| NTPD(8) | System Manager's Manual | NTPD(8) |
ntpd — Network
Time Protocol (NTP) daemon
ntpd |
[-dnv]
[-f file] |
The ntpd daemon synchronizes the local
clock to one or more remote NTP servers or local timedelta sensors.
ntpd can also act as an NTP server itself,
redistributing the local time. It implements the Simple Network Time
Protocol version 4, as described in RFC 5905, and the Network Time Protocol
version 3, as described in RFC 1305. Time can also be fetched from TLS HTTPS
servers to reduce the impact of unauthenticated NTP man-in-the-middle
attacks.
The options are as follows:
-dntpd will run in the foreground and log to
stderr.-f
file-n-vntpd to send DEBUG priority
messages to syslog.ntpd uses the adjtime(2)
system call to correct the local system time without causing time jumps.
Adjustments of 32ms and greater are logged using
syslog(3). The threshold value is chosen to avoid having
local clock drift thrash the log files. Should ntpd
be started with the -d or -v
option, all calls to adjtime(2) will be logged.
At boot, ntpd will stay for a maximum of
15 seconds in the foreground and make efforts to verify and correct the time
if constraints are configured and satisfied or if trusted servers or sensors
return results, and if the clock is not being moved backwards.
After the local clock is synchronized,
ntpd adjusts the clock frequency using the
adjfreq(2) system call to compensate for systematic
drift.
ntpd is started at boot time by default
via ntpd_flags in
/etc/rc.conf. See rc(8) and
rc.conf(8) for more information on the boot process and
enabling daemons.
When ntpd starts up, it reads settings
from its configuration file, typically ntpd.conf(5), and
its initial clock drift from /var/db/ntpd.drift.
Clock drift is periodically written to the drift file thereafter.
date(1), adjfreq(2), adjtime(2), ntpd.conf(5), ntpctl(8), rc(8), rc.conf(8), rdate(8)
David L. Mills, Network Time Protocol (Version 3): Specification, Implementation and Analysis, RFC 1305, March 1992.
David L. Mills, Jim Martin, Jack Burbank, and William Kasch, Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms Specification, RFC 5905, June 2010.
The ntpd program first appeared in
OpenBSD 3.6.
| March 2, 2023 | Debian |