Time Synchronization -------------------- include::attributes.txt[] ifdef::wiki[] :pve-toplevel: endif::wiki[] The {pve} cluster stack itself relies heavily on the fact that all the nodes have precisely synchronized time. Some other components, like Ceph, also refuse to work properly if the local time on nodes is not in sync. Time synchronization between nodes can be achieved with the ``Network Time Protocol'' (`NTP`). {pve} uses `systemd-timesyncd` as NTP client by default, preconfigured to use a set of public servers. This setup works out of the box in most cases. Using Custom NTP Servers ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In some cases, it might be desired to not use the default NTP servers. For example, if your {pve} nodes do not have access to the public internet (e.g., because of restrictive firewall rules), you need to setup local NTP servers and tell `systemd-timesyncd` to use them: .File `/etc/systemd/timesyncd.conf` ---- [Time] Servers=ntp1.example.com ntp2.example.com ntp3.example.com ntp4.example.com ---- After restarting the synchronization service (`systemctl restart systemd-timesyncd`) you should verify that your newly configured NTP servers are used by checking the journal (`journalctl --since -1h -u systemd-timesyncd`): ---- ... Oct 07 14:58:36 node1 systemd[1]: Stopping Network Time Synchronization... Oct 07 14:58:36 node1 systemd[1]: Starting Network Time Synchronization... Oct 07 14:58:36 node1 systemd[1]: Started Network Time Synchronization. Oct 07 14:58:36 node1 systemd-timesyncd[13514]: Using NTP server 10.0.0.1:123 (ntp1.example.com). Oct 07 14:58:36 nora systemd-timesyncd[13514]: interval/delta/delay/jitter/drift 64s/-0.002s/0.020s/0.000s/-31ppm ... ----