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NAME

       ntpd — Network Time Protocol daemon

SYNOPSIS

       ntpd [-dnSsv] [-f file] [-p file]

DESCRIPTION

       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,  but  support is currently not enabled on Debian due to
       missing LibreSSL's libtls implementation at this time.

       The options are as follows:

       -d          Do not daemonize.  If this option is specified, ntpd will run in the foreground  and  log  to
                   stderr.

       -f file     Use file as the configuration file, instead of the default /etc/openntpd/ntpd.conf.

       -n          Configtest mode.  Only check the configuration file for validity.

       -p file     Write pid to file

       -S          Do not set the time immediately at startup.  This is the default.

       -s          Try  to  set the time immediately at startup, as opposed to slowly adjusting the clock.  ntpd
                   will stay in the foreground for up to 15 seconds  waiting  for  one  of  the  configured  NTP
                   servers to reply.

       -v          This option allows ntpd 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.

       After the local clock is synchronized, ntpd adjusts the clock frequency using the adjfreq(2) system  call
       to compensate for systematic drift.

       When  ntpd  starts  up,  it  reads  settings from its configuration file, typically ntpd.conf(5), and its
       initial clock drift from /var/lib/openntpd/ntpd.drift.  Clock drift is periodically written to the  drift
       file thereafter.

FILES

       /etc/openntpd/ntpd.conf          Default configuration file.
       /var/lib/openntpd/ntpd.drift     Drift file.
       /var/lib/openntpd/run/ntpd.sock  Socket file for communication with ntpctl(8).

SEE ALSO

       date(1), adjfreq(2), adjtime(2), ntpd.conf(5), ntpctl(8),

STANDARDS

       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.

HISTORY

       The ntpd program first appeared in OpenBSD 3.6.

Debian                                          September 6, 2017                                        NTPD(8)