Commit Graph

2 Commits (1441562149a8833f2a1714570a36cc1fd90a96d0)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Vladimir Oltean 3f2e73e91b ts2phc: instantiate a full clock structure for every PHC master
This propagates the use of "struct ts2phc_private" all the way into the
master API, in preparation of a new use case that will be supported
soon: some PPS masters (to be precise, the "PHC" kind) instantiate a
struct clock which could be disciplined by ts2phc.

When a PHC A emits a pulse and another PHC B timestamps it, the offset
between their precise timestamps can be used to synchronize either one
of them. So far in ts2phc, only the slave PHC (the one using extts) has
been synchronized to the master (the one using perout).

This is partly because there is no proper kernel API to report the
precise timestamp of a perout pulse. We only have the periodic API, and
that doesn't report precise timestamps either; we just use vague
approximations of what the PPS master PHC's time was, based on reading
that PHC immediately after a slave extts event was received by the
application. While this is far from ideal, it does work, and does allow
PHC A to be synchronized to B.

This is particularly useful with the yet-to-be-introduced "automatic"
mode of ts2phc (similar to '-a' of phc2sys), and the PPS distribution
tree is fixed in hardware (as opposed to port states, which in
"automatic" mode are dynamic, as the name suggests).

Signed-off-by: Vladimir Oltean <olteanv@gmail.com>
2020-08-30 02:56:13 +03:00
Richard Cochran 1bdc9143aa Introduce the ts2phc program.
Some PTP Hardware Clocks have input pins that can generate time stamps
on the edges of external signals.  This functionality can be used in
various ways.  For example, one can synchronize a PHC device to a
global time source by taking a Pulse Per Second signal from the source
into the PHC.  This patch adds support for synchronizing one or more
PHC slaves to a given master clock.

The implementation follows a modular design that allows adding
different kinds of master clocks in the future.  This patch starts off
with a single "generic" PPS master, meaning a PPS signal that lacks
and time or date information.  The generic master assumes that the
Linux system time is approximately correct (by NTP or RTC for example)
in order to calculate the time of the incoming PPS edges.

Signed-off-by: Richard Cochran <richardcochran@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Balint Ferencz <fernya@gmail.com>
2020-05-07 14:57:47 -07:00