
How to Synchronize Time with Chrony NTP in Linux
How to Synchronize Time with Chrony NTP in Linux 관련
The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is a protocol used to synchronize computer system clocks automatically over a network. The machine can have the system clock use Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) rather than local time.
Maintaining accurate time on Linux systems, especially servers is an important task for many reasons. For example, in a networked environment, accurate timekeeping is required for accurate timestamps in packets and system logs for root-cause analysis, determining when problems occurred, and finding correlations.
Chrony
is now the default NTP implementation package on the latest versions of RHEL-based distributions such as CentOS Stream, Fedora, Rocky Linux & AlmaLinux, and Debian-based distributions such as Ubuntu & Linux Mint, among others, and comes pre-installed by default.
The Chrony
package consists of chronyd
, a daemon that runs in userspace, and chronyc
a command-line program for monitoring and controlling chronyd
.
Chrony
is a versatile NTP implementation and performs well in a wide range of conditions (check out the comparison of the chrony suite to other NTP implementations). It can be used to synchronize the system clock with NTP servers (act as a client), with a reference clock (e.g a GPS receiver), or with a manual time input. It can also be employed as an NTPv4 (RFC 5905) server or peer to provide a time service to other computers in the network.
In this article, you will learn how to synchronize server time with NTP in Linux using chrony
.
Installing Chrony in Linux Server
In most Linux systems, the chrony
command is not installed by default. To install it, execute the below command.
sudo yum install chrony
sudo apt install chrony

The default location for the chrony
daemon is /usr/sbin/
chronyd
and the command line program will be installed to /usr/bin/chronyc
.
Once the installation is complete, start the chrony
service and enable it to automatically start at system boot, then check if it is up and running.
systemctl enable --now chronyd
systemctl status chronyd

To cross-check if chrony
is now up and running fine and to see the number of servers and peers that are connected to it, run the following chronyc
command.
chronyc activity

Checking Chrony Synchronization in Linux
To display information (list of servers available, status, and offsets from the local clock and the source) about the current time sources that chronyd
is accessing, run the following command with the -v
flag shows the description for each column.
chronyc sources
#
# OR
#
chronyc sources -v

Concerning the previous command, to display other useful information for each of the sources currently being examined by chronyd
(such as the drift rate and offset estimation process), use the sourcestats
command.
chronyc sourcestats
#
# OR
#
chronyc sourcestats -v

To check chrony
tracking, run the following command.
chronyc tracking
In the output of this command, the reference ID specifies the name (or IP address) if available, of the server to which the computer is currently synchronized, out of all the available servers.

Configuring Chrony Time Sources in Linux
The main chrony
configuration file is located at /etc/chrony.conf
(CentOS/RHEL/Fedora) or /etc/chrony/chrony.conf
(Ubuntu/Debian).
When installing a Linux OS in the cloud, your system should have some default servers or a pool of servers added during the installation process. To add or change the default servers, open the configuration file for editing:
vi /etc/chrony.conf
#
# OR
#
vi /etc/chrony/chrony.conf
You can either add several servers using the server directive as shown.
server 0.europe.pool.ntp.org iburst
server 1.europe.pool.ntp.org iburst
server 2.europe.pool.ntp.org ibusrt
server 3.europe.pool.ntp.org ibusrt

or in most cases, it’s best to use ntppool.org to find an NTP server. This allows the system to try to find the closest available servers for you. To add a pool, use the pool directive:
pool 0.pool.ntp.org burst

There are many other options you can configure in the file. After making changes, restart the chrony service.
sudo systemctl restart chrony
#
# OR
#
systemctl restart chronyd
To show information about the current time sources that chronyd
is querying, run the following command once more.
chronyc sources

To check the chrony
tracking status, run the following command.
chronyc tracking

To display the current time on your system, check whether the system clock is synchronized and whether NTP is indeed active, run the timedatectl command:
timedatectl

That brings us to the end of this guide. If you have any questions, reach us via the comment section below. For more information, check out: using the chrony suite to configure NTP from the RHEL documentation or using chrony to configure NTP from the Ubuntu official blog.