On 08/02/2012 05:24 PM, Leonidas Spyropoulos wrote:
Are you running ntpd ? Could be related to: http://serverfault.com/questions/403732/anyone-else-experiencing-high-rates-...
Try stopping the ntpd and setting the date manually as suggested. Then start ntpd again.
I had this problem on a Java application (activeMQ)
I was bitten by this as soon as the leap second happened and followed the thread "Re: [arch-general] Leap seconds ntp and chrony?" I host a couple of minecraft servers for my kids. As soon as the leap second was injected, the apps crashed dead in their tracks. That was a completely different box though. Here, time itself doesn't seem to be the issue. The sysclock and hwclock are fairly well synced: 09:46 providence:~> date && sudo hwclock --show Fri Aug 3 09:46:19 CDT 2012 Fri 03 Aug 2012 09:46:20 AM CDT -0.736355 seconds The drift does bounce a bit, but I'm not sure that matters: 09:46 providence:~> date && sudo hwclock --show Fri Aug 3 09:46:19 CDT 2012 Fri 03 Aug 2012 09:46:20 AM CDT -0.736355 seconds 09:46 providence:~> date && sudo hwclock --show Fri Aug 3 09:47:21 CDT 2012 Fri 03 Aug 2012 09:47:22 AM CDT -0.891175 seconds 09:47 providence:~> date && sudo hwclock --show Fri Aug 3 09:47:28 CDT 2012 Fri 03 Aug 2012 09:47:29 AM CDT -0.250572 seconds I'll keep and eye on this issue. I wonder if any of the latest changes to the init/shutdown system or rc.conf could have done this? -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.