This collector is intended for usage with local NTPD like ntp.org, chrony or OpenNTPD.
Note, some chrony packages have local stratum 10
configuration value making chrony a valid server when it it is unsynchronised. This configuration makes one of node_ntp_sanity
heuristics unreliable.
Note, OpenNTPD does not listen for SNTP queries by default, you should add listen on 127.0.0.1
configuration line to use this collector with OpenNTPD.
This metric shows stratum of local NTPD.
Stratum 16
means that clock are unsynchronised. See also aforementioned note about default local stratum in chrony.
Raw leap flag value. 0 – OK, 1 – add leap second at UTC midnight, 2 – delete leap second at UTC midnight, 3 – unsynchronised.
OpenNTPD ignores leap seconds and never sets leap flag to 1
or 2
.
RTT (round-trip time) from node_exporter collector to local NTPD. This value is used in sanity check as part of causality violation estimate.
Clock offset between local time and NTPD time.
ntp.org always sets NTPD time to local clock instead of relaying remote NTP time, so this offset is irrelevant for this NTPD.
This value is used in sanity check as part of causality violation estimate.
Reference Time. This field show time when the last adjustment was made, but implementation details vary from "local wall-clock time" to "Reference Time field in incoming SNTP packet".
time() - node_ntp_reference_timestamp_seconds
and
node_time - node_ntp_reference_timestamp_seconds
represent some estimate of
"freshness" of synchronization.
These values are used to calculate synchronization distance that is limited by
collector.ntp.max-distance
.
ntp.org adds known local offset to announced root dispersion and linearly
increases dispersion in case of NTP connectivity problems, OpenNTPD does not
account dispersion at all and always reports 0
.
Aggregate NTPD health including stratum, leap flag, sane freshness, root
distance being less than collector.ntp.max-distance
and causality violation
being less than collector.ntp.local-offset-tolerance
.
Causality violation is lower bound estimate of clock error done using SNTP,
it's calculated as positive portion of abs(node_ntp_offset) - node_ntp_rtt / 2
.
This collector exports state of kernel time synchronization flag that should be maintained by time-keeping daemon and is eventually raised by Linux kernel if time-keeping daemon does not update it regularly.
Unfortunately some daemons do not handle this flag properly, e.g. chrony-1.30
from Debian/jessie clears STA_UNSYNC
flag during daemon initialisation and
does not indicate clock synchronization status using this flag. Modern chrony
versions should work better. All chrony versions require rtcsync
option to
maintain this flag. OpenNTPD does not touch this flag at all till
OpenNTPD-5.9p1.
On the other hand combination of sync_status
and offset
exported by timex
module is the way to monitor if systemd-timesyncd does its job.