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Man Pages
ptpd2.conf(5) PTPd config file ptpd2.conf(5)

ptpd2.conf - Precision Time Protocol daemon config file

Settings in the PTPd configuration file are grouped into sections and take the form of section:key="value" variables. The configuration file can either be formatted that way (preferred) or in .ini file style where a series of key="value" variables is grouped into sections using [section] headers. Every setting listed here can also be specified as a command line parameter (--section:key=value ). Quotation marks are optional. NOTE: the configuration file must end with a newline.

Only a small number of configuration file settings (SNMP, lock file configuration) requires a restart of the PTPd process to take effect. All other settings can be changed while ptpd is running - configuration file is reloaded and checked for changes when PTPd receives the SIGHUP signal. When reloading configuration, PTPd will always attempt to test settings before applying them and once running, will never exit as a result of configuration errors. If it does exit during config refresh, this is most likely a bug.

Any setting passed as a command line parameter will always take priority over the configuration file, so once ptpd is running, those settings cannot be changed - a warning will be logged on every attempt to change those settings using the configuration file.

ptpengine PTP protocol specific configuration
clock
Clock related settings
servo
Clock control PI servo configuration
global
Global configuration - logging, etc.
ntpengine
NTP control configuration
variables
User-defined variables

To allow for easier management and automated generation of configuration, PTPd supports user variables, which can be defined in the configuration file or in command line. They are defined as variables:[name]=[value], or if using .ini style format, in the [variables] section. Once defined, a variable can be referred to in the remaining configuration settings as @name@, and is substituted with the value of the variable

Example:

variables:instance=server15

global:status_file=/var/run/ptpd2.@instance@.status

global:log_file=/var/run/ptpd2.@instance@.status

Note: for the same effect, ptpd can be run from command line, such as --config=/path/to/file --variables:instance=server15

PTPd includes suppport for built-in variables, automatically defined. The following variables are automatically substituted:

@pid@ - current PTPd process ID @hostname@ - current host name

As of version 2.3.1.1, ptpd enables the user to minimise the configuration effort for common scenarios, using built-in templates and template files. A template is a named set of pre-defined settings whic are prepended before any other settings, so user can still overwrite settings provided by the template. To use this feature, set global:config_templates=[name],[name],... in the configuration file, or run ptpd with --global:config_templates=[name],[name],.... Multiple templates can be specified, separated by comma, space or tab; they are applied in the order they are provided, so template settings override any overlapping settings from previous templates specified. Templates can include user-defined variables.

A number of template files can also be supplied with the global:template_files setting (comma, space or tab separated lis of file paths). The template files will be processed in the order they are provided in, so for overlapping settings, the last template applied overrides settings applied by any previous templates. PTPd will also try to load a default template file on startup: templates.conf from the default data directory: /usr/local/share/ptpd/templates.conf

The template file is formatted in .ini style - each template is a section defined as [template-name], followed by a number of settings specified as section:setting.

Example:

[my-template]

global:verbose_foreground=Y

ptpengine:preset=slaveonly

To see the list of available built-in templates, run ptpd with -T or --show-templates

ptpengine:interface [STRING]
usage
Network interface to use - eth0, igb0 etc. (required). See also ptpengine:backup_interface.
default
[none]

ptpengine:backup_interface [STRING]
usage
Backup network interface to use - eth0, igb0 etc. When no GM available, slave will keep alternating between primary and secondary until a GM is found.
default
[none]

ptpengine:preset [SELECT]
options
none slaveonly masteronly masterslave
usage
PTP engine preset:
none
Defaults, no clock class restrictions
slaveonly
Slave only (clock class 255 only)
masteronly
Master, passive when not best master (clock class 0..127)
masterslave
Full IEEE 1588 implementation: Master, slave when not best master (clock class 128..254)
default
slaveonly
NOTE:
Presets affect the following settings: ptpengine:slave_only, clock_no_adjust and ptpengine:clock_class (range and default value). To see all preset settings, run ptpd2 -H (--long-help)

ptpengine:transport [SELECT]
options
ipv4 ethernet
usage
Transport type for PTP packets. NOTE: Ethernet transport requires building with libpcap and is not supported on Solaris as of 2.3.1, and cannot be enabled on those systems unless ptpd is compiled with --enable-experimental-options.
default
ipv4

ptpengine:dot1as [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable IEEE 802.1AS / AVB compatibility (transportSpecific field in PTP message headers). Requires Ethernet transport as this is the only mapping used by 802.1AS that PTP supports
default
N

ptpengine:ip_mode [SELECT]
options
multicast unicast hybrid
usage
IP transmission mode (requires IP transport):
multicast
uses multicast for all messages
hybrid
uses multicast for sync and announce, and unicast for delay request and response
unicast
uses unicast for all transmission. When unicast mode is selected, destination IP(s) (ptpengine:unicast_ destinations) must be configured depending on unicast negotiation setting (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation) and master or slave role (see: ptpengine:unicast_destinations)
default
multicast

ptpengine:disabled [BOOLEAN]
usage
Disable PTP port. Causes the PTP state machine to stay in PTP_DISABLED state indefinitely, until it is re-enabled via configuration change or ENABLE_PORT management message.
default
N

ptpengine:unicast_negotiation [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable unicast negotiation support using signaling messages - as used by the Telecom profile (ITU-T G.8265.1).
default
N

ptpengine:unicast_grant_duration [INT: 30 .. 604800]
usage
Duration (seconds) for which the transmission of unicast messages is granted by a master, or requested by a slave when unicast negotiation is used (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation). When using PTPd with other PTP implementations, PTPd will never refuse to grant a message based on the requested duration: it will grant for 30 seconds if requested for any less than 30 seconds, and will grant for 7 days (604800) if requested for any longer.
default
300

ptpengine:disable_bmca [BOOLEAN]
usage
Disable Best Master Clock Algorithm for unicast masters. Only effective for masteronly preset - all Announce messages will be ignored and the cock will transition directly into MASTER state and remain an active master. This behaviour is required for Telecom profile operation.
default
N

ptpengine:unicast_any_master [BOOLEAN]
usage
When using unicast negotiation (slave), accept PTP messages from any grandmaster. By default, only messages from acceptable masters (ptpengine:unicast_destinations) are accepted, and only if transmission was granted by the GM. This setting can be used when mixing GMs supporting G.8265.1 and manual unicast (no negotiation), or to assist with interoperability issues where signaling messages and timing messages come from different port identities.
default
N

ptpengine:unicast_port_mask [INT: 0 .. 65535 (0xFFFF)]
usage
PTP port number wildcard mask (16-bit) applied onto port identities when running unicast negotiation: allows multiple port identities (with the same clock ID) to be accepted as coming from the same port. This option can be used as a workaround where a node sends signaling messages and timing messages with different port identities. NOTE: This can also be entered in hexadecimal notation (0xNNNN).
default
0

ptpengine:disable_udp_checksums [BOOLEAN]
usage
Disable UDP checksum validation on UDP sockets (Linux only). Workaround for situations where a node (like Transparent Clock) does not rewrite checksums. Enabled by default.
default
Y

ptpengine:use_libpcap [BOOLEAN]
usage
Use libpcap for sending and receiving traffic (automatically enabled in Ethernet mode). Requires building with libpcap - builds made with --disable-pcap cannot use this feature, and as of 2.3.1, Solaris systems will not attempt to use libpcap unless compiled with --enable-experimental-options
default
N

ptpengine:delay_mechanism [SELECT]
options
E2E P2P DELAY_DISABLED
usage
Delay detection mechanism used - use DELAY_DISABLED for syntonisation only (no synchronisation). E2E uses Delay Request messages, P2P uses Peer Delay Request messages.
default
E2E

ptpengine:domain [INT: 0 .. 127]
usage
PTP domain number.
default
0

ptpengine:any_domain [BOOLEAN]
usage
Usability extension: if enabled, a slave-only clock will accept masters from any domain, while preferring the configured domain, and preferring lower domain number. This option should be used for slave-only clocks and should not be used with unicast negotiation. NOTE: this behaviour is not part of the standard.
default
N

ptpengine:port_number [INT: 1 .. 65534]
usage
PTP port number (part of PTP Port Identity - not UDP port). For ordinary clocks (single port), the default should be used, but when running multiple instances to simulate a boundary clock, The port number can be changed.
default
1

ptpengine:port_description [STRING: 64 characters max]
usage
User description of the PTP port - this value is returned in response to USER_DESCRIPTION management message and CLOCK_DESCRIPTION management message.
default
[ptpd]

ptpengine:slave_only [BOOLEAN]
usage
Slave only mode (sets clock class to 255, overriding value from preset).
default
Y

ptpengine:inbound_latency [INT]
usage
Specify latency correction (nanoseconds) for incoming packets.
default
0

ptpengine:outbound_latency [INT]
usage
Specify latency correction (nanoseconds) for outgoing packets.
default
0

ptpengine:offset_shift [INT]
usage
Apply an arbitrary shift (nanoseconds) to offset from master when in slave state. Value can be positive or negative - useful for correcting for of antenna latencies, delay assymetry and IP stack latencies. This will not be visible in the offset from master value - only in the resulting clock correction.
default
0

ptpengine:always_respect_utc_offset [BOOLEAN]
usage
Compatibility option: In slave state, always respect UTC offset announced by best master, even if the the currrentUtcOffsetValid flag is announced FALSE. NOTE: this behaviour is not part of the standard.
default
N

ptpengine:prefer_utc_offset_valid [BOOLEAN]
usage
Compatibility extension to BMC algorithm: when enabled, BMC for both master and save clocks will prefer masters announcing currrentUtcOffsetValid as TRUE. NOTE: this behaviour is not part of the standard.
default
N

ptpengine:require_utc_offset_valid [BOOLEAN]
usage
Compatibility option: when enabled, ptpd2 will ignore Announce messages from masters announcing currentUtcOffsetValid as FALSE. NOTE: this behaviour is not part of the standard.
default
N

ptpengine:log_announce_interval [INT: -4 .. 7]
usage
PTP announce message interval in master state. When using unicast negotiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), for slaves this is the initial (minimum) interval requested and for masters this is the minimum interval granted. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.)
default
1

ptpengine:log_announce_interval_max [INT: -1 .. 7]
usage
When using unicast negtiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), this is the maximum announce interval granted by a master, and the maximum interval a slave will attempt to request. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.)
default
5

ptpengine:announce_receipt_timeout [INT: 2 .. 255]
usage
PTP announce receipt timeout announced in master state.
default
6

ptpengine:announce_receipt_grace_period [INT: 0 .. 20]
usage
PTP announce receipt timeout grace period in slave state: when announce receipt timeout occurs, disqualify current best GM, then wait n times announce receipt timeout before resetting. Allows for a seamless GM failover when standby GMs are slow to react. When set to 0, this option is not used.
default
0

ptpengine:log_sync_interval [INT: -7 .. 7]
usage
PTP sync message interval in master state. When using unicast negotiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), for slaves this is the initial (minimum) interval requested and for masters this is the minimum interval granted. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.)
default
0

ptpengine:log_sync_interval_max [INT: -1 .. 7]
usage
When using unicast negtiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), this is the maximum sync interval granted by a master, and the maximum interval a slave will attempt to request. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.)
default
5

ptpengine:log_delayreq_override [BOOLEAN]
usage
Override the Delay Request interval provided by best master.
default
N

ptpengine:log_delayreq_auto [BOOLEAN]
usage
Automatically override the Delay Request interval (with ptpengine:log_delayreq_interval) if the received value is 127 (0X7F), such as in unicast messages, unless using unicast negotiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation)
default
Y

ptpengine:log_delayreq_interval_initial [INT: -7 .. 7]
usage
Delay request interval used before receiving first delay response (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.)
default
0

ptpengine:log_delayreq_interval [INT: -7 .. 7]
usage
Minimum delay request interval announced when in master state, in slave state overrides the master interval. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.). When using unicast negotiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), for slaves this is the initial (minimum) interval requested and for masters this is the minimum interval granted.
default
0

ptpengine:log_delayreq_interval_max [INT: -1 .. 7]
usage
When using unicast negtiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), this is the maximum delay request interval granted by a master, and the maximum interval a slave will attempt to request. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.).
default
5

ptpengine:log_peer_delayreq_interval [INT: -7 .. 7]
usage
Minimum peer delay request message interval in peer to peer delay mode (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.). When using unicast negotiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), this is the initial (minimum) interval requested by a node from its peer and this is the minimum interval granted for a peer.
default
1

ptpengine:log_peer_delayreq_interval_max [INT: -1 .. 7]
usage
When using unicast negtiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation), this is the maximum peer delay request interval granted by a node, and the maximum interval a node will attempt to request from its peer. (expressed as log 2 i.e. -1=0.5s, 0=1s, 1=2s etc.).
default
5

ptpengine:foreignrecord_capacity [INT: 5 .. 10]
usage
Foreign master record size (Maximum number of foreign masters).
default
5

ptpengine:ptp_allan_variance [INT: 0 .. 65535]
usage
Specify Allan variance announced in master state.
default
28768

ptpengine:ptp_clock_accuracy [SELECT]
options
ACC_25NS ACC_100NS ACC_250NS ACC_1US ACC_2.5US ACC_10US ACC_25US ACC_100US ACC_250US ACC_1MS ACC_2.5MS ACC_10MS ACC_25MS ACC_100MS ACC_250MS ACC_1S ACC_10S ACC_10SPLUS ACC_UNKNOWN
usage
Clock accuracy range announced in master state.
default
ACC_UNKNOWN

ptpengine:utc_offset [INT]
usage
Underlying time source UTC offset announced in master state.
default
0

ptpengine:utc_offset_valid [BOOLEAN]
usage
Underlying time source UTC offset validity announced in master state.
default
N

ptpengine:time_traceable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Underlying time source time traceability announced in master state.
default
N

ptpengine:frequency_traceable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Underlying time source frequency traceability announced in master state.
default
N

ptpengine:ptp_timescale [SELECT]
options
PTP ARB
usage
Time scale announced in master state (with ARB, UTC properties are ignored by slaves). When clock class is set to 13 (application specific), this value is ignored and ARB is used.
default
ARB

ptpengine:ptp_timesource [SELECT]
options
ATOMIC_CLOCK GPS TERRESTRIAL_RADIO PTP NTP HAND_SET OTHER INTERNAL_OSCILLATOR
usage
Time source announced in master state.
default
INTERNAL_OSCILLATOR

ptpengine:clock_class [INT: 0 .. 255]
usage
Clock class - announced in master state. Always 255 for slave-only. Minimum, maximum and default values are controlled by presets. If set to 13 (application specific time source), announced time scale is always set to ARB. This setting controls the states a PTP port can be in. If below 128, port will only be in MASTER or PASSIVE states (master only). If above 127, port will be in MASTER or SLAVE states.
default
255

ptpengine:priority1 [INT: 0 .. 248]
usage
Priority 1 announced in master state,used for Best Master Clock selection.
default
128

ptpengine:priority2 [INT: 0 .. 248]
usage
Priority 2 announced in master state, used for Best Master Clock selection.
default
128

ptpengine:max_listen [INT: min: 1 ]
usage
Number of consecutive protocol resets to LISTENING before full network reset.
default
5

ptpengine:unicast_destinations [STRING]
usage
An IPv4 address or list of IPv4 addresses to be used as unicast destinations. When unicast negotiation (ptpengine:unicast_negotiation) is enabled, setting this is mandatory for slaves as they must be aware of which GMs to request messages from. When unicast negotiation is disabled, setting this is mandatory for GMs, as they must deliver messages to a pre-configured group of slaves.
default
[none]

ptpengine:unicast_domains [STRING]
usage
Specify PTP domain number for each configured unicast destination (ptpengine:unicast_destinations). This is only used by slave-only clocks using multiple unicast destinations to allow for each master to be in a separate domain, such as with Telecom Profile. The number of entries should match the number of unicast destinations, otherwise unconfigured domains or domains set to 0 are set to domain configured in ptpengine:domain. The format is a comma, tab or space-separated list of 8-bit unsigned integers (0 .. 255).
default
[none]

ptpengine:unicast_local_preference [STRING]
usage
Specify a local preference for each configured unicast destination (ptpengine:unicast_destinations). This is only used by slave-only clocks using multiple unicast destinations to allow for each master's BMC selection to be influenced locally by the slave, such as with Telecom Profile. The number of entries should match the number of unicast destinations, otherwise unconfigured preference is set to 255 (lowest), so that the unconfigurest entries do not pre-empt the configured entries. The format is a comma, tab or space-separated list of 8-bit unsigned integers (0 .. 255).
default
[none]

ptpengine:unicast_peer_destination [STRING]
usage
When using IP unicast mode (ptpengine:ip_mode=unicast) and Peer to Peer delay mechanism (ptpengine:delay_mechanism=P2P), a peer unicast destination must be configured to request the peer delay from. Format is a single unicast IPv4 address.
default
[none]

ptpengine:management_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable handling of PTP management messages. Only GET messages are processed by default. See ptpengine:management_set_enable.
default
Y

ptpengine:management_set_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Accept SET and COMMAND management messages.
default
N

ptpengine:igmp_refresh [BOOLEAN]
usage
Send explicit IGMP joins between engine resets and periodically in master state.
default
Y

ptpengine:master_igmp_refresh_interval [INT: 0 .. 255]
usage
Periodic IGMP join interval (seconds) in master state when running IPv4 multicast: when set below 10 or when ptpengine:igmp_refresh is disabled, this setting has no effect.
default
60

ptpengine:multicast_ttl [INT: 1 .. 64]
usage
Multicast time to live for multicast PTP packets (ignored and set to 1 for peer to peer messages).
default
64

ptpengine:ip_dscp [INT: 0 .. 63]
usage
DiffServ CodepPoint for packet prioritisation (decimal). When set to zero, this option is not used. Use 46 for Expedited Forwarding (0x2e).
default
0

ptpengine:sync_stat_filter_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable statistical filter for Sync messages
default
N

ptpengine:sync_stat_filter_type [SELECT]
options
none mean min max absmin absmax median
usage
Type of filter used for Sync message filtering:
none
no filtering - pass-through
mean
mean (average) - smooth results but influenced by outliers
min
minimal value - useful for high packet delay variation ("lucky packets")
max
maximal value - useful for testing worst case scenarios
absmin
absolute minimum - value closest to zero. Also useful for test purposes.
absmax
absolute maximun value farthest away from zero
median
median (middle value) - more robust than mean, not influenced by outliers
default
min

ptpengine:sync_stat_filter_window [INT: 3 .. 128]
usage
Number of samples used for the Sync statistical filter
default
4

ptpengine:sync_stat_filter_window_type [SELECT]
options
sliding interval
usage
Sampling window behaviour for the Sync statistical filter:
sliding
sliding window - a value is output every time the filter runs, which can result in duplicates
interval
only output a value every n-th sample (full window) - independent sampling periods
default
sliding

ptpengine:delay_stat_filter_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable statistical filter for Delay messages
default
N

ptpengine:delay_stat_filter_type [SELECT]
options
none mean min max absmin absmax median
usage
Type of filter used for Delay message filtering:
none
no filtering - pass-through
mean
mean (average) - smooth results but influenced by outliers
min
minimal value - useful for high packet delay variation ("lucky packets")
max
maximal value - useful for testing worst case scenarios
absmin
absolute minimum - value closest to zero. Also useful for test purposes.
absmax
absolute maximun value farthest away from zero
median
median (middle value) - more robust than mean, not influenced by outliers
default
min

ptpengine:delay_stat_filter_window [INT: 3 .. 128]
usage
Number of samples used for the Delay statistical filter
default
4

ptpengine:delay_stat_filter_window_type [SELECT]
options
sliding interval
usage
Sampling window behaviour for the Delay statistical filter:
sliding
sliding window - a value is output every time the filter runs, which can result in duplicates
interval
only output a value every n-th sample (full window) - independent sampling periods
default
sliding

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable outlier filter for the Delay Response component in slave state
default
N

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_action [SELECT]
options
discard filter
usage
Delay Response outlier filter action. If set to 'filter', outliers are replaced with moving average.
default
discard

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_capacity [INT: 4 .. 60]
usage
Number of samples in the Delay Response outlier filter buffer
default
20

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_threshold [FLOAT: 0.001000 .. 1000.000000]
usage
Delay Response outlier filter threshold: multiplier for Peirce's maximum standard deviation. When set below 1.0, filter is tighter, when set above 1.0, filter is looser than standard Peirce's test.
default
1.000000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_always_filter [BOOLEAN]
usage
Always run the Delay Response outlier filter, even if clock is being slewed at maximum rate
default
N

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_autotune_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable automatic threshold control for Delay Response outlier filter.
default
Y

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_autotune_minpercent [INT: 0 .. 99]
usage
Delay Response outlier filter autotune low watermark - minimum percentage of discarded samples in the update period before filter is tightened by the autotune step value
default
20

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_autotune_maxpercent [INT: 1 .. 100]
usage
Delay Response outlier filter autotune high watermark - maximum percentage of discarded samples in the update period before filter is loosened by the autotune step value
default
95

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_autotune_step [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 10.000000]
usage
The value the Delay Response outlier filter threshold is increased or decreased by when auto-tuning
default
0.100000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_autotune_minthreshold [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 10.000000]
usage
Minimum Delay Response filter threshold value used when auto-tuning
default
0.100000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_autotune_maxthreshold [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 10.000000]
usage
Maximum Delay Response filter threshold value used when auto-tuning
default
5.000000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_weight [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 2.000000]
usage
Delay Response outlier weight: if an outlier is detected, determines the amount of its deviation from mean that is used to build the standard deviation statistics and influence further outlier detection. When set to 1.0, the outlier is used as is.
default
1.000000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_stepdetect_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable Delay Response filter step detection (delaySM) to block when certain level exceeded
default
N

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_stepdetect_threshold [INT: 50000 .. 999999999]
usage
Delay step detection threshold. Step detection is performed only when delaySM is below this threshold (nanoseconds)
default
1000000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_stepdetect_level [INT: 50000 .. 999999999]
usage
Delay step level. When step detection enabled and operational, delaySM above this level (nanoseconds) is considered a clock step and updates are paused
default
500000

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_stepdetect_credit [INT: 50 .. 1000]
usage
Initial credit (number of samples) the Delay step detection filter can block for. When credit is exhausted, filter stops blocking. Credit is gradually restored (see ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_stepdetect_credit_increment)
default
200

ptpengine:delay_outlier_filter_stepdetect_credit_increment [INT : 1 .. 100]
usage
Amount of credit for the Delay step detection filter restored every full sample window
default
10

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable outlier filter for the Sync component in slave state.
default
N

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_action [SELECT]
options
discard filter
usage
Sync outlier filter action. If set to 'filter', outliers are replaced with moving average.
default
discard

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_capacity [INT: 4 .. 60]
usage
Number of samples in the Sync outlier filter buffer.
default
20

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_threshold [FLOAT: 0.001000 .. 1000.000000]
usage
Sync outlier filter threshold: multiplier for the Peirce's maximum standard deviation. When set below 1.0, filter is tighter, when set above 1.0, filter is looser than standard Peirce's test.
default
1.000000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_always_filter [BOOLEAN]
usage
Always run the Sync outlier filter, even if clock is being slewed at maximum rate
default
N

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_autotune_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable automatic threshold control for Sync outlier filter.
default
Y

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_autotune_minpercent [INT: 0 .. 99]
usage
Sync outlier filter autotune low watermark - minimum percentage of discarded samples in the update period before filter is tightened by the autotune step value
default
20

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_autotune_maxpercent [INT: 1 .. 100]
usage
Sync outlier filter autotune high watermark - maximum percentage of discarded samples in the update period before filter is loosened by the autotune step value
default
95

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_autotune_step [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 10.000000]
usage
The value the Sync outlier filter threshold is increased or decreased by when auto-tuning
default
0.100000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_autotune_minthreshold [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 10.000000]
usage
Minimum Sync filter threshold value used when auto-tuning
default
0.100000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_autotune_maxthreshold [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 10.000000]
usage
Maximum Sync filter threshold value used when auto-tuning
default
5.000000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_weight [FLOAT: 0.010000 .. 2.000000]
usage
Sync outlier weight: if an outlier is detected, this value determines the amount of its deviation from mean that is used to build the standard deviation statistics and influence further outlier detection. When set to 1.0, the outlier is used as is
default
1.000000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_stepdetect_enable [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable Sync filter step detection (delayMS) to block when certain level exceeded
default
N

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_stepdetect_threshold [INT: 50000 .. 999999999]
usage
Sync step detection threshold. Step detection is performed only when delayMS is below this threshold (nanoseconds)
default
1000000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_stepdetect_level [INT: 50000 .. 999999999]
usage
Sync step level. When step detection enabled and operational, delayMS above this level (nanoseconds) is considered a clock step and updates are paused
default
500000

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_stepdetect_credit [INT: 50 .. 1000]
usage
Initial credit (number of samples) the Sync step detection filter can block for. When credit is exhausted, filter stops blocking. Credit is gradually restored (see ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_stepdetect_credit_increment)
default
200

ptpengine:sync_outlier_filter_stepdetect_credit_increment [INT : 1 .. 100]
usage
Amount of credit for the Sync step detection filter restored every full sample window
default
10

ptpengine:sync_sequence_checking [BOOLEAN]
usage
When enabled, Sync messages will only be accepted if sequence ID is increasing. note: This can cause the slave to temporarily lock up if GM restarts before announce timeout, so this is limited to 50 consecutive sequence errors. Alternatively, ptpengine:clock_update_timeout can be used to reset the slave beforehand.
default
N

ptpengine:clock_update_timeout [INT: 0 .. 3600]
usage
If set to non-zero, time (seconds) before slave is reset back into PTP_LISTENING, if thetre were no clock updates. This is useful for situations where slave is in SLAVE state (receiving Announce) but is not receiving or not accepting Sync messages.
default
0

ptpengine:calibration_delay [INT: 0 .. 300]
usage
Delay between moving to slave state and enabling clock updates (seconds). This allows mean path delay to stabilise before starting clock updates. Activated when going into slave state and during slave's GM failover. 0 - not used.
default
0

ptpengine:idle_timeout [INT: 10 .. 3600]
usage
PTP idle timeout (seconds): if PTPd is in SLAVE state and there have been no clock updates for this amout of time, PTPd releases clock control.
default
0

ptpengine:offset_alarm_threshold [INT: 0 .. 999999999]
usage
PTP Slave Offset from Master alarm threshold (nanoseconds) - absolute value. When set to non-zero, an alarm is raised when PTP slave's offset from master crosses this value. The alarm is logged, indicated in the status file, and SNMP traps are sent if SNMP is enabled. Similar notifications are created when offset returns within the threshold. When zet to 0, offset is not checked against the threshold.
default
0

ptpengine:panic_mode [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable panic mode: when offset from master is above 1 second, stop updating the clock for a period of time and then step the clock if offset remains above 1 second.
default
N

ptpengine:panic_mode_duration [INT: 1 .. 60]
usage
Duration (minutes) of the panic mode period (no clock updates) when offset above 1 second detected.
default
2

ptpengine:panic_mode_release_clock [BOOLEAN]
usage
When entering panic mode, release clock control while panic mode lasts. If not set, PTP will hold clock control during panic mode. If set together with ntpengine:* configured, this will fail over to NTP.
default
N

ptpengine:panic_mode_exit_threshold [INT: 0 .. 999999999]
usage
Do not exit panic mode until offset drops below this value (nanoseconds). 0 = not used.
default
0

ptpengine:pid_as_clock_identity [BOOLEAN]
usage
Use PTPd's process ID as the middle part of the PTP clock ID - useful for running multiple instances.
default
N

ptpengine:ntp_failover [BOOLEAN]
usage
Fail over to NTP when PTP time sync not available - requires ntpengine:enabled, but does not require the rest of NTP configuration: will warn instead of failing over if cannot control ntpd.
default
N

ptpengine:ntp_failover_timeout [INT: 0 .. 1800]
usage
NTP failover timeout in seconds: time between PTP slave going into LISTENING state, and failing over to NTP. 0 = fail over immediately. This setting controls the time provider election hold time.
default
60

ptpengine:prefer_ntp [BOOLEAN]
usage
Prefer NTP time synchronisation. Only use PTP when NTP not available. Could be used when NTP runs with a local GPS receiver or another hardware reference.
default
N

ptpengine:panic_mode_ntp [BOOLEAN]
usage
Deprecated as of 2.3.1, but still supported: see ptppengine:panic_mode_release_clock.
default
N

ptpengine:sigusr2_clears_counters [BOOLEAN]
usage
Clear counters after dumping all counter values on SIGUSR2.
default
N

ptpengine:timing_acl_permit [STRING]
usage
Permit access control list for timing and signaling messages. Format is a series of network prefixes and/or IP addresses separated by commas, spaces, tabs or semicolons. Accepted format is CIDR notation (a.b.c.d/mm), single IP address (a.b.c.d), or full network/mask (a.b.c.d/m.m.m.m). Shortcuts can be used: 172.16/12 is expanded to 172.16.0.0/12; 192.168/255.255 is expanded to 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, etc. The match is performed on the source IP address of the incoming messages. IP access lists are only supported when using the IP transport.
default
[none]

ptpengine:timing_acl_deny [STRING]
usage
Deny access control list for timing and signaling messages. Format is a series of network prefixes and/or IP addresses separated by commas, spaces, tabs or semicolons. Accepted format is CIDR notation (a.b.c.d/mm), single IP address (a.b.c.d), or full network/mask (a.b.c.d/m.m.m.m). Shortcuts can be used: 172.16/12 is expanded to 172.16.0.0/12; 192.168/255.255 is expanded to 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, etc. The match is performed on the source IP address of the incoming messages. IP access lists are only supported when using the IP transport.
default
[none]

ptpengine:management_acl_permit [STRING]
usage
Permit access control list for management messages. Format is a series of network prefixes and/or IP addresses separated by commas, spaces, tabs or semicolons. Accepted format is CIDR notation (a.b.c.d/mm), single IP address (a.b.c.d), or full network/mask (a.b.c.d/m.m.m.m). Shortcuts can be used: 172.16/12 is expanded to 172.16.0.0/12; 192.168/255.255 is expanded to 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, etc. The match is performed on the source IP address of the incoming messages. IP access lists are only supported when using the IP transport.
default
[none]

ptpengine:management_acl_deny [STRING]
usage
Deny access control list for management messages. Format is a series of network prefixes and/or IP addresses separated by commas, spaces, tabs or semicolons. Accepted format is CIDR notation (a.b.c.d/mm), single IP address (a.b.c.d), or full network/mask (a.b.c.d/m.m.m.m). Shortcuts can be used: 172.16/12 is expanded to 172.16.0.0/12; 192.168/255.255 is expanded to 192.168.0.0/255.255.0.0, etc. The match is performed on the source IP address of the incoming messages. IP access lists are only supported when using the IP transport.
default
[none]

ptpengine:timing_acl_order [SELECT]
options
permit-deny deny-permit
usage
Order in which permit and deny access lists are evaluated for timing and signaling messages, the evaluation process is the same as for Apache httpd. See: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_access_compat.html#order
default
deny-permit

ptpengine:management_acl_order [SELECT]
options
permit-deny deny-permit
usage
Order in which permit and deny access lists are evaluated for management messages, the evaluation process is the same as for Apache httpd. See: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/current/mod/mod_access_compat.html#order
default
deny-permit

clock:no_adjust [BOOLEAN]
usage
Do not adjust the clock.
default
N

clock:no_reset [BOOLEAN]
usage
Do not reset the clock - only slew.
default
N

clock:step_startup_force [BOOLEAN]
usage
Force clock step on first sync after startup regardless of offset and clock:no_reset
default
N

clock:step_startup [BOOLEAN]
usage
Step clock on startup only if offset >= 1 second, ignoring panic mode and clock:no_reset
default
N

clock:set_rtc_on_step [BOOLEAN]
usage
Attempt setting the RTC when stepping clock (Linux only - FreeBSD does this for us. WARNING: this will always set the RTC to OS clock time, regardless of time zones, so this assumes that RTC runs in UTC or otherwise in the same timescale as PTP. True at least on most single-boot x86 Linux systems.
default
N

clock:drift_handling [SELECT]
options
reset preserve file
usage
Observed drift handling method between servo restarts:
reset
set to zero (not recommended)
preserve
use kernel value
file
load/save to drift file on startup/shutdown, use kernel value inbetween. To specify drift file, use the clock:drift_file setting.
default
preserve

clock:drift_file [STRING]
usage
Specify drift file
default
/etc/ptpd2_kernelclock.drift

clock:leap_seconds_file [STRING]
usage
Specify leap second file location (up to date version can be downloaded from: http://www.ietf.org/timezones/data/leap-seconds.list). When configured, PTP master will use data from this file to announce leap flags and UTC offset, overriding OS information, and PTP slave will use data from this file as well as information supplied by the GM. If configured, this file is always reloaded on configuration reload (SIGHUP), reloaded on clock step and reloaded after a leap second event to ensure the information is up to date. As of ptpd 2.3.1, the file is bundled with ptpd and is installed into (prefix)/share/ptpd/leap-seconds.list.ddMMMyyyy where ddMMMyyyy is the leap seconds file expiry date.
default
[none]

clock:leap_second_pause_period [INT: 5 .. 600]
usage
Time (seconds) before and after midnight that clock updates should be suspended for during a leap second event. The total duration of the pause is twice the configured duration. Clock updates are suspended when there is a leap second event pending and time to midnight is less than or equal to this value and resumed no earlier than this value after midnight. Clock updates are resumed in a controlled manner - after a control message, such as PTP announce. This ensures that the updated UTC offset is received before any further clock updates.
default
5

clock:leap_second_notice_period [INT: 3600 .. 86400]
usage
Time (seconds) before midnight that PTPd starts announcing the leap second if it's running as master. The IEEE 1588 standard suggests 12 hours notice and this is the default, but it may be changed to allow more flexibility.
default
43200

clock:leap_second_handling [SELECT]
options
accept ignore step smear
usage
Clock sync behaviour during leap second events:
accept
Inform OS kernel about the leap second and let the kernel insert or delete the leap second
ignore
Do not inform the kernel - this ends with a +/-1-second offset which is then slewed back down
step
Do not inform the kernel and step the clock immediately after the leap second event
smear
Gradually introduce an extra offset over a period of time before the leap second event, which accumulates to +/-1 second (see clock:leap_second_smear_period). Once the clock stabilises, this results in a clock frequency shift which is taken off after the event. Once the leap second event is over, the extra offset is also removed and time is back in line with master time.
default
accept

clock:leap_second_smear_period [INT: 3600 .. 86400]
usage
When clock:leap_second_handling is set to smear, this setting defines the period (in seconds) before the leap second event, over which the leap second offset is gradually added. Example: when set to 24 hours (86400), an extra +/-11.5 microseconds is added every second (11.5 ppm clock frequency offset).
default
86400

clock:max_offset_ppm [INT: 500 .. 1000]
usage
Maximum absolute frequency shift which can be applied to the clock servo when slewing the clock. Expressed in parts per million (1 ppm = shift of 1 us per second. Values above 512 will use the tick duration correction to allow even faster slewing. Default maximum is 512 without using tick.
default
500

servo:delayfilter_stiffness [INT]
usage
Mean Path Delay filter stiffness.
default
6

servo:kp [FLOAT: min: 0.000001 ]
usage
Clock servo PI controller proportional component gain (kP).
default
0.100000

servo:ki [FLOAT: min: 0.000001 ]
usage
Clock servo PI controller integral component gain (kI).
default
0.001000

servo:dt_method [SELECT]
options
none constant measured
usage
How servo update interval (delta t) is calculated:
none
servo not corrected for update interval (dt always 1),
constant
constant value (target servo update rate) - sync interval for PTP,
measured
servo measures how often it's updated and uses this interval.
default
constant

servo:dt_max [FLOAT: 1.500000 .. 100.000000]
usage
Maximum servo update interval (delta t) when using measured servo update interval (servo:dt_method = measured), specified as sync interval multiplier
default
5.000000

servo:stability_detection [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable clock synchronisation servo stability detection (based on standard deviation of the observed drift value) - drift will be saved to drift file / cached when considered stable, also clock stability status will be logged.
default
N

servo:stability_threshold [FLOAT: 1.000000 .. 10000.000000]
usage
Specify the observed drift standard deviation threshold in parts per billion (ppb) - if stanard deviation is within the threshold, servo is considered stable.
default
5.000000

servo:stability_period [INT: 1 .. 100]
usage
Specify for how many statistics update intervals the observed drift standard deviation has to stay within threshold to be considered stable.
default
3

servo:stability_timeout [INT: 1 .. 60]
usage
Specify after how many minutes without stabilisation servo is considered unstable. Assists with logging servo stability information and allows to preserve observed drift if servo cannot stabilise.
default
10

servo:max_delay [INT: 0 .. 999999999]
usage
Do not accept master to slave delay (delayMS - from Sync message) or slave to master delay (delaySM - from Delay Response message) if greater than this value (nanoseconds). 0 = not used.
default
0

servo:max_delay_max_rejected [INT: min: 0 ]
usage
Maximum number of consecutive rejected delay measurements exceeding the maxDelay threshold (servo:max_delay), before slave is reset. 0 = not checked.
default
0

servo:max_delay_stable_only [BOOLEAN]
usage
If servo:max_delay is set, perform the check only if clock servo has stabilised.
default
N

servo:max_offset [INT: 0 .. 999999999]
usage
Do not reset the clock if offset from master is greater than this value (nanoseconds). 0 = not used.
default
0

global:config_templates [STRING]
usage
Comma, space or tab-separated list of template names to be applied to the configuration (see CONFIGURATION TEMPLATES AND TEMPLATE FILES section). Templates are applied in the order they are specified, so any overlapping settings from one template are overridden with settings from the following template(s). PTPd provides some built-in templates - see the templates section above; to see the built-in templates, run ptpd with -T or --show-templates.
default
[none]

global:template_files [STRING]
usage
Comma, space or tab-separated list of template file paths to be loaded (see CONFIGURATION TEMPLATES AND TEMPLATE FILES section). Template files are also loaded in the order they are provided, so templates in one file can be extended by templates in the next file(s); any overlapping settings are overridden by following files. PTPd will not exit when one or more template files cannot be opened. PTPd will always try to load /usr/local/share/ptpd/templates.conf on startup.
default
[none]

global:enable_alarms [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable support for alarm and event notifications (see ALARMS section). Alarms enable self-diagnosing of common error conditions and events such as master change or time properties change. When SNMP support is enabled (global:enable_snmp) and SNMP trap support is enabled (global:enable_snmp_traps), alarms trigger SNMP traps.
default
N

global:alarm_timeout [INT: 0 .. 3600]
usage
Mininmum alarm age (seconds) - minimal time between alarm set and clear notifications. The condition can clear while alarm lasts, but notification (log or SNMP) will only be triggered after the timeout. This option prevents from alarms flapping (repeated set and clear notifications).
default
30

global:alarm_initial_delay [INT: 0 .. 3600]
usage
Delay the start of alarm processing (seconds) after ptpd startup. This option allows to avoid unnecessary alarms before PTPd starts synchronising, which should happen after a few seconds, but could take longer in cases where multicast has to converge upstream, or when there is a mismatch in message intervals and unicast signaling has to negotiate them down (or up) to acceptable values. This also prevents from alerting on offset from master too soon after startup (see ptpengine:offset_alarm_threshold) - delay can be increased to cover the initial sync period, however this is not recommended as an offset alarm after startup can indicate a slave cold start.
default
10

global:enable_snmp [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable SNMP agent (if compiled with PTPD_SNMP).
default
N

global:enable_snmp_traps [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable reporting of alarms and events as SNMP traps. Requires PTPd to be compiled with PTPD_SNMP, and requires alarms to be enabled (global:enable_alarms)
default
N

global:use_syslog [BOOLEAN]
usage
Send log messages to syslog. Disabling this sends all messages to stdout (or speficied log file).
default
N

global:lock_file [STRING]
usage
Lock file location
default
[none]

global:auto_lockfile [BOOLEAN]
usage
Use mode specific and interface specific lock file (overrides global:lock_file).
default
N

global:lock_directory [STRING]
usage
Lock file directory: used with automatic mode-specific lock files, also used when no lock file is specified. When lock file is specified, it's expected to be an absolute path.
default
/var/run

global:ignore_lock [BOOLEAN]
usage
Skip lock file checking and locking.
default
N

global:quality_file [STRING]
usage
File used to record data about sync packets. Enables recording when set.
default
[none]

global:quality_file_max_size [INT: min: 0 ]
usage
Maximum sync packet record file size (in kB) - file will be truncated if size exceeds the limit. 0 - no limit.
default
0

global:quality_file_max_files [INT: 0 .. 100]
usage
Enable log rotation of the sync packet record file up to n files. 0 - do not rotate.
default
0

global:quality_file_truncate [BOOLEAN]
usage
Truncate the sync packet record file every time it is (re) opened: startup and SIGHUP.
default
N

global:status_file [STRING]
usage
File used to log ptpd2 status information.
default
/var/run/ptpd2.status

global:log_status [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable / disable writing status information to file.
default
N

global:status_update_interval [INT: 1 .. 30]
usage
Status file update interval in seconds.
default
1

global:log_file [STRING]
usage
Specify log file path (event log). Setting this enables logging to file.
default
[none]

global:log_file_max_size [INT: min: 0 ]
usage
Maximum log file size (in kB) - log file will be truncated if size exceeds the limit. 0 - no limit.
default
0

global:log_file_max_files [INT: 0 .. 100]
usage
Enable log rotation of the sync packet record file up to n files. 0 - do not rotate.

default
0

global:log_file_truncate [BOOLEAN]
usage
Truncate the log file every time it is (re) opened: startup and SIGHUP.
default
N

global:log_level [SELECT]
options
LOG_ERR LOG_WARNING LOG_NOTICE LOG_INFO LOG_ALL
usage
Specify log level (only messages at this priority or higer will be logged). The minimal level is LOG_ERR. LOG_ALL enables debug output if compiled with RUNTIME_DEBUG.
default
LOG_ALL

global:statistics_file [STRING]
usage
Specify statistics log file path. Setting this enables logging of statistics, but can be overriden with global:log_statistics.
default
[none]

global:statistics_log_interval [INT: min: 0 ]
usage
Log timing statistics every n seconds for Sync and Delay messages (0 - log all).
default
0

global:statistics_file_max_size [INT: min: 0 ]
usage
Maximum statistics log file size (in kB) - log file will be truncated if size exceeds the limit. 0 - no limit.
default
0

global:statistics_file_max_files [INT: 0 .. 100]
usage
Enable log rotation of the statistics file up to n files. 0 - do not rotate.
default
0

global:statistics_file_truncate [BOOLEAN]
usage
Truncate the statistics file every time it is (re) opened: startup and SIGHUP.
default
N

global:dump_packets [BOOLEAN]
usage
Dump the contents of every PTP packet.
default
N

global:verbose_foreground [BOOLEAN]
usage
Run in foreground with statistics and all messages logged to stdout. Overrides log file and statistics file settings and disables syslog.

default
N

global:foreground [BOOLEAN]
usage
Run in foreground - ignored when global:verbose_foreground is set.
default
N

global:log_statistics [BOOLEAN]
usage
Log timing statistics for every PTP packet received. Output is in CSV format and field headers are always printed when starting or refreshing the statistics log.
default
N

global:statistics_timestamp_format [SELECT]
options
datetime unix both
usage
Timestamp format used when logging timing statistics (when global:log_statistics is enabled):
datetime
Formatted date and time: YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss.uuuuuu
unix
Unix timestamp with nanoseconds: s.ns
both
Formatted date and time followed by unix timestamp (adds one extra field to the log)
default
datetime

global:periodic_updates [BOOLEAN]
usage
Log a status update every time statistics are updated (global:statistics_update_interval). This update is written to the main log target. Status updates are logged even if ptpd is configured without support for statistics.
default
N

global:cpuaffinity_cpucore [INT: -1 .. 255]
usage
Bind ptpd2 process to a selected CPU core number. 0 = first CPU core, etc. -1 = do not bind to a single core.
default
0

global:statistics_update_interval [INT: 1 .. 60]
usage
Clock synchronisation statistics update interval in seconds. Also controls how often periodic status information is logged (when using global:statistics_update_interval).
default
30

global:timingdomain_election_delay [INT: 0 .. 3600 ]
usage
Delay (seconds) before releasing a time service (NTP or PTP) and electing a new one to control a clock. 0 = elect immediately
default
15

ntpengine:enabled [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable NTPd integration
default
N

ntpengine:control_enabled [BOOLEAN]
usage
Enable control over local NTPd daemon
default
N

ntpengine:check_interval [INT: 5 .. 600]
usage
NTP control check interval in seconds
default
15

ntpengine:key_id [INT: 0 .. 65535]
usage
NTP key number - must be configured as a trusted control key in ntp.conf, and be non-zero for the ntpengine:control_enabled setting to take effect.
default
0

ntpengine:key [STRING]
usage
NTP key (plain text, max. 20 characters) - must match the key configured in ntpd's keys file, and must be non-zero for the ntpengine:control_enabled setting to take effect.
default
[none]

Configuration file support has only been introduced in version 2.3. There may still be some inconsistencies in the way some settings are parsed and while order should not make any difference, for some complex behaviours it may still be the case.

Please report any bugs using the bug tracker on the SourceForge page: http://sourceforge.net/projects/ptpd/

ptpd2(8)

Steven Kreuzer <skreuzer@freebsd.org>

Gael Mace <gael_mace@users.sourceforge.net>

George Neville-Neil <gnn@freebsd.org>

Wojciech Owczarek <wojciech@owczarek.co.uk>

Alexandre Van Kempen

ptpd2.conf(5) man page first written by Wojciech Owczarek for ptpd 2.3.0 in November 2013

October, 2015 version 2.3.2

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