ntpdc
(1m)
名前
ntpdc - Network Time Protocol special query program
形式
/usr/sbin/ntpdc [-46lpsidnv?!] [-c command] [-D debuglvl]
[-< optfile] [-> optfile] [host] [...]
説明
SunOS 5.11 1
System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
NAME
ntpdc - Network Time Protocol special query program
SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/ntpdc [-46lpsidnv?!] [-c command] [-D debuglvl]
[-< optfile] [-> optfile] [host] [...]
OPTIONS
Specifying a command line option other than -i or -n will
cause the specified query (queries) to be sent to the indi-
cated host(s) immediately. Otherwise, ntpdc will attempt to
read interactive format commands from the standard input.
-4 Force DNS resolution of following host names on the
command line to the IPv4 namespace.
-6 Force DNS resolution of following host names on the
command line to the IPv6 namespace.
-c command
The argument command is interpreted as an interactive
command and is added to the list of commands to be exe-
cuted on the specified host(s). Multiple -c options may
be given.
-i Force ntpdc to operate in interactive mode. Prompts
will be written to the standard output and commands
read from the standard input.
-l Obtain a list of peers which are known to the
server(s). This switch is equivalent to -c listpeers.
-n Output all host addresses in numeric format rather than
converting to the canonical host names.
-p Print a list of the peers known to the server as well
as a summary of their state. This is equivalent to -c
peers.
-s Print a list of the peers known to the server as well
as a summary of their state, but in a slightly differ-
ent format than the -p switch. This is equivalent to -c
dmpeers.
DESCRIPTION
ntpdc is used to query the ntpd daemon about its current
state and to request changes in that state. The program may
be run either in interactive mode or controlled using com-
mand line arguments. Extensive state and statistics informa-
tion 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
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
specified at run time using ntpdc. If one or more request
options are included on the command line when ntpdc is exe-
cuted, each of the requests will be sent to the NTP servers
running on each of the hosts given as command line argu-
ments, 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. ntpdc will prompt
for commands if the standard input is a terminal device.
ntpdc 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 topol-
ogy. ntpdc 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 imple-
mentation of the ntpd daemon and can be expected to work
only with this and maybe some previous versions of the dae-
mon. Requests from a remote ntpdc program 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 resolu-
tion to the IPv6 namespace.
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 program itself and do not result
in NTP mode 7 requests being sent to a server. These are
described following.
? [ command_keyword ], help [ command_keyword ]
A ? by itself will print a list of all the command key-
words known to this incarnation of ntpq. A ? followed
by a command keyword will print function and usage
information about the command. This command is probably
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
a better source of information about ntpq than this
manual page.
delay milliseconds
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.
host hostname
Set the host to which future queries will be sent.
Hostname may be either a host name or a numeric
address.
hostnames [ yes | no ]
If yes is specified, host names are printed in informa-
tion displays. If no is specified, numeric addresses
are printed instead. The default is yes, unless modi-
fied using the command line -n switch.
keyid keyid
This command allows the specification of a key number
to be used to authenticate configuration requests from
ntpdc to the host(s). This must correspond to a key
number which the host/server has been configured to use
for this purpose (server options: trustedkey, and
requestkey). If authentication is not enabled on the
host(s) for ntpdc commands, the command "keyid 0"
should be given; otherwise the keyid of the next subse-
quent addpeer/addserver/broadcast
command will be used.
quit
exit Exit ntpdc.
debug [ no | more | less ]
With no parameter displays the current ntpdc debug
level. The no flag turns off all debugging, while more
and less increase and decrease the level respectively.
passwd
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.
timeout milliseconds
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
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 time-
out, the total waiting time for a timeout will be twice
the timeout value set.
version
Display the version of the ntpdc command.
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.
listpeers
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 candi-
dates.
peers
Obtains a list of peers for which the server is main-
taining state, along with a summary of that state. Sum-
mary 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 * marks the peer the server is cur-
rently synchronizing to. The contents of the host
field may be one of four forms. It may be a host name,
an IP address, a reference clock implementation name
with its parameter or REFCLK(implementation number,
parameter). If the "hostnames no" command has been
given only IP-addresses will be displayed.
dmpeers
A slightly different peer summary list. Identical to
the output of the peers command, except for the charac-
ter in the leftmost column. Characters only appear
beside peers which were included in the final stage of
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
the clock selection algorithm. A . indicates that this
peer was cast off in the falseticker detection, while a
+ indicates that the peer made it through. A * denotes
the peer the server is currently synchronizing with.
showpeer peer_address [...]
Shows a detailed display of the current peer variables
for one or more peers. Most of these values are
described in the NTP Version 2 specification.
pstats peer_address [...]
Show per-peer statistic counters associated with the
specified peer(s).
clockstat clock_peer_address [...]
Obtain and print information concerning a peer clock.
The values obtained provide information on the setting
of fudge factors and other clock performance informa-
tion.
kerninfo
Obtain and print kernel phase-lock loop operating
parameters. This information is available if the host
supports the ntp_adjtime system call.
loopinfo [ oneline | multiline ]
Print the values of selected loop filter variables. The
loop filter is the part of NTP which deals with adjust-
ing the local system clock. The offset is the last off-
set given to the loop filter by the packet processing
code. The frequency is the frequency error of the local
clock in parts-per-million (ppm). The time_const con-
trols the stiffness of the phase-lock loop and thus the
speed at which it can adapt to oscillator drift. The
watchdog timer value is the number of seconds which
have elapsed since the last sample offset was given to
the loop filter. The oneline and multiline options
specify the format in which this information is to be
printed, with multiline as the default.
sysinfo
Print a variety of system state variables, i.e., state
related to the local server. All except the last four
lines are described in the NTP Version 3 specification,
RFC-1305. The system flags show various system flags,
some of which can be set and cleared by the enable and
disable configuration commands, respectively. These are
the auth, bclient, monitor, pll, pps and stats flags.
See the ntpd documentation for the meaning of these
flags. There are two additional flags which are read
only, the kernel_pll and kernel_pps. These flags indi-
cate the synchronization status when the precision time
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
kernel modifications are in use. The kernel_pll indi-
cates that the local clock is being disciplined by the
kernel, while the kernel_pps indicates the kernel dis-
cipline is provided by the PPS signal. The stability
is the residual frequency error remaining after the
system frequency correction is applied and is intended
for maintenance and debugging. In most architectures,
this value will initially decrease from as high as 500
ppm to a nominal value in the range .01 to 0.1 ppm. If
it remains high for some time after starting the dae-
mon, something may be wrong with the local clock, or
the value of the kernel variable tick may be incorrect.
The broadcastdelay shows the default broadcast delay,
as set by the broadcastdelay configuration command.
The authdelay shows the default authentication delay,
as set by the authdelay configuration command.
sysstats
Print statistics counters maintained in the protocol
module.
ctlstats
Print statistics counters maintained in the control
module.
memstats
Print statistics counters related to memory allocation
code.
iostats
Print statistics counters maintained in the input-out-
put module.
timerstats
Print statistics counters maintained in the timer/event
queue support code.
reslist
Obtain and print the server's restriction list. This
list is (usually) printed in sorted order and may help
to understand how the restrictions are applied.
ifstats
List interface statistics for interfaces used by ntpd
for network communication.
ifreload
Force rescan of current system interfaces. Outputs
interface statistics for interfaces that could possibly
change. Marks unchanged interfaces with ., added inter-
faces with + and deleted interfaces with -.
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
monlist [ version ]
Obtain and print traffic counts collected and main-
tained by the monitor facility. The version number
should not normally need to be specified.
clkbug clock_peer_address [...]
Obtain debugging information for a reference clock
driver. This information is provided only by some clock
drivers and is mostly undecodable without a copy of the
driver source in hand.
Runtime Configuration Requests
All requests which cause state changes in the server are
authenticated by the server using a configured NTP key (the
facility can also be disabled by the server by not configur-
ing a key). The key number and the corresponding key must
also be made known to ntpdc. This can be done using the
keyid and passwd commands, the latter of which will prompt
at the terminal for a password to use as the encryption key.
You will also be prompted automatically for both the key
number and password the first time a command which would
result in an authenticated request to the server is given.
Authentication not only provides verification that the
requester has permission to make such changes, but also
gives an extra degree of protection against transmission
errors.
Authenticated requests always include a timestamp in the
packet data, which is included in the computation of the
authentication code. This timestamp is compared by the
server to its receive time stamp. If they differ by more
than a small amount the request is rejected. This is done
for two reasons. First, it makes simple replay attacks on
the server, by someone who might be able to overhear traffic
on your LAN, much more difficult. Second, it makes it more
difficult to request configuration changes to your server
from topologically remote hosts. While the reconfiguration
facility will work well with a server on the local host, and
may work adequately between time-synchronized hosts on the
same LAN, it will work very poorly for more distant hosts.
As such, if reasonable passwords are chosen, care is taken
in the distribution and protection of keys and appropriate
source address restrictions are applied, the run time recon-
figuration facility should provide an adequate level of
security.
The following commands all make authenticated requests.
addpeer peer_address [ keyid ] [ version ]
[ minpoll# | prefer | iburst | burst | minpoll N |
maxpoll N [ dynamic ] [...] ]
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
addpeer peer_address [ prefer | iburst | burst | minpoll N
| maxpoll N | keyid N | version N [...] ]
Add a configured peer association at the given address
and operating in symmetric active mode. Note that an
existing association with the same peer may be deleted
when this command is executed, or may simply be con-
verted to conform to the new configuration, as appro-
priate. If the keyid is nonzero, all outgoing packets
to the remote server will have an authentication field
attached encrypted with this key. If the value is 0 (or
not given) no authentication will be done. If ntpdc's
key number has not yet been set (e.g., by the keyid
command), it will be set to this value. The version#
can be 1 through 4 and defaults to 3. The remaining
options are either a numeric value for minpoll# or lit-
erals prefer, iburst, burst, minpoll N, keyid N, ver-
sion N, or maxpoll N (where N is a numeric value),
and have the action as specified in the peer configura-
tion file command of ntpd. See the server options
page at file:///usr/share/doc/ntp/confopt.html for
further information. Each flag (or its absence)
replaces the previous setting. The prefer keyword indi-
cates a preferred peer (and thus will be used primarily
for clock synchronisation if possible). The preferred
peer also determines the validity of the PPS signal -
if the preferred peer is suitable for synchronisation
so is the PPS signal. The dynamic keyword allows asso-
ciation configuration even when no suitable network
interface is found at configuration time. The dynamic
interface update mechanism may complete the configura-
tion when new interfaces appear (e.g. WLAN/PPP inter-
faces) at a later time and thus render the association
operable.
addserver peer_address [ keyid ] [ version ] [minpoll#
| prefer | iburst | burst | minpoll N | maxpoll N
[...] ]
addserver peer_address [ prefer | iburst | burst | minpoll N
| maxpoll N | keyid N | version N [...] [ dynamic ] ]
Identical to the addpeer command, except that the oper-
ating mode is client.
addrefclock clock_address [ mode [ prefer | burst | minpoll
N
| maxpoll N ...]]
Identical to the addpeer command, except that the
address is a REFCLOCK designator and it configures a
hardware refclock instead of a remote server.
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
broadcast peer_address [ keyid ] [ version ] [ prefer ]
Identical to the addpeer command, except that the oper-
ating mode is broadcast. In this case a valid non-zero
key identifier and key are required. The peer_address
parameter can be the broadcast address of the local
network or a multicast group address assigned to NTP.
If a multicast address, a multicast-capable kernel is
required.
unconfig peer_address [...]
This command causes the configured bit to be removed
from the specified peer(s). In many cases this will
cause the peer association to be deleted. When appro-
priate, however, the association may persist in an
unconfigured mode if the remote peer is willing to con-
tinue on in this fashion.
fudge peer_address [ time1 ] [ time2 ] [ stratum ] [ refid ]
This command provides a way to set certain data for a
reference clock. See the source listing for further
information.
pps | stats]
enable [ auth | bclient | calibrate | kernel | monitor |
ntp |
pps | stats]
disable [ auth | bclient | calibrate | kernel | monitor |
ntp |
These commands operate in the same way as the enable
and disable configuration file commands of ntpd. See
the <a href="miscopt.html">Miscellaneous Options</a>
page for further information.
restrict address mask flag [ flag ]
This command operates in the same way as the restrict
configuration file commands of ntpd.
unrestrict address mask flag [ flag ]
Unrestrict the matching entry from the restrict list.
delrestrict address mask [ ntpport ]
Delete the matching entry from the restrict list.
readkeys
Causes the current set of authentication keys to be
purged and a new set to be obtained by rereading the
keys file (which must have been specified in the ntpd
configuration file). This allows encryption keys to be
changed without restarting the server.
trustedkey keyid [...]
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
untrustedkey keyid [...]
controlkey keyid [...]
requestkey keyid [...]
These commands operate in the same way as the corre-
sponding configuration file commands of ntpd.
keytype md5
This command specifies the default keytype. Since the
only type currently support is md5, this is a nop.
authinfo
Returns information concerning the authentication mod-
ule, including known keys and counts of encryptions and
decryptions which have been done.
traps
Display the traps set in the server. See the source
listing for further information.
addtrap [ address [ port ] [ interface ]
Set a trap for asynchronous messages. See the source
listing for further information.
clrtrap [ address [ port ] [ interface]
Clear a trap for asynchronous messages. See the source
listing for further information.
reset
Clear the statistics counters in various modules of the
server. See the source listing for further information.
preset [peer_address [...]]
Clear the statistics counters in various modules of the
server with respect to the indicated peers.
OPTION PRESETS
Most options may be preset by loading values from configura-
tion file(s) and values from environment variables named:
NTPDC_<option-name> or NTPDC
The environmental presets take precedence (are processed
later than) the configuration files. The option-name should
be in all capital letters. For example, to set the --com-
mand option, you would set the NTPDC_COMMAND environment
variable. The users home directory and the current direc-
tory are searched for a file named .ntprc.
ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following
attributes:
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System Administration Commands ntpdc(1M)
+---------------+----------------------+
|ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |
+---------------+----------------------+
|Availability | service/network/ntp |
+---------------+----------------------+
|Stability | Uncommitted obsolete |
+---------------+----------------------+
SEE ALSO
ntpd(1M), ntpq(1M), ntprc(4), attributes(5)
NOTES
This software was built from source available at
https://java.net/projects/solaris-userland. The original
community source was downloaded from http://ar-
chive.ntp.org/ntp4/ntp-dev/ntp-dev-4.2.7p381.tar.gz
Further information about this software can be found on the
open source community website at http://www.ntp.org/.
SunOS 5.11 Last change: 11