I'm connected to my university's small Linux cluster via PuTTY and WinSCP, transferring files using the latter and compiling and running them with the former. My work so far has been performed in the university's labs, but today I have been doing some work at home that generated an interesting warning.
I uploaded an entire folder of stuff and, upon running the make
command, I get this as the last line of output:
make: warning: Clock skew detected. Your build may be incomplete.
The resulting binary works correctly, and there doesn't seem to be any other unexpected errors in the build process.
I seem to be able to trigger the error by building after uploading some new / replacement files (I edit everything locally then upload the new version), so I'm wondering if it's something just as simple as mismatched file modification times? Or something more concerning?
So, should I be worried? How do I fix/prevent this?
214 Answers
That message is usually an indication that some of your files have modification times later than the current system time. Since make
decides which files to compile when performing an incremental build by checking if a source files has been modified more recently than its object file, this situation can cause unnecessary files to be built, or worse, necessary files to not be built.
However, if you are building from scratch (not doing an incremental build) you can likely ignore this warning without consequence.
6Typically this occurs when building in a NFS mounted directory, and the clocks on the client and the NFS server are out of sync.
The solution is to run an NTP client on both the NFS server and all clients.
6Install the Network Time Protocol
This also happened to me when running make
on a Samba SMB CIFS share on a server. A durable solution consists in installing the ntp
daemon on both the server and the client. (Please, note that this problem is not solved by running ntpdate
. This would resolve the time difference only temporarily, but not in the future.)
For Ubuntu and Debian-derived systems, simply type the following line at the command line:
$ sudo apt install ntp
Moreover, one will still need to issue the command touch *
once (and only once) in the affected directory to correct the file modification times once and for all.
$ touch *
For more information about the differences between ntp
and ntpdate
, please refer to:
Simple solution:
# touch filename
will do all OK.
For more info: http://embeddedbuzz.blogspot.in/2012/03/make-warning-clock-skew-detected-your.html
The other answers here do a good job of explaining the issue, so I won't repeat that here. But there is one solution that can resolve it that isn't listed yet: simply run make clean
, then rerun make
.
Having make remove any already compiled files will prevent make from having any files to compare the timestamps of, resolving the warning.
3According to user m9dhatter on LinuxQuestions.org:
"make" uses the time stamp of the file to determine if the file it is trying to compile is old or new. if your clock is bonked, it may have problems compiling.
if you try to modify files at another machine with a clock time ahead by a few minutes and transfer them to your machine and then try to compile it may cough up a warning that says the file was modified from the future. clock may be skewed or something to that effect ( cant really remember ). you could just ls to the offending file and do this:
#touch <filename of offending file>
I have had this in the past - due to the clocks being out on the machines. Consider setting up NTP so that all machines have the same time.
0This is usually simply due to mismatching times between your host and client machines. You can try to synchronize the times on your machines using ntp.
type in the terminal and it will solve the issue:
find . -type f | xargs -n 5 touch make clean clean
The solution is to run an NTP client , just run the command as below
#ntpdate 172.16.12.100
172.16.12.100 is the ntp server
2Replace the watch battery in your computer. I have seen this error message when the coin looking battery on the motherboard was in need of replacement.
(Just in case anyone lands here) If you have sudo rights one option is to synchronize the system time
sudo date -s "$(wget -qSO- --max-redirect=0 google.com 2>&1 | grep Date: | cut -d' ' -f5-8)Z"
Make checks if the result of the compilation, e.g. somefile.o, is older than the source, e.g. somefile.c. The warning above means that something about the timestaps of the files is strange. Probably the system clocks of the University server differs from your clock and you e.g. push at 1 pm a file with modification date 2 pm. You can see the time at the console by typing date.
This happened to me. It's because I ran make -j 4
and some jobs finished out of order. This warning should be expected when using the -j
option.
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