📖 ~1 min read
Table of contents
Symptom & Impact
System clock drifts and `timedatectl` shows unsynchronized status on RHEL 9 hosts.
Environment & Reproduction
Run `chronyc tracking` and `chronyc sources -v` to inspect source reach and offset.
Root Cause Analysis
Confirm `chrony` package is installed and not replaced by conflicting NTP implementations.
Quick Triage
Use `systemctl status chronyd` and confirm `enabled` state across reboots.
Step-by-Step Diagnosis
Check `journalctl -u chronyd –since -3h` for DNS failures or source selection issues.

Solution – Primary Fix
Backup `/etc/chrony.conf` and current source output before updates.
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Solution – Alternative Approaches
Allow UDP 123 as required and verify outbound reachability; inspect `firewalld` egress policy where enforced.
Verification & Acceptance Criteria
SELinux impact is rare, but review AVC logs if custom chrony paths were introduced.
Rollback Plan
Set reliable `server` lines, restart with `systemctl restart chronyd`, and force initial step if needed.
Prevention & Hardening
Confirm `timedatectl status` reports synchronized and offset stabilizes near zero.
Related Errors & Cross-Refs
Use internal NTP tiers and monitor chrony metrics in your observability stack.
Related tutorial: View the step-by-step tutorial for rhel-9.
View all rhel-9 tutorials on the Tutorials Hub →
Browse all common problems & solutions on the Tutorials Hub.
References & Further Reading
Attach chrony config, source stats, and packet-level results when sync remains unstable.
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