ntpdc: NTPD Control User's Manual


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ntpdc: NTPD Control User Manual

This document describes the use of the NTP Project's ntpdc program, that can be used to query a Network Time Protocol (NTP) server and display the time offset of the system clock relative to the server clock. Run as root, it can correct the system clock to this offset as well. It can be run as an interactive command or from a cron job.

This document applies to version 4.2.7p335 of ntpdc.

The program implements the SNTP protocol as defined by RFC 5905, the NTPv4 IETF specification.



Description

By default, ntpdc writes the local data and time (i.e., not UTC) to the standard output in the format:

     1996-10-15 20:17:25.123 (+0800) +4.567 +/- 0.089 secs

where YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS.SUBSEC is the local date and time, (+0800) is the local timezone adjustment (so we would add 8 hours and 0 minutes to convert the reported local time to UTC), and the +4.567 +/- 0.089 secs indicates the time offset and error bound of the system clock relative to the server clock.



Invoking ntpdc

ntpdc is a utility program used to query ntpd(8) about its current state and to request changes in that state. It uses NTP mode 7 control message formats described in the source code. The program may be run either in interactive mode or controlled using command line arguments. Extensive state and statistics information is available through the ntpdc interface. In addition, nearly all the configuration options which can be specified at startup using ntpd's configuration file may also be specified at run time using ntpdc.

This section was generated by AutoGen, using the agtexi-cmd template and the option descriptions for the ntpdc program. This software is released under the NTP license, <http://ntp.org/license>.


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ntpdc help/usage (--help)

This is the automatically generated usage text for ntpdc.

The text printed is the same whether selected with the help option (--help) or the more-help option (--more-help). more-help will print the usage text by passing it through a pager program. more-help is disabled on platforms without a working fork(2) function. The PAGER environment variable is used to select the program, defaulting to more. Both will exit with a status code of 0.

ntpdc - vendor-specific NTPD control program - Ver. 4.2.7p335
USAGE:  ntpdc [ -<flag> [<val>] | --<name>[{=| }<val>] ]... [ host ...]
  Flg Arg Option-Name    Description
   -4 no  ipv4           Force IPv4 DNS name resolution
                                - prohibits these options:
                                ipv6
   -6 no  ipv6           Force IPv6 DNS name resolution
                                - prohibits these options:
                                ipv4
   -c Str command        run a command and exit
                                - may appear multiple times
   -d no  debug-level    Increase debug verbosity level
                                - may appear multiple times
   -D Num set-debug-level Set the debug verbosity level
                                - may appear multiple times
   -i no  interactive    Force ntpq to operate in interactive mode
                                - prohibits these options:
                                command
                                listpeers
                                peers
                                showpeers
   -l no  listpeers      Print a list of the peers
                                - prohibits these options:
                                command
   -n no  numeric        numeric host addresses
   -p no  peers          Print a list of the peers
                                - prohibits these options:
                                command
   -s no  showpeers      Show a list of the peers
                                - prohibits these options:
                                command
      opt version        Output version information and exit
   -? no  help           Display extended usage information and exit
   -! no  more-help      Extended usage information passed thru pager
   -> opt save-opts      Save the option state to a config file
   -< Str load-opts      Load options from a config file
                                - disabled as --no-load-opts
                                - may appear multiple times

Options are specified by doubled hyphens and their name or by a single
hyphen and the flag character.



The following option preset mechanisms are supported:
 - reading file $HOME/.ntprc
 - reading file ./.ntprc
 - examining environment variables named NTPDC_*

please send bug reports to:  http://bugs.ntp.org, bugs@ntp.org


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ipv4 option (-4)

This is the “force ipv4 dns name resolution” option.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

Force DNS resolution of following host names on the command line to the IPv4 namespace.


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ipv6 option (-6)

This is the “force ipv6 dns name resolution” option.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

Force DNS resolution of following host names on the command line to the IPv6 namespace.


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command option (-c)

This is the “run a command and exit” option. This option takes an argument string cmd.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

The following argument is interpreted as an interactive format command and is added to the list of commands to be executed on the specified host(s).


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interactive option (-i)

This is the “force ntpq to operate in interactive mode” option.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

Force ntpq to operate in interactive mode. Prompts will be written to the standard output and commands read from the standard input.


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listpeers option (-l)

This is the “print a list of the peers” option.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary of their state. This is equivalent to the 'listpeers' interactive command.


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numeric option (-n)

This is the “numeric host addresses” option. Output all host addresses in dotted-quad numeric format rather than converting to the canonical host names.


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peers option (-p)

This is the “print a list of the peers” option.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary of their state. This is equivalent to the 'peers' interactive command.


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showpeers option (-s)

This is the “show a list of the peers” option.

This option has some usage constraints. It:

Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary of their state. This is equivalent to the 'dmpeers' interactive command.


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presetting/configuring ntpdc

Any option that is not marked as not presettable may be preset by loading values from configuration ("rc" or "ini") files, and values from environment variables named NTPDC and NTPDC_<OPTION_NAME>. <OPTION_NAME> must be one of the options listed above in upper case and segmented with underscores. The NTPDC variable will be tokenized and parsed like the command line. The remaining variables are tested for existence and their values are treated like option arguments.

libopts will search in 2 places for configuration files:

The environment variables HOME, and PWD are expanded and replaced when ntpdc runs. For any of these that are plain files, they are simply processed. For any that are directories, then a file named .ntprc is searched for within that directory and processed.

Configuration files may be in a wide variety of formats. The basic format is an option name followed by a value (argument) on the same line. Values may be separated from the option name with a colon, equal sign or simply white space. Values may be continued across multiple lines by escaping the newline with a backslash.

Multiple programs may also share the same initialization file. Common options are collected at the top, followed by program specific segments. The segments are separated by lines like:

    [NTPDC]

or by

    <?program ntpdc>

Do not mix these styles within one configuration file.

Compound values and carefully constructed string values may also be specified using XML syntax:

    <option-name>
       <sub-opt>...&lt;...&gt;...</sub-opt>
    </option-name>

yielding an option-name.sub-opt string value of

    "...<...>..."

AutoOpts does not track suboptions. You simply note that it is a hierarchicly valued option. AutoOpts does provide a means for searching the associated name/value pair list (see: optionFindValue).

The command line options relating to configuration and/or usage help are:

version (-)

Print the program version to standard out, optionally with licensing information, then exit 0. The optional argument specifies how much licensing detail to provide. The default is to print just the version. The licensing infomation may be selected with an option argument. Only the first letter of the argument is examined:

version
Only print the version. This is the default.
copyright
Name the copyright usage licensing terms.
verbose
Print the full copyright usage licensing terms.


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ntpdc exit status

One of the following exit values will be returned:

0 (EXIT_SUCCESS)
Successful program execution.
1 (EXIT_FAILURE)
The operation failed or the command syntax was not valid.
66 (EX_NOINPUT)
A specified configuration file could not be loaded.
70 (EX_SOFTWARE)
libopts had an internal operational error. Please report it to autogen-users@lists.sourceforge.net. Thank you.


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ntpdc Usage

If one or more request options are included on the command line when ntpdc is executed, each of the requests will be sent to the NTP servers running on each of the hosts given as command line arguments, or on localhost by default. If no request options are given, ntpdc will attempt to read commands from the standard input and execute these on the NTP server running on the first host given on the command line, again defaulting to localhost when no other host is specified. The ntpdc utility will prompt for commands if the standard input is a terminal device.

The ntpdc utility uses NTP mode 7 packets to communicate with the NTP server, and hence can be used to query any compatible server on the network which permits it. Note that since NTP is a UDP protocol this communication will be somewhat unreliable, especially over large distances in terms of network topology. The ntpdc utility makes no attempt to retransmit requests, and will time requests out if the remote host is not heard from within a suitable timeout time.

The operation of ntpdc are specific to the particular implementation of the ntpd(8) daemon and can be expected to work only with this and maybe some previous versions of the daemon. Requests from a remote ntpdc utility which affect the state of the local server must be authenticated, which requires both the remote program and local server share a common key and key identifier.

Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a -4 qualifier preceding the host name forces DNS resolution to the IPv4 namespace, while a -6 qualifier forces DNS resolution to the IPv6 namespace. Specifying a command line option other than -i or -n will cause the specified query (queries) to be sent to the indicated host(s) immediately. Otherwise, ntpdc will attempt to read interactive format commands from the standard input.



Interactive Commands

Interactive Commands Interactive format commands consist of a keyword followed by zero to four arguments. Only enough characters of the full keyword to uniquely identify the command need be typed. The output of a command is normally sent to the standard output, but optionally the output of individual commands may be sent to a file by appending a \&>, followed by a file name, to the command line.

A number of interactive format commands are executed entirely within the ntpdc utility itself and do not result in NTP mode 7 requests being sent to a server. These are described following.

Ic
Ic
A Ic\&? will print a list of all the command keywords known to this incarnation of ntpdc. A Ic\&? followed by a command keyword will print function and usage information about the command. This command is probably a better source of information about ntpq(8) than this manual page.
Ic
Specify a time interval to be added to timestamps included in requests which require authentication. This is used to enable (unreliable) server reconfiguration over long delay network paths or between machines whose clocks are unsynchronized. Actually the server does not now require timestamps in authenticated requests, so this command may be obsolete.
Ic
Set the host to which future queries will be sent. Hostname may be either a host name or a numeric address.
Ic
If yes is specified, host names are printed in information displays. If no is specified, numeric addresses are printed instead. The default is yes, unless modified using the command line -n switch.
Ic
This command allows the specification of a key number to be used to authenticate configuration requests. This must correspond to a key number the server has been configured to use for this purpose.
Ic
Exit ntpdc.
Ic
This command prompts you to type in a password (which will not be echoed) which will be used to authenticate configuration requests. The password must correspond to the key configured for use by the NTP server for this purpose if such requests are to be successful.
Ic
Specify a timeout period for responses to server queries. The default is about 8000 milliseconds. Note that since ntpdc retries each query once after a timeout, the total waiting time for a timeout will be twice the timeout value set.



Control Message Commands

Control Message Commands Query commands result in NTP mode 7 packets containing requests for information being sent to the server. These are read-only commands in that they make no modification of the server configuration state.

Ic
Obtains and prints a brief list of the peers for which the server is maintaining state. These should include all configured peer associations as well as those peers whose stratum is such that they are considered by the server to be possible future synchronization candidates.
Ic
Obtains a list of peers for which the server is maintaining state, along with a summary of that state. Summary information includes the address of the remote peer, the local interface address (0.0.0.0 if a local address has yet to be determined), the stratum of the remote peer (a stratum of 16 indicates the remote peer is unsynchronized), the polling interval, in seconds, the reachability register, in octal, and the current estimated delay, offset and dispersion of the peer, all in seconds.

The character in the left margin indicates the mode this peer entry is operating in. A \&+ denotes symmetric active, a \&- indicates symmetric passive, a \&= means the remote server is being polled in client mode, a \&^ indicates that the server is broadcasting to this address, a \&~ denotes that the remote peer is sending broadcasts and a \&~ denotes that the remote peer is sending broadcasts and a \&* marks the peer the server is currently synchronizing to.