On Fri, Nov 7, 2008 at 2:49 AM, Kenneth Holter <kenneho.ndu@xxxxxxxxx>wrote: > Hei. > > > One of our RHEL 4 servers running on VmWare has a quite serious NTP > problem. > I know that NTP can be an issue when running red hat boxes on VmWare, so as > a fix I put this small script in a file in /etc/cron.hourly: Early on I went through the frustrations with time & NTP problems on RHEL 4 virtual machines. I've used a number of the earlier suggestions, including various boot time & VMware configuration options. I even went so far as to compile a custom kernel with the clock frequency set back to 100, as it was for the 2.4.x kernels. Overall it didn't seem like any of the boot time or VMware config options made that much difference. Recompling the kernel works, but gets to be a lot of overhead after awhile. Now for the odd part: Currently my RHEL4 VMs have time sync enabled in the VMware config file & also have NTP running. It seems that the longer NTP runs, the more accurate the time gets on the VM. When booting a "new" VM, it wasn't uncommon for NTP to adjust the time by 20-30 seconds. Once the VM gets a bit "older" & NTP has been running longer, when rebooting the VM clock adjustment goes down to around 5-6 seconds. I suspect part of this has to do with the frequency & adjustment history recorded by NTP. The updated VMware KB may be of some help as well. Good luck! -Eric -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list