A Practical Guide to Time for Developers: Part 4 -The Linux Time Sync Cheat Sheet
If you got here and made it through the previous articles, you have already done the hard part. You are basically a time guru now. You know what time means in computing, how a machine keeps it, why...

Source: DEV Community
If you got here and made it through the previous articles, you have already done the hard part. You are basically a time guru now. You know what time means in computing, how a machine keeps it, why clocks drift, how synchronization works, and why timestamp location matters. That is already more than most people ever learn about this topic. Now let’s compress all of that into the Linux view of the world. This is the top of the iceberg: a small set of clocks, commands, and tools that represent most of the concepts we have been building up across the series. Think of this as the practical cheat sheet — the 90% version. The one you can use to inspect clocks, understand what is synchronized to what, and handle most everyday Linux time-sync tasks without drowning in documentation. This is probably the part you will want to bookmark. The three main clock entities in Linux When people say “Linux time,” they often mean one thing. In reality, Linux commonly deals with at least three different cl