2003-12-04 21:14:59 +03:00
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.TH MSNTP 1
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.SH NAME
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msntp \- a SNTP utility (command and daemon)
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.SH SYNOPSIS
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.B msntp
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[
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.B \-h
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.B \-\-help
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.B \-?
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] [
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.B \-v
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.B \-V
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.B \-W
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] [
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.B \-B
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[
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.I period
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] |
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.B \-S
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.B \-q
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[
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.BI \-f " savefile"
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] | [ {
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.B \-r
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.B \-a
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} [
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.BI \-P " prompt"
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] [
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.BI \-l " lockfile"
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] ] [
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.BI \-e " minerr"
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] [
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.BI \-E " maxerr"
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] [
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.BI \-c " count"
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] [
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.BI \-d " delay"
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.B \-x
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[
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.I separation
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] ] [
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.BI \-f " savefile"
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] ] [
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.I address(es)
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] ]
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.SH DESCRIPTION
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.PP
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.I msntp
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can be used as a SNTP client to query a NTP or SNTP server and either display
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the time or set the local system's time (given suitable privilege). It can be
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run as an interactive command, in a
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.I cron
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job or as a daemon. It can be run as a daemon to provide a SNTP server for
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other clients. NTP is the Network Time Protocol (RFC 1305) and SNTP is the
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Simple Network Time Protocol (RFC 2030, which supersedes RFC 1769).
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.SS Options
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.PP
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.I msntp
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recognizes the following options:
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.TP
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.B \-h
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displays the syntax error message. If there are no other arguments, it then
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stops; otherwise it then does what was requested.
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.B \-\-help
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and
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.B \-?
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are synonyms.
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.TP
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.B \-v
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indicates that diagnostic messages for non-fatal errors and a limited amount of
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tracing should be written to standard error. Fatal ones always produce a
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diagnostic. This option should be set when there is a suspected problem with
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the server, network or the source.
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.TP
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.B \-V
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requests more and less comprehensible output, mainly for investigating problems
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with apparently inconsistent timestamps. This option should be set when the
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program fails with a message indicating that is the trouble.
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.TP
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.B \-W
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requests very verbose debugging output, and will interfere with the timing
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when writing to the terminal (because of line buffered output from C). Note
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that the times produced by this are the corrections needed, and not the error
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in the local clock. This option should be set only when debugging the source.
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.TP
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.BI \-B " period"
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indicates that it should behave as a server, broadcasting time packets at
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intervals of
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.I period
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minutes (sic). Acceptable values of
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.I period
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are from 1 to 1440 (a day), and the default (i.e. if
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.B \-B
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is specified but
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.I period
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is omitted) is 60. Naturally, this will work only if the user has enough
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privilege.
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.TP
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.B \-S
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indicates that it should behave as a server, responding to time requests from
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clients. Naturally, this will work only if the user has enough privilege.
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.TP
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.B \-q
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indicates that it should query a daemon save file being maintained by it.
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This needs no privilege and will change neither the save file nor the clock.
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.PP
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The default is that it should behave as a client, and the following options
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are then relevant:
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.TP
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.B \-r
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indicates that the system clock should be reset by
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.IR settimeofday .
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Naturally, this will work only if the user has enough privilege.
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.TP
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.B \-a
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indicates that the system clock should be reset by
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.IR adjtime .
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Naturally, this will work only if the user has enough privilege.
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.PP
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The default is to write the estimated correct local date and time (i.e. not
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UTC) to the standard output in a format like
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.BR "'1996 Oct 15 20:17:25.123 + 4.567 +/- 0.089 secs'" ,
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where the
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.B "'+ 4.567 +/- 0.089 secs'"
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indicates the estimated error in the time on the local system. In daemon mode,
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it will add drift information in a format like
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.BR "' + 1.3 +/- 0.1 ppm'" ,
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and display this at roughly
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.I separation
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intervals (see under the
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.B \-x
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option for details).
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.TP
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.BI \-l " lockfile"
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sets the name of the lock file to ensure that there is only
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one copy of
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.I msntp
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running at once. The default is installation-dependent, but will usually be
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.IR /etc/msntp.pid .
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.TP
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.BI \-e " minerr"
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sets the maximum ignorable variation between the clocks to
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.IR minerr .
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Acceptable values are from 0.001 to 1, and the default is 0.1 if a NTP host is
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is specified and 0.5 otherwise.
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.TP
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.BI \-E " maxerr"
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sets the maximum value of various delays that are deemed acceptable to
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.IR maxerr .
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Acceptable values are from 1 to 60, and the default is 5. It should sometimes
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be increased if there are problems with the network, NTP server or system
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clock, but take care.
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.TP
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.BI \-P " prompt"
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sets the maximum clock change that will be made automatically to
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.IR maxerr .
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Acceptable values are from 1 to 3600 or
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.IR no ,
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and the default is 30. If the program is being run interactively in ordinary
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client mode, and the system clock is to be changed, larger corrections will
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prompt the user for confirmation. Specifying
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.I no
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will disable this and the correction will be made regardless.
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.TP
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.BI \-c " count"
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sets the maximum number of NTP packets required to
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.IR count .
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Acceptable values are from 1 to 25 if a NTP host is specified and from 5 to 25
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otherwise, and the default is 5. If the maximum isn't enough, the system needs
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a better consistency algorithm than this program uses.
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.TP
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.BI \-d " delay"
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sets a rough limit on the total running time to
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.I delay
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seconds. Acceptable values are from 1 to 3600, and the default is 15 if a NTP
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host is specified and 300 otherwise.
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.TP
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.BI \-x " separation"
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2003-12-05 03:07:12 +03:00
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causes the program to run as a daemon (i.e. forever), and to estimate and
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2003-12-04 21:14:59 +03:00
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correct for the clock drift.
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.I separation
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sets the minimum time between calls to the server in minutes if a NTP host is
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specified, and between broadcast packets if not. Acceptable values are from 1
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to 1440 (a day), and the default (if
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.B \-x
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is specified but
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.I separation
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is omitted) is 300.
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.TP
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.BI \-f " savefile"
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may be used with the
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.B \-x
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option to store a record of previous packets, which speeds up recalculating
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the drift after
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.I msntp
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has to be restarted (e.g. because of network or server outages). In order to
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restart the data,
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.I msntp
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must be restarted reasonably soon after it died (within a few times the value of
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.IR separation ) ,
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with the same value of the
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.B \-c
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option, the same value of
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.IR separation ,
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in the same mode (i.e. broadcast or client), though the NTP servers need not
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be the same for client mode, and with compatible values of other settings.
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Note that the file will be created with the default ownerships and permissions,
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using standard C facilities. The default is installation-dependent, but will
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usually be
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.IR /etc/msntp.state .
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.PP
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.B address(es)
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are the DNS names or IP numbers of hosts to use for the challenge and response
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protocol; if no names are given, the program waits for broadcasts. Polling a
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server is vastly more reliable than listening to broadcasts. Note that a
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single component numeric address is not allowed, to avoid ambiguities. If
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more than one name is give, they will be used in a round-robin fashion.
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.PP
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Constraints:
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.IP
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.B minerr
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must be less than
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.B maxerr
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which must be less than
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.B delay
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(or, if a NTP host is not specified
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.BR delay / count "),"
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and
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.B count
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must be less than half of
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.BR delay .
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.IP
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In update mode,
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.B maxerr
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must be less than
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.BR prompt .
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2003-12-04 21:14:59 +03:00
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.IP
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In daemon mode (i.e. when
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.B \-x
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is specified),
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.B minerr
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must be less than
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.B maxerr
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which must be less than
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.B separation
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(note that this is in minutes, not seconds, but the numeric value is compared).
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.PP
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Note that none of the above values are closely linked to the limits described
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in the NTP protocol (RFC 1305).
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.SH USAGE
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The simplest use of this program is as an unprivileged command to check the
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current time and error in the local clock. For example:
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.IP
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.B msntp ntpserver.somewhere
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.PP
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It can be run as a unprivileged background process to check on the clock drift
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as well as the current error; this will probably fail if the local clock is
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reset while it is running. For example:
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.IP
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.B msntp -x ntpserver.somewhere > output 2>\*[Am]1 \*[Am]
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.PP
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With suitable privilege, it can be run as a command or in a
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.I cron
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job to reset the local clock from a reliable server, like the
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.I ntpdate
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and
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.I rdate
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commands. For example:
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.IP
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.B msntp -a ntpserver.somewhere
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.PP
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It can also be run as a daemon to keep the local clock in step. For example:
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.IP
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.B msntp -a -x ntpserver.somewhere > output 2>\*[Am]1 \*[Am]
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.PP
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More information on how to use this utility is given in the
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.I README
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file in the distribution. In particular, this
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.I man
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page does not describe how to set it up as a server, which needs special care
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to avoid propagating misinformation.
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.SH RETURN VALUE
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When used as a client in non-daemon mode, the program returns a zero exit
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status for success, and a non-zero one otherwise. When used as a daemon
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(either client or server), it does not return except after a serious error.
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.SH BUGS
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The program implements the SNTP protocol, and does not provide all NTP
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facilities. In particular, it contains no checks against any form of spoofing.
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If this is a serious concern, some network security mechanism (like a firewall
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or even just
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.IR tcpwrappers )
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should be installed.
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.PP
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There are some errors, ambiguities and inconsistencies in the RFCs, and this
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code may not interwork with all other NTP implementations. Any unreasonable
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restrictions should be reported as bugs to whoever is responsible. It may
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be difficult to find out who that is.
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.PP
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The program will stop as soon as it feels that things have got out of control.
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In client daemon mode, it will usually fail during an extended period of
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network or server inaccessibility or excessively slow performance, or when the
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local clock is reset by another process. It will then need restarting
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manually. Experienced system administrators can write a shell script, a
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.I cron
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job or put it in
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.IR inittab ,
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to do this automatically.
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.PP
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The error cannot be estimated reliably with broadcast packets or for the drift
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in daemon mode (even with client-server packets), and the guess made by the
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program may be wrong (possibly even very wrong). If this is a problem, then
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setting the
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.B \-c
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option to a larger value may help. Or it may not.
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.SH AUTHOR
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.I msntp
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was developed by N.M. Maclaren of the University of Cambridge Computing
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Service.
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