DOKK / manpages / debian 11 / linuxptp / nsm.8.en
NSM(8) System Manager's Manual NSM(8)

nsm - NetSync Monitor client

nsm [ -f config ] [ -i interface ] [ long-options ] [ command ] ...

nsm is a program which implements a NetSync Monitor (NSM) client. NSM is an extension to the Precision Time Protocol (PTP), which enables a client to measure the offset of its clock against any PTP clock in the network which supports NSM. It uses unicast messages, but unlike PTP in the unicast mode it does not require the server to keep any state specific to the client. It is particularly useful for monitoring.

The program reads commands from the standard input or from the command line.

Send a NetSync Monitor request to the specified network address (IPv4 or MAC) and print the measured offset with the response.
Display a help message.

Read configuration from the specified file. No configuration file is read by default.
Specify the network interface.
Display a help message.
Print the software version and exit.

Each and every configuration file option (see below in sections PROGRAM OPTIONS and PORT OPTIONS) may also appear as a "long" style command line argument. For example, the transportSpecific option may be set using either of these two forms:

--transportSpecific 1 --transportSpecific=1

Option values given on the command line override values in the global section of the configuration file (which, in turn, overrides default values).

The configuration file is divided into sections. Each section starts with a line containing its name enclosed in brackets and it follows with settings. Each setting is placed on a separate line, it contains the name of the option and the value separated by whitespace characters. Empty lines and lines starting with # are ignored.

The global section (indicated as [global]) sets the global program options as well as the default port specific options. Other sections are port specific sections and they override the default port options. The name of the section is the name of the configured port (e.g. [eth0] ).

The time difference in nanoseconds of the transmit and receive paths. This value should be positive when the master-to-slave propagation time is longer and negative when the slave-to-master time is longer. The default is 0 nanoseconds.
Select the network transport. Possible values are UDPv4 and L2. The default is UDPv4.
The transport specific field. Must be in the range 0 to 255. The default is 0.

The domain attribute of the local clock. The default is 0. time_stamping The time stamping method. The allowed values are hardware, software and legacy. The default is hardware.

Be cautious when the same configuration file is used for both ptp4l and nsm. Keep in mind that values specified in the configuration file take precedence over their default values. If a certain option which is common to ptp4l and nsm is specified to a non-default value in the configuration file (e.g. for ptp4l), then this non-default value applies also for nsm. This might be not what is expected.

To avoid securely these unexpected behaviour, different configuration files for ptp4l and nsm are recommended.

ptp4l(8)

June 2019 linuxptp