Provided by: radioclk_1.0.pristine-3_amd64 

NAME
radioclkd - decode time from radio clock(s) attached to serial port
SYNOPSIS
radioclkd [ -tphv ] device
DESCRIPTION
radioclkd is a simple daemon that decodes the time from a radio clock device attached to the DCD and/or
CTS and/or DSR status lines of serial port of a computer. It is able to decode the DCF77, MSF and WWVB
time signals. The received time is then sent to ntpd using the shared memory reference clock driver. The
type of time signal being received is automatically determined. If you have problems getting the program
to work using interrupts, the following command is known to help in many instances. If this fails you can
always fall back to the polling method.
stty crtscts < /dev/ttyS0
Details on a cheap and easy to make device for receiving these time signals can be found at
http://www.buzzard.org.uk/jonathan/radioclock.html
OPTIONS
-p, --poll
Poll the serial port for changes of status in the DCD, CTS and DSR lines rather than use
interrupts
-t, --test
Enter test mode printing the length of each pulse and the decoded time at the end of each minute
on stdout. The time is not sent to ntpd using the shared memory reference clock driver in this
mode.
-h, --help
Print a short synopsis of the command line arguments.
-v, --version
Print the version number and then exit.
CONFIGURATION
Configuration is very simple. Use server 127.127.28.0 in your ntp.conf file for a clock attached to the
DCD line, server 127.127.28.1 for a clock attached to the CTS line, and server 127.127.28.2 for a clock
attached to the DSR line. You will also want to use a fudge line on the server to change the displayed
refid.
CALIBRATION
Due to delays in the propogation of the radio signal, it's processing by the receiver board and the
latency of the operating system the time decoded by the receiver will be slightly offset from actual UTC.
Typically this delay will be less than 20ms, so unless you are very fussy about the time, or are using
more than one time source, such as a GPS unit, other radio clock or NTP server on the internet you can
ignore this section.
The basics of the calibration procedure is to determine the average offset of the radio receiver, and use
the time1 fudge factor in ntp.conf to bring the receiver as close as possible to the real time. The
easiest way of determining the offset of the radio receivers time is to run it against a reference clock
that does not suffer from these problems. The best reference clock would be a GPS unit. This might be a
GPS unit that you don't wish to dedicate to time keeping, or a borrowed unit. If this is not possible you
could use a stratum 1 server on the internet.
The method of calibration is quite simple. We attach the calibration reference clock to the computer and
fudge the stratum of our radio receiver up to say 5. This way we can be sure that ntpd will lock onto
the calibration reference clock. We need to make sure that ntpd is configured to collect peer statistics
so make sure we have some lines similar to these in ntp.conf
statsdir /var/log/ntpstats/
statistics loopstats peerstats clockstats
filegen peerstats file peerstats type day enable
After that we restart ntpd and leave it running for several hours. We can then make a copy the peerstats
file. The trick is to remove all the entries before ntpd has come into close aggrement with the
calibration reference clock and then run the peer.awk script in the scripts/stats directory of the ntp
distribution. This will give us a mean offset of our radio receivers in milliseconds. This can them be
converted into seconds and added to the fudge line in ntp.conf for our receiver.
The final step is to remove the change in stratum level for our reference clock and restart ntpd. If you
move the receiver any significant distance then you will need to repeat this calibration step. Across the
room or around the current building will be fine, but if you move it to the next town/city then you will
need to recalibrate.
IN USE
The version of ntpd that comes with most Linux distributions does not have the shared memory reference
clock driver compiled in by default. This can be identified by checking the logs after ntpd is started.
If the shared memory reference clock driver is not compiled in then the logs will contain warnings about
the reference clock driver not being recognized. To compile ntpd with the shared memory reference clock
driver you must specify the --enable-SHM option when running configure.
Neither radioclkd or ntpd ever mark the shared memory segment for deletion. If you stop using the shared
memory reference clock driver therefore any shared memory segments will persist until you reboot or
manually delete the segment using ipcrm. The segments can be identified as the one with key 0x4e545030,
0x4e545031 or 0x4e545032 using the ipcs command.
BUGS
If you are running a kernel with the PPS kit and have a clock attached to the DCD line you may experience
lockups. If you encounter this problem the currently recommended solution is to move the clock to either
the CTS or DSR lines.
AUTHOR
This program was written by Jonathan Buzzard <jonathan@buzzard.org.uk> and may be freely distributed
under the terms of the GNU General Public License. There is ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY for this program.
Version 1.0 19 Jan 2003 RADIOCLKD(1)