linuxptp 1.5-2 source package in Ubuntu
Changelog
linuxptp (1.5-2) unstable; urgency=medium * Renamed debian/install to debian/linuxptp.install (Closes: #802103) -- IOhannes m zmölnig (Debian/GNU) <email address hidden> Sat, 17 Oct 2015 20:04:02 +0200
Upload details
- Uploaded by:
- Debian Multimedia Maintainers
- Uploaded to:
- Sid
- Original maintainer:
- Debian Multimedia Maintainers
- Architectures:
- linux-any
- Section:
- misc
- Urgency:
- Medium Urgency
See full publishing history Publishing
Series | Published | Component | Section |
---|
Downloads
File | Size | SHA-256 Checksum |
---|---|---|
linuxptp_1.5-2.dsc | 2.0 KiB | 82ac15dfef93b14e0db11c6345b630531246b6d53f5cd2621fc5e0092ad40a9d |
linuxptp_1.5.orig.tar.gz | 135.9 KiB | ecebc8503a9fd2340299f8015e520527c32cf3760d34849fa0e855bbbf4b1090 |
linuxptp_1.5-2.debian.tar.xz | 4.9 KiB | 56e63abe12a94604e6e75e56b15bfa7669c947e35708e9510966e2467a836c7e |
Available diffs
- diff from 1.5-1 to 1.5-2 (586 bytes)
No changes file available.
Binary packages built by this source
- linuxptp: Precision Time Protocol (PTP, IEEE1588) implementation for Linux
Linuxptp is an implementation of the Precision Time Protocol (PTP)
according to IEEE standard 1588 for Linux. Features include:
- support for hardware and software time stamping via the Linux
SO_TIMESTAMPING socket option.
- support for the Linux PTP Hardware Clock (PHC) subsystem by using the
clock_gettime family of calls, including the new clock_adjtimex
system call
- implementation of Boundary Clock (BC) and Ordinary Clock (OC)
- transport over UDP/IPv4, UDP/IPv6, and raw Ethernet (Layer 2)
- support for IEEE 802.1AS-2011 in the role of end station
.
PTP provides higher precision and faster synchronization than NTP even
without hardware support. With hardware support, sub-microsecond
accuracy can be expected. Whereas NTP is intended for WAN use, PTP is
designed for LAN environments and makes use of UDP multicast.
- linuxptp-dbgsym: debug symbols for package linuxptp
Linuxptp is an implementation of the Precision Time Protocol (PTP)
according to IEEE standard 1588 for Linux. Features include:
- support for hardware and software time stamping via the Linux
SO_TIMESTAMPING socket option.
- support for the Linux PTP Hardware Clock (PHC) subsystem by using the
clock_gettime family of calls, including the new clock_adjtimex
system call
- implementation of Boundary Clock (BC) and Ordinary Clock (OC)
- transport over UDP/IPv4, UDP/IPv6, and raw Ethernet (Layer 2)
- support for IEEE 802.1AS-2011 in the role of end station
.
PTP provides higher precision and faster synchronization than NTP even
without hardware support. With hardware support, sub-microsecond
accuracy can be expected. Whereas NTP is intended for WAN use, PTP is
designed for LAN environments and makes use of UDP multicast.