock and tail -f /var/log/syslog in parallel. When 
CRON logged a wrong time, xclock did NOT show any time jump but seemed to 
freeze for a fraction of a second.
  Open a screen and start a script that will once per second read the time (in 
unix seconds) and compare the read time with the time read a second ago. If the 
current time was smaller, the script would send an email with a process list 
from before and after the jump. The script also never detected any time jump.

  In summary, my current impression is that there might be a bug in CRON 
because no other programm seems to be able to see the "wrong" time. The server 
in question is syslog server for 4 servers and 3 network devices. The time 
jumps exclusively show in syslog entries from the local CRON instance. Not in 
any remote syslog entry and not in any other local syslog entry, e.g. from 
DHCPD, bind, tftpd, etc. etc.
  Also, after a reboot, things work ok for several days upto about 2 or 3 
weeks. Then the "time jumps" start to occur with increasing frequency.

  I don't use user crontabs but maintain all jobs in /etc/crontab. I
  have number of jobs which are triggered every minute and another
  number of jobs which are triggered every 5 minutes (maybe some CRON
  internal counter overflow problem?).

  Hardware:
  Asus P9D-V
  Intel Xeon E3-1240L V3
  16GB ECC RAM
  128GB SSD System
  3x3TB ZFS RaidZ2 storage
  1x3TB Misc. data

  CMOS battery already changed and board inspected.

  nostromo:~ # lsb_release -rd
  Description:    Ubuntu 14.04.2 LTS
  Release:        14.04

  nostromo:~ # apt-cache policy cron
  cron:
    Installed: 3.0pl1-124ubuntu2
    Candidate: 3.0pl1-124ubuntu2
    Version table:
   *** 3.0pl1-124ubuntu2 0
          500 http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ trusty/main amd64 Packages
          100 /var/lib/dpkg/status

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