ntp_misc man page on Oracle

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ntp_misc(5)							   ntp_misc(5)

NAME
       ntp_misc - Miscellaneous Options

       broadcastdelay seconds
	       The broadcast and multicast modes require a special calibration
	       to determine the network delay between  the  local  and	remote
	       servers.	 Ordinarily, this is done automatically by the initial
	       protocol exchanges between  the	client	and  server.  In  some
	       cases,  the  calibration	 procedure  may fail due to network or
	       server access controls, for example. This command specifies the
	       default	delay  to be used under these circumstances. Typically
	       (for Ethernet), a number between 0.003  and  0.007  seconds  is
	       appropriate.

       driftfile driftfile { tolerance ]
	       This  command  specifies the complete path and name of the file
	       used to record the frequency of	the  local  clock  oscillator.
	       This  is	 the same operation as the -f command linke option. If
	       the file exists, it is read at startup in order to set the ini‐
	       tial  frequency and then updated once per hour or more with the
	       current frequency computed by the daemon. If the file  name  is
	       specified,  but the file itself does not exist, the starts with
	       an initial frequency of zero and creates the file when  writing
	       it for the first time. If this command is not given, the daemon
	       will always start with an initial frequency of zero.  The  file
	       format  consists	 of a single line containing a single floating
	       point number, which records the frequency  offset  measured  in
	       parts-per-million  (PPM).  The file is updated by first writing
	       the current drift value into a temporary file and then renaming
	       this  file  to  replace the old version. This implies that ntpd
	       must have write permission for the directory the drift file  is
	       located	in, and that file system links, symbolic or otherwise,
	       should be avoided.   The	 parameter  tolerance  is  the	wander
	       threshold to skip writing the new value. If the value of wander
	       computed from recent frequency changes  is  greater  than  this
	       threshold  the file will be updated once per hour. If below the
	       threshold, the file will not be written.

       enable [ auth | bclient | calibrate | kernel | monitor | ntp  |	pps  |
       stats]

       disable	[  auth | bclient | calibrate | kernel | monitor | ntp | pps |
       stats ]
	       Provides a way to enable or  disable  various  system  options.
	       Flags  not  mentioned  are  unaffected.	Note that all of these
	       flags can be controlled remotely using the ntpdc	 utility  pro‐
	       gram.

	       auth    Enables	the  server  to	 synchronize with unconfigured
		       peers only if the peer has been correctly authenticated
		       using  either  public  key or private key cryptography.
		       The default for this flag is enable.

	       bclient Enables the server to  listen  for  a  message  from  a
		       broadcast  or  multicast	 server,  as in the multicast‐
		       client command with default address.  The  default  for
		       this flag is disable.

	       calibrate
		       Enables the calibrate feature for reference clocks. The
		       default for this flag is disable.

	       kernel  Enables the kernel time discipline, if  available.  The
		       default	for  this  flag is enable if support is avail‐
		       able, otherwise disable.

	       monitor Enables the monitoring facility. See the ntpdc  program
		       and  the	 monlist  command  or further information. The
		       default for this flag is enable.

	       ntp     Enables time and frequency discipline. In effect,  this
		       switch  opens  and  closes  the feedback loop, which is
		       useful for  testing.  The  default  for	this  flag  is
		       enable.

	       stats   Enables	the  statistics	 facility.  See the Monitoring
		       Options page for further information. The  default  for
		       this flag is disable.

       includefile includefile
	       This  command  allows  additional  configuration commands to be
	       included from a separate file. Include files may be nested to a
	       depth  of five; upon reaching the end of any include file, com‐
	       mand processing resumes in  the	previous  configuration	 file.
	       This  option  is	 useful	 for  sites  that run ntpd on multiple
	       hosts, with (mostly) common options (e.g., a restriction list).

       interface [listen | ignore | drop] [all | ipv4 | ipv6 | wildcard | name
       | address[/prefixlen]]
	       This  command  controls which network addresses ntpd opens, and
	       whether input is dropped without processing. The first  parame‐
	       ter  determines the action for addresses which match the second
	       parameter. That parameter specifies a class of addresses, or  a
	       specific	 interface  name,  or an address. In the address case,
	       prefixlen determines how many bits must match for this rule  to
	       apply.  ignore prevents opening matching addresses, drop causes
	       ntpd to open the address and drop all received packets  without
	       examination.  Multiple interface commands can be used. The last
	       rule which matches a particular address determines  the	action
	       for it. interface commands are disabled if any -I, --interface,
	       -L, or --novirtualips command-line options are used. If none of
	       those  options  are used and no interface actions are specified
	       in the configuration file, all available network addresses  are
	       opened. The nic command is an alias for interface.

       leapfile leapfile
	       This  command  loads  the NIST leapseconds file and initializes
	       the leapsecond values for the next leapsecond time,  expiration
	       time  and  TAI  offset.	The file can be obtained directly from
	       NIST  national  time  servers  using  ftp  as  the  ASCII  file
	       pub/leap-seconds.   While not strictly a security function, the
	       Autokey protocol provides means to securely retrieve  the  cur‐
	       rent or updated leapsecond values from a server.

       logconfig configkeyword
	       This  command controls the amount and type of output written to
	       the system syslog facility or the alternate logfile  log	 file.
	       All  configkeyword  keywords  can  be prefixed with =, + and -,
	       where = sets the syslogmask, + adds  and	 -  removes  messages.
	       syslog messages can be controlled in four classes (clock, peer,
	       sys and sync). Within these classes four types of messages  can
	       be  controlled:	informational  messages (info), event messages
	       (events), statistics messages (statistics) and status  messages
	       (status).   Configuration  keywords are formed by concatenating
	       the message class with the event class. The all prefix  can  be
	       used  instead  of  a message class. A message class may also be
	       followed by the all keyword to enable/disable all  messages  of
	       the  respective	message class. By default, logconfig output is
	       set to =syncall +sysevents +sysstatus.	Thus,  a  minimal  log
	       configuration  could  look  like	 this:	logconfig  =syncstatus
	       +sysevents This would just list the synchronizations  state  of
	       ntpd  and  the  major  system  events.  For  a simple reference
	       server, the following minimum message  configuration  could  be
	       useful:	logconfig  =syncall  +clockall This configuration will
	       list all clock information and synchronization information. All
	       other  events and messages about peers, system events and so on
	       is suppressed.

       logfile logfile
	       This command specifies the location of an alternate log file to
	       be  used instead of the default system syslog facility. This is
	       the same operation as the -l command line option.

       phone dial1 dial2 ...
	       This command is used in conjunction with the ACTS modem	driver
	       (type  18).  The arguments consist of a maximum of 10 telephone
	       numbers used to dial USNO, NIST or European time services.  The
	       Hayes  command  ATDT is normally prepended to the number, which
	       can contain other modem control codes as well.

       saveconfigdir directory_path
	       Specify the directory in which to write configuration snapshots
	       requested with ntpq's saveconfig command. If saveconfigdir does
	       not appear in the configuration file, saveconfig	 requests  are
	       rejected by ntpd.

       setvar variable [default]
	       This  command  adds  an additional system variable. These vari‐
	       ables can be used to distribute additional information such  as
	       the  access policy. If the variable of the form name = value is
	       followed by the default keyword, the variable will be listed as
	       part  of	 the default system variables (ntpq rv command). These
	       additional variables serve informational	 purposes  only.  They
	       are  not related to the protocol other that they can be listed.
	       The known protocol variables will always override any variables
	       defined via the setvar mechanism. There are three special vari‐
	       ables that contain the names of all variable of the same group.
	       The  sys_var_list  holds the names of all system variables. The
	       peer_var_list holds the names of all  peer  variables  and  the
	       clock_var_list  holds  the  names  of the reference clock vari‐
	       ables.

       tinker [ allan allan | dispersion dispersion |  freq  freq  |  huffpuff
       huffpuff | panic panic | step step | stepout stepout ]
	       This  command alters certain system variables used by the clock
	       discipline algorithm. The default  values  of  these  variables
	       have  been  carefully  optimized	 for  a	 wide range of network
	       speeds and reliability expectations. Very rarely is  it	neces‐
	       sary to change the default values; but, some folks can't resist
	       twisting the knobs. The options are as follows:

	       allan allan
		       Spedifies the Allan intercept, which is a parameter  of
		       the PLL/FLL clock discipline algorithm, in seconds with
		       default 1500 s.

	       dispersion dispersion
		       Specifies the dispersion increase  rate	in  parts-per-
		       million (PPM) with default 15 PPM.

	       freq freq
		       Spedifies  the  frequency  offset  in parts-per-million
		       (PPM) with default the value in the frequency file.

	       huffpuff huffpuff
		       Spedifies the huff-n'-puff filter  span,	 which	deter‐
		       mines  the  most	 recent	 interval  the	algorithm will
		       search for a minimum delay. The lower limit  is	900  s
		       (15 m), but a more reasonable value is 7200 (2 hours).

	       panic panic
		       Spedifies  the  panic threshold in seconds with default
		       1000 s. If set to zero, the panic sanity check is  dis‐
		       abled and a clock offset of any value will be accepted.

	       step step
		       Spedifies  the  step  threshold in seconds. The default
		       without this command is 0.128 s. If set to  zero,  step
		       adjustments  will  never	 occur.	 Note: The kernel time
		       discipline is disabled if the step threshold is set  to
		       zero or greater than 0.5 s.

	       stepout stepout
		       Specifies the stepout threshold in seconds. The default
		       without this command is 900 s. If set to zero,  popcorn
		       spikes will not be suppressed.

       tos  [ beacon beacon | ceiling ceiling | cohort {0 | 1} | floor floor |
       maxclock maxclock | maxdist  maxdist  |	minclock  minclock  |  mindist
       mindist | minsane minsane | orphan stratum ]
	       This  command  alters  certain system variables used by the the
	       clock selection and clustering algorithms. The  default	values
	       of  these  variables  have  been carefully optimized for a wide
	       range of network	 speeds	 and  reliability  expectations.  Very
	       rarely  is it necessary to change the default values; but, some
	       folks can't resist twisting the knobs. It can be used to select
	       the  quality and quantity of peers used to synchronize the sys‐
	       tem clock and  is  most	useful	in  dynamic  server  discovery
	       schemes. The options are as follows:

	       beacon beacon
		       The  manycast server sends packets at intervals of 64 s
		       if less than maxclock servers are available. Otherwise,
		       it sends packets at the beacon interval in seconds. The
		       default is 3600 s. See the Automatic  Server  Discovery
		       page for further details.

	       ceiling ceiling
		       Specify	the maximum stratum (exclusive) for acceptable
		       server packets. The default is 16.  See	the  Automatic
		       Server Discovery page for further details.

	       cohort { 0 | 1 }
		       Specify	whether (1) or whether not (0) a server packet
		       will be accepted for the same stratum  as  the  client.
		       The  default  is	 0. See the Automatic Server Discovery
		       page for further details.

	       floor floor
		       Specify the minimum stratum (inclusive) for  acceptable
		       server  packest.	 The  default  is 1. See the Automatic
		       Server Discovery page for further details.

	       maxclock maxclock
		       Specify the maximum number of servers retained  by  the
		       server  discovery  schemes.  The default is 10. See the
		       Automatic Server Discovery page for further details.

	       maxdist maxdistance
		       Specify the synchronization distance threshold used  by
		       the  clock  selection  algorithm. The default is 1.5 s.
		       This determines both the minimum number of  packets  to
		       set  the	 system clock and the maximum roundtrip delay.
		       It can be decreased to improve reliability or increased
		       to synchronize clocks on the Moon or planets.

	       minclock minclock
		       Specify	the  number  of servers used by the clustering
		       algorithm as the minimum to include  on	the  candidate
		       list.  The  default  is	3.  This is also the number of
		       servers to be averaged by the combining algorithm.

	       mindist mindistance
		       Specify the minimum distance used by the selection  and
		       anticlockhop algorithm. Larger values increase the tol‐
		       erance for outliers; smaller values increase the selec‐
		       tivity.	The  default is .001 s. In some cases, such as
		       reference clocks with high jitter and a PPS signal,  it
		       is useful to increase the value to insure the intersec‐
		       tion interval is always nonempty.

	       minsane minsane
		       Specify the number of servers  used  by	the  selection
		       algorithm  as  the minimum to set the system clock. The
		       default is 1 for legacy purposes; however, for critical
		       applications  the  value	 should be somewhat higher but
		       less than minclock.

	       orphan stratum
		       Specify the orphan stratum with	default	 16.  If  less
		       than  16	 this  is  the	stratum	 assumed  by  the root
		       servers. See the Association Management page  for  fur‐
		       ther details.

       trap host_address [port port_number] [interface interfSace_address]
	       This  command  configures  a  trap  receiver  at the given host
	       address and port number for sending messages with the specified
	       local  interface	 address. If the port number is unspecified, a
	       value of 18447 is used. If the interface address is not	speci‐
	       fied,  the  message  is sent with a source address of the local
	       interface the message is sent through. Note that	 on  a	multi‐
	       homed  host  the interface used may vary from time to time with
	       routing changes.	 The trap receiver will	 generally  log	 event
	       messages	 and  other information from the server in a log file.
	       While such monitor programs may also  request  their  own  trap
	       dynamically,  configuring  a  trap receiver will ensure that no
	       messages are lost when the server is started.

       ttl hop ...
	       This command specifies a	 list  of  TTL	values	in  increasing
	       order.  up to 8 values can be specified. In manycast mode these
	       values are used	in  turn  in  an  expanding-ring  search.  The
	       default is eight multiples of 32 starting at 31.

SEE ALSO
       ntp.conf(5)

       The official HTML documentation.

       This file was automatically generated from HTML source.

								   ntp_misc(5)
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