systemd-timesyncd.service, systemd-timesyncd — Network Time Synchronization
systemd-timesyncd.service
/usr/lib/systemd/systemd-timesyncd
systemd-timesyncd is a system service that may be used to synchronize the
    local system clock with a remote Network Time Protocol (NTP) server. It also saves the local time to disk
    every time the clock has been synchronized and uses this to possibly advance the system realtime clock on
    subsequent reboots to ensure it (roughly) monotonically advances even if the system lacks a
    battery-buffered RTC chip.
The systemd-timesyncd service implements SNTP only. This minimalistic service
    will step the system clock for large offsets or slowly adjust it for smaller deltas. Complex use cases
    that require full NTP support (and where SNTP is not sufficient) are not covered by
    systemd-timesyncd.
The NTP servers contacted are determined from the global settings in
    timesyncd.conf(5), the
    per-link static settings in .network files, and the per-link dynamic settings
    received over DHCP. See
    systemd.network(5) for
    further details.
timedatectl(1)'s set-ntp command may be used to enable and start, or disable and stop this service.
timedatectl(1)'s timesync-status or show-timesync command can be used to show the current status of this service.
systemd-timesyncd initialization delays the start of units that are ordered
    after time-set.target (see
    systemd.special(7) for
    details) until the local time has been updated from /var/lib/systemd/timesync/clock
    (see below) in order to make it roughly monotonic. It does not delay other units until synchronization
    with an accurate reference time sources has been reached. Use
    systemd-time-wait-sync.service(8)
    to achieve that, which will delay start of units that are ordered after
    time-sync.target until synchronization to an accurate reference clock is
    reached.
/var/lib/systemd/timesync/clock¶The modification time ("mtime") of this file is updated on each successful NTP
          synchronization or after each SaveIntervalSec= time interval, as specified in
          timesyncd.conf(5).
When initializing, the local clock is advanced to the modification time of this file (if the
          file timestamp is in the past this adjustment is not made). If the file does not exist yet, the
          clock is instead advanced to the modification time of /usr/lib/clock-epoch –
          if it exists – or to a time derived from the source tree at build time. This mechanism is used to
          ensure that the system clock remains somewhat reasonably initialized and roughly monotonic across
          reboots, in case no battery-buffered local RTC is available.
/usr/lib/clock-epoch¶The modification time ("mtime") of this file is used for advancing the system clock
        in case /var/lib/systemd/timesync/clock does not exist yet, see
        above.
/run/systemd/timesync/synchronized¶A file that is touched on each successful synchronization, to assist
          systemd-time-wait-sync and other applications to detecting synchronization
          with accurate reference clocks.