xref: /freebsd/contrib/ntp/ntpd/ntp.conf.def (revision e0c4386e)
1/* -*- Mode: Text -*- */
2
3autogen definitions options;
4
5#include copyright.def
6
7// We want the synopsis to be "/etc/ntp.conf" but we need the prog-name
8// to be ntp.conf - the latter is also how autogen produces the output
9// file name.
10prog-name	= "ntp.conf";
11file-path	= "/etc/ntp.conf";
12prog-title	= "Network Time Protocol (NTP) daemon configuration file format";
13
14/* explain: Additional information whenever the usage routine is invoked */
15explain = <<- _END_EXPLAIN
16	_END_EXPLAIN;
17
18doc-section	= {
19  ds-type	= 'DESCRIPTION';
20  ds-format	= 'mdoc';
21  ds-text	= <<- _END_PROG_MDOC_DESCRIP
22The
23.Nm
24configuration file is read at initial startup by the
25.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
26daemon in order to specify the synchronization sources,
27modes and other related information.
28Usually, it is installed in the
29.Pa /etc
30directory,
31but could be installed elsewhere
32(see the daemon's
33.Fl c
34command line option).
35.Pp
36The file format is similar to other
37.Ux
38configuration files.
39Comments begin with a
40.Ql #
41character and extend to the end of the line;
42blank lines are ignored.
43Configuration commands consist of an initial keyword
44followed by a list of arguments,
45some of which may be optional, separated by whitespace.
46Commands may not be continued over multiple lines.
47Arguments may be host names,
48host addresses written in numeric, dotted-quad form,
49integers, floating point numbers (when specifying times in seconds)
50and text strings.
51.Pp
52The rest of this page describes the configuration and control options.
53The
54.Qq Notes on Configuring NTP and Setting up an NTP Subnet
55page
56(available as part of the HTML documentation
57provided in
58.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp )
59contains an extended discussion of these options.
60In addition to the discussion of general
61.Sx Configuration Options ,
62there are sections describing the following supported functionality
63and the options used to control it:
64.Bl -bullet -offset indent
65.It
66.Sx Authentication Support
67.It
68.Sx Monitoring Support
69.It
70.Sx Access Control Support
71.It
72.Sx Automatic NTP Configuration Options
73.It
74.Sx Reference Clock Support
75.It
76.Sx Miscellaneous Options
77.El
78.Pp
79Following these is a section describing
80.Sx Miscellaneous Options .
81While there is a rich set of options available,
82the only required option is one or more
83.Ic pool ,
84.Ic server ,
85.Ic peer ,
86.Ic broadcast
87or
88.Ic manycastclient
89commands.
90.Sh Configuration Support
91Following is a description of the configuration commands in
92NTPv4.
93These commands have the same basic functions as in NTPv3 and
94in some cases new functions and new arguments.
95There are two
96classes of commands, configuration commands that configure a
97persistent association with a remote server or peer or reference
98clock, and auxiliary commands that specify environmental variables
99that control various related operations.
100.Ss Configuration Commands
101The various modes are determined by the command keyword and the
102type of the required IP address.
103Addresses are classed by type as
104(s) a remote server or peer (IPv4 class A, B and C), (b) the
105broadcast address of a local interface, (m) a multicast address (IPv4
106class D), or (r) a reference clock address (127.127.x.x).
107Note that
108only those options applicable to each command are listed below.
109Use
110of options not listed may not be caught as an error, but may result
111in some weird and even destructive behavior.
112.Pp
113If the Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6 (RFC-2553)
114is detected, support for the IPv6 address family is generated
115in addition to the default support of the IPv4 address family.
116In a few cases, including the
117.Cm reslist
118billboard generated
119by
120.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
121or
122.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc ,
123IPv6 addresses are automatically generated.
124IPv6 addresses can be identified by the presence of colons
125.Dq \&:
126in the address field.
127IPv6 addresses can be used almost everywhere where
128IPv4 addresses can be used,
129with the exception of reference clock addresses,
130which are always IPv4.
131.Pp
132Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a
133.Fl 4
134qualifier preceding
135the host name forces DNS resolution to the IPv4 namespace,
136while a
137.Fl 6
138qualifier forces DNS resolution to the IPv6 namespace.
139See IPv6 references for the
140equivalent classes for that address family.
141.Bl -tag -width indent
142.It Xo Ic pool Ar address
143.Op Cm burst
144.Op Cm iburst
145.Op Cm version Ar version
146.Op Cm prefer
147.Op Cm minpoll Ar minpoll
148.Op Cm maxpoll Ar maxpoll
149.Op Cm xmtnonce
150.Xc
151.It Xo Ic server Ar address
152.Op Cm key Ar key \&| Cm autokey
153.Op Cm burst
154.Op Cm iburst
155.Op Cm version Ar version
156.Op Cm prefer
157.Op Cm minpoll Ar minpoll
158.Op Cm maxpoll Ar maxpoll
159.Op Cm true
160.Op Cm xmtnonce
161.Xc
162.It Xo Ic peer Ar address
163.Op Cm key Ar key \&| Cm autokey
164.Op Cm version Ar version
165.Op Cm prefer
166.Op Cm minpoll Ar minpoll
167.Op Cm maxpoll Ar maxpoll
168.Op Cm true
169.Op Cm xleave
170.Xc
171.It Xo Ic broadcast Ar address
172.Op Cm key Ar key \&| Cm autokey
173.Op Cm version Ar version
174.Op Cm prefer
175.Op Cm minpoll Ar minpoll
176.Op Cm ttl Ar ttl
177.Op Cm xleave
178.Xc
179.It Xo Ic manycastclient Ar address
180.Op Cm key Ar key \&| Cm autokey
181.Op Cm version Ar version
182.Op Cm prefer
183.Op Cm minpoll Ar minpoll
184.Op Cm maxpoll Ar maxpoll
185.Op Cm ttl Ar ttl
186.Xc
187.El
188.Pp
189These five commands specify the time server name or address to
190be used and the mode in which to operate.
191The
192.Ar address
193can be
194either a DNS name or an IP address in dotted-quad notation.
195Additional information on association behavior can be found in the
196.Qq Association Management
197page
198(available as part of the HTML documentation
199provided in
200.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
201.Bl -tag -width indent
202.It Ic pool
203For type s addresses, this command mobilizes a persistent
204client mode association with a number of remote servers.
205In this mode the local clock can synchronized to the
206remote server, but the remote server can never be synchronized to
207the local clock.
208.It Ic server
209For type s and r addresses, this command mobilizes a persistent
210client mode association with the specified remote server or local
211radio clock.
212In this mode the local clock can synchronized to the
213remote server, but the remote server can never be synchronized to
214the local clock.
215This command should
216.Em not
217be used for type
218b or m addresses.
219.It Ic peer
220For type s addresses (only), this command mobilizes a
221persistent symmetric-active mode association with the specified
222remote peer.
223In this mode the local clock can be synchronized to
224the remote peer or the remote peer can be synchronized to the local
225clock.
226This is useful in a network of servers where, depending on
227various failure scenarios, either the local or remote peer may be
228the better source of time.
229This command should NOT be used for type
230b, m or r addresses.
231.It Ic broadcast
232For type b and m addresses (only), this
233command mobilizes a persistent broadcast mode association.
234Multiple
235commands can be used to specify multiple local broadcast interfaces
236(subnets) and/or multiple multicast groups.
237Note that local
238broadcast messages go only to the interface associated with the
239subnet specified, but multicast messages go to all interfaces.
240In broadcast mode the local server sends periodic broadcast
241messages to a client population at the
242.Ar address
243specified, which is usually the broadcast address on (one of) the
244local network(s) or a multicast address assigned to NTP.
245The IANA
246has assigned the multicast group address IPv4 224.0.1.1 and
247IPv6 ff05::101 (site local) exclusively to
248NTP, but other nonconflicting addresses can be used to contain the
249messages within administrative boundaries.
250Ordinarily, this
251specification applies only to the local server operating as a
252sender; for operation as a broadcast client, see the
253.Ic broadcastclient
254or
255.Ic multicastclient
256commands
257below.
258.It Ic manycastclient
259For type m addresses (only), this command mobilizes a
260manycast client mode association for the multicast address
261specified.
262In this case a specific address must be supplied which
263matches the address used on the
264.Ic manycastserver
265command for
266the designated manycast servers.
267The NTP multicast address
268224.0.1.1 assigned by the IANA should NOT be used, unless specific
269means are taken to avoid spraying large areas of the Internet with
270these messages and causing a possibly massive implosion of replies
271at the sender.
272The
273.Ic manycastserver
274command specifies that the local server
275is to operate in client mode with the remote servers that are
276discovered as the result of broadcast/multicast messages.
277The
278client broadcasts a request message to the group address associated
279with the specified
280.Ar address
281and specifically enabled
282servers respond to these messages.
283The client selects the servers
284providing the best time and continues as with the
285.Ic server
286command.
287The remaining servers are discarded as if never
288heard.
289.El
290.Pp
291Options:
292.Bl -tag -width indent
293.It Cm autokey
294All packets sent to and received from the server or peer are to
295include authentication fields encrypted using the autokey scheme
296described in
297.Sx Authentication Options .
298.It Cm burst
299when the server is reachable, send a burst of eight packets
300instead of the usual one.
301The packet spacing is normally 2 s;
302however, the spacing between the first and second packets
303can be changed with the
304.Ic calldelay
305command to allow
306additional time for a modem or ISDN call to complete.
307This is designed to improve timekeeping quality
308with the
309.Ic server
310command and s addresses.
311.It Cm iburst
312When the server is unreachable, send a burst of eight packets
313instead of the usual one.
314The packet spacing is normally 2 s;
315however, the spacing between the first two packets can be
316changed with the
317.Ic calldelay
318command to allow
319additional time for a modem or ISDN call to complete.
320This is designed to speed the initial synchronization
321acquisition with the
322.Ic server
323command and s addresses and when
324.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
325is started with the
326.Fl q
327option.
328.It Cm key Ar key
329All packets sent to and received from the server or peer are to
330include authentication fields encrypted using the specified
331.Ar key
332identifier with values from 1 to 65535, inclusive.
333The
334default is to include no encryption field.
335.It Cm minpoll Ar minpoll
336.It Cm maxpoll Ar maxpoll
337These options specify the minimum and maximum poll intervals
338for NTP messages, as a power of 2 in seconds
339The maximum poll
340interval defaults to 10 (1,024 s), but can be increased by the
341.Cm maxpoll
342option to an upper limit of 17 (36.4 h).
343The
344minimum poll interval defaults to 6 (64 s), but can be decreased by
345the
346.Cm minpoll
347option to a lower limit of 4 (16 s).
348.It Cm noselect
349Marks the server as unused, except for display purposes.
350The server is discarded by the selection algroithm.
351.It Cm preempt
352Says the association can be preempted.
353.It Cm prefer
354Marks the server as preferred.
355All other things being equal,
356this host will be chosen for synchronization among a set of
357correctly operating hosts.
358See the
359.Qq Mitigation Rules and the prefer Keyword
360page
361(available as part of the HTML documentation
362provided in
363.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp )
364for further information.
365.It Cm true
366Marks the server as a truechimer,
367forcing the association to always survive the selection and clustering algorithms.
368This option should almost certainly
369.Em only
370be used while testing an association.
371.It Cm ttl Ar ttl
372This option is used only with broadcast server and manycast
373client modes.
374It specifies the time-to-live
375.Ar ttl
376to
377use on broadcast server and multicast server and the maximum
378.Ar ttl
379for the expanding ring search with manycast
380client packets.
381Selection of the proper value, which defaults to
382127, is something of a black art and should be coordinated with the
383network administrator.
384.It Cm version Ar version
385Specifies the version number to be used for outgoing NTP
386packets.
387Versions 1-4 are the choices, with version 4 the
388default.
389.It Cm xleave
390Valid in
391.Cm peer
392and
393.Cm broadcast
394modes only, this flag enables interleave mode.
395.It Cm xmtnonce
396Valid only for
397.Cm server
398and
399.Cm pool
400modes, this flag puts a random number in the packet's transmit timestamp.
401
402.El
403.Ss Auxiliary Commands
404.Bl -tag -width indent
405.It Ic broadcastclient
406This command enables reception of broadcast server messages to
407any local interface (type b) address.
408Upon receiving a message for
409the first time, the broadcast client measures the nominal server
410propagation delay using a brief client/server exchange with the
411server, then enters the broadcast client mode, in which it
412synchronizes to succeeding broadcast messages.
413Note that, in order
414to avoid accidental or malicious disruption in this mode, both the
415server and client should operate using symmetric-key or public-key
416authentication as described in
417.Sx Authentication Options .
418.It Ic manycastserver Ar address ...
419This command enables reception of manycast client messages to
420the multicast group address(es) (type m) specified.
421At least one
422address is required, but the NTP multicast address 224.0.1.1
423assigned by the IANA should NOT be used, unless specific means are
424taken to limit the span of the reply and avoid a possibly massive
425implosion at the original sender.
426Note that, in order to avoid
427accidental or malicious disruption in this mode, both the server
428and client should operate using symmetric-key or public-key
429authentication as described in
430.Sx Authentication Options .
431.It Ic multicastclient Ar address ...
432This command enables reception of multicast server messages to
433the multicast group address(es) (type m) specified.
434Upon receiving
435a message for the first time, the multicast client measures the
436nominal server propagation delay using a brief client/server
437exchange with the server, then enters the broadcast client mode, in
438which it synchronizes to succeeding multicast messages.
439Note that,
440in order to avoid accidental or malicious disruption in this mode,
441both the server and client should operate using symmetric-key or
442public-key authentication as described in
443.Sx Authentication Options .
444.It Ic mdnstries Ar number
445If we are participating in mDNS,
446after we have synched for the first time
447we attempt to register with the mDNS system.
448If that registration attempt fails,
449we try again at one minute intervals for up to
450.Ic mdnstries
451times.
452After all,
453.Ic ntpd
454may be starting before mDNS.
455The default value for
456.Ic mdnstries
457is 5.
458.El
459.Sh Authentication Support
460Authentication support allows the NTP client to verify that the
461server is in fact known and trusted and not an intruder intending
462accidentally or on purpose to masquerade as that server.
463The NTPv3
464specification RFC-1305 defines a scheme which provides
465cryptographic authentication of received NTP packets.
466Originally,
467this was done using the Data Encryption Standard (DES) algorithm
468operating in Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) mode, commonly called
469DES-CBC.
470Subsequently, this was replaced by the RSA Message Digest
4715 (MD5) algorithm using a private key, commonly called keyed-MD5.
472Either algorithm computes a message digest, or one-way hash, which
473can be used to verify the server has the correct private key and
474key identifier.
475.Pp
476NTPv4 retains the NTPv3 scheme, properly described as symmetric key
477cryptography and, in addition, provides a new Autokey scheme
478based on public key cryptography.
479Public key cryptography is generally considered more secure
480than symmetric key cryptography, since the security is based
481on a private value which is generated by each server and
482never revealed.
483With Autokey all key distribution and
484management functions involve only public values, which
485considerably simplifies key distribution and storage.
486Public key management is based on X.509 certificates,
487which can be provided by commercial services or
488produced by utility programs in the OpenSSL software library
489or the NTPv4 distribution.
490.Pp
491While the algorithms for symmetric key cryptography are
492included in the NTPv4 distribution, public key cryptography
493requires the OpenSSL software library to be installed
494before building the NTP distribution.
495Directions for doing that
496are on the Building and Installing the Distribution page.
497.Pp
498Authentication is configured separately for each association
499using the
500.Cm key
501or
502.Cm autokey
503subcommand on the
504.Ic peer ,
505.Ic server ,
506.Ic broadcast
507and
508.Ic manycastclient
509configuration commands as described in
510.Sx Configuration Options
511page.
512The authentication
513options described below specify the locations of the key files,
514if other than default, which symmetric keys are trusted
515and the interval between various operations, if other than default.
516.Pp
517Authentication is always enabled,
518although ineffective if not configured as
519described below.
520If a NTP packet arrives
521including a message authentication
522code (MAC), it is accepted only if it
523passes all cryptographic checks.
524The
525checks require correct key ID, key value
526and message digest.
527If the packet has
528been modified in any way or replayed
529by an intruder, it will fail one or more
530of these checks and be discarded.
531Furthermore, the Autokey scheme requires a
532preliminary protocol exchange to obtain
533the server certificate, verify its
534credentials and initialize the protocol
535.Pp
536The
537.Cm auth
538flag controls whether new associations or
539remote configuration commands require cryptographic authentication.
540This flag can be set or reset by the
541.Ic enable
542and
543.Ic disable
544commands and also by remote
545configuration commands sent by a
546.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
547program running on
548another machine.
549If this flag is enabled, which is the default
550case, new broadcast client and symmetric passive associations and
551remote configuration commands must be cryptographically
552authenticated using either symmetric key or public key cryptography.
553If this
554flag is disabled, these operations are effective
555even if not cryptographic
556authenticated.
557It should be understood
558that operating with the
559.Ic auth
560flag disabled invites a significant vulnerability
561where a rogue hacker can
562masquerade as a falseticker and seriously
563disrupt system timekeeping.
564It is
565important to note that this flag has no purpose
566other than to allow or disallow
567a new association in response to new broadcast
568and symmetric active messages
569and remote configuration commands and, in particular,
570the flag has no effect on
571the authentication process itself.
572.Pp
573An attractive alternative where multicast support is available
574is manycast mode, in which clients periodically troll
575for servers as described in the
576.Sx Automatic NTP Configuration Options
577page.
578Either symmetric key or public key
579cryptographic authentication can be used in this mode.
580The principle advantage
581of manycast mode is that potential servers need not be
582configured in advance,
583since the client finds them during regular operation,
584and the configuration
585files for all clients can be identical.
586.Pp
587The security model and protocol schemes for
588both symmetric key and public key
589cryptography are summarized below;
590further details are in the briefings, papers
591and reports at the NTP project page linked from
592.Li http://www.ntp.org/ .
593.Ss Symmetric-Key Cryptography
594The original RFC-1305 specification allows any one of possibly
59565,535 keys, each distinguished by a 32-bit key identifier, to
596authenticate an association.
597The servers and clients involved must
598agree on the key and key identifier to
599authenticate NTP packets.
600Keys and
601related information are specified in a key
602file, usually called
603.Pa ntp.keys ,
604which must be distributed and stored using
605secure means beyond the scope of the NTP protocol itself.
606Besides the keys used
607for ordinary NTP associations,
608additional keys can be used as passwords for the
609.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
610and
611.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
612utility programs.
613.Pp
614When
615.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
616is first started, it reads the key file specified in the
617.Ic keys
618configuration command and installs the keys
619in the key cache.
620However,
621individual keys must be activated with the
622.Ic trusted
623command before use.
624This
625allows, for instance, the installation of possibly
626several batches of keys and
627then activating or deactivating each batch
628remotely using
629.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc .
630This also provides a revocation capability that can be used
631if a key becomes compromised.
632The
633.Ic requestkey
634command selects the key used as the password for the
635.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
636utility, while the
637.Ic controlkey
638command selects the key used as the password for the
639.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
640utility.
641.Ss Public Key Cryptography
642NTPv4 supports the original NTPv3 symmetric key scheme
643described in RFC-1305 and in addition the Autokey protocol,
644which is based on public key cryptography.
645The Autokey Version 2 protocol described on the Autokey Protocol
646page verifies packet integrity using MD5 message digests
647and verifies the source with digital signatures and any of several
648digest/signature schemes.
649Optional identity schemes described on the Identity Schemes
650page and based on cryptographic challenge/response algorithms
651are also available.
652Using all of these schemes provides strong security against
653replay with or without modification, spoofing, masquerade
654and most forms of clogging attacks.
655.\" .Pp
656.\" The cryptographic means necessary for all Autokey operations
657.\" is provided by the OpenSSL software library.
658.\" This library is available from http://www.openssl.org/
659.\" and can be installed using the procedures outlined
660.\" in the Building and Installing the Distribution page.
661.\" Once installed,
662.\" the configure and build
663.\" process automatically detects the library and links
664.\" the library routines required.
665.Pp
666The Autokey protocol has several modes of operation
667corresponding to the various NTP modes supported.
668Most modes use a special cookie which can be
669computed independently by the client and server,
670but encrypted in transmission.
671All modes use in addition a variant of the S-KEY scheme,
672in which a pseudo-random key list is generated and used
673in reverse order.
674These schemes are described along with an executive summary,
675current status, briefing slides and reading list on the
676.Sx Autonomous Authentication
677page.
678.Pp
679The specific cryptographic environment used by Autokey servers
680and clients is determined by a set of files
681and soft links generated by the
682.Xr ntp-keygen 1ntpkeygenmdoc
683program.
684This includes a required host key file,
685required certificate file and optional sign key file,
686leapsecond file and identity scheme files.
687The
688digest/signature scheme is specified in the X.509 certificate
689along with the matching sign key.
690There are several schemes
691available in the OpenSSL software library, each identified
692by a specific string such as
693.Cm md5WithRSAEncryption ,
694which stands for the MD5 message digest with RSA
695encryption scheme.
696The current NTP distribution supports
697all the schemes in the OpenSSL library, including
698those based on RSA and DSA digital signatures.
699.Pp
700NTP secure groups can be used to define cryptographic compartments
701and security hierarchies.
702It is important that every host
703in the group be able to construct a certificate trail to one
704or more trusted hosts in the same group.
705Each group
706host runs the Autokey protocol to obtain the certificates
707for all hosts along the trail to one or more trusted hosts.
708This requires the configuration file in all hosts to be
709engineered so that, even under anticipated failure conditions,
710the NTP subnet will form such that every group host can find
711a trail to at least one trusted host.
712.Ss Naming and Addressing
713It is important to note that Autokey does not use DNS to
714resolve addresses, since DNS can't be completely trusted
715until the name servers have synchronized clocks.
716The cryptographic name used by Autokey to bind the host identity
717credentials and cryptographic values must be independent
718of interface, network and any other naming convention.
719The name appears in the host certificate in either or both
720the subject and issuer fields, so protection against
721DNS compromise is essential.
722.Pp
723By convention, the name of an Autokey host is the name returned
724by the Unix
725.Xr gethostname 2
726system call or equivalent in other systems.
727By the system design
728model, there are no provisions to allow alternate names or aliases.
729However, this is not to say that DNS aliases, different names
730for each interface, etc., are constrained in any way.
731.Pp
732It is also important to note that Autokey verifies authenticity
733using the host name, network address and public keys,
734all of which are bound together by the protocol specifically
735to deflect masquerade attacks.
736For this reason Autokey
737includes the source and destination IP addresses in message digest
738computations and so the same addresses must be available
739at both the server and client.
740For this reason operation
741with network address translation schemes is not possible.
742This reflects the intended robust security model where government
743and corporate NTP servers are operated outside firewall perimeters.
744.Ss Operation
745A specific combination of authentication scheme (none,
746symmetric key, public key) and identity scheme is called
747a cryptotype, although not all combinations are compatible.
748There may be management configurations where the clients,
749servers and peers may not all support the same cryptotypes.
750A secure NTPv4 subnet can be configured in many ways while
751keeping in mind the principles explained above and
752in this section.
753Note however that some cryptotype
754combinations may successfully interoperate with each other,
755but may not represent good security practice.
756.Pp
757The cryptotype of an association is determined at the time
758of mobilization, either at configuration time or some time
759later when a message of appropriate cryptotype arrives.
760When mobilized by a
761.Ic server
762or
763.Ic peer
764configuration command and no
765.Ic key
766or
767.Ic autokey
768subcommands are present, the association is not
769authenticated; if the
770.Ic key
771subcommand is present, the association is authenticated
772using the symmetric key ID specified; if the
773.Ic autokey
774subcommand is present, the association is authenticated
775using Autokey.
776.Pp
777When multiple identity schemes are supported in the Autokey
778protocol, the first message exchange determines which one is used.
779The client request message contains bits corresponding
780to which schemes it has available.
781The server response message
782contains bits corresponding to which schemes it has available.
783Both server and client match the received bits with their own
784and select a common scheme.
785.Pp
786Following the principle that time is a public value,
787a server responds to any client packet that matches
788its cryptotype capabilities.
789Thus, a server receiving
790an unauthenticated packet will respond with an unauthenticated
791packet, while the same server receiving a packet of a cryptotype
792it supports will respond with packets of that cryptotype.
793However, unconfigured broadcast or manycast client
794associations or symmetric passive associations will not be
795mobilized unless the server supports a cryptotype compatible
796with the first packet received.
797By default, unauthenticated associations will not be mobilized
798unless overridden in a decidedly dangerous way.
799.Pp
800Some examples may help to reduce confusion.
801Client Alice has no specific cryptotype selected.
802Server Bob has both a symmetric key file and minimal Autokey files.
803Alice's unauthenticated messages arrive at Bob, who replies with
804unauthenticated messages.
805Cathy has a copy of Bob's symmetric
806key file and has selected key ID 4 in messages to Bob.
807Bob verifies the message with his key ID 4.
808If it's the
809same key and the message is verified, Bob sends Cathy a reply
810authenticated with that key.
811If verification fails,
812Bob sends Cathy a thing called a crypto-NAK, which tells her
813something broke.
814She can see the evidence using the
815.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
816program.
817.Pp
818Denise has rolled her own host key and certificate.
819She also uses one of the identity schemes as Bob.
820She sends the first Autokey message to Bob and they
821both dance the protocol authentication and identity steps.
822If all comes out okay, Denise and Bob continue as described above.
823.Pp
824It should be clear from the above that Bob can support
825all the girls at the same time, as long as he has compatible
826authentication and identity credentials.
827Now, Bob can act just like the girls in his own choice of servers;
828he can run multiple configured associations with multiple different
829servers (or the same server, although that might not be useful).
830But, wise security policy might preclude some cryptotype
831combinations; for instance, running an identity scheme
832with one server and no authentication with another might not be wise.
833.Ss Key Management
834The cryptographic values used by the Autokey protocol are
835incorporated as a set of files generated by the
836.Xr ntp-keygen 1ntpkeygenmdoc
837utility program, including symmetric key, host key and
838public certificate files, as well as sign key, identity parameters
839and leapseconds files.
840Alternatively, host and sign keys and
841certificate files can be generated by the OpenSSL utilities
842and certificates can be imported from public certificate
843authorities.
844Note that symmetric keys are necessary for the
845.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
846and
847.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
848utility programs.
849The remaining files are necessary only for the
850Autokey protocol.
851.Pp
852Certificates imported from OpenSSL or public certificate
853authorities have certian limitations.
854The certificate should be in ASN.1 syntax, X.509 Version 3
855format and encoded in PEM, which is the same format
856used by OpenSSL.
857The overall length of the certificate encoded
858in ASN.1 must not exceed 1024 bytes.
859The subject distinguished
860name field (CN) is the fully qualified name of the host
861on which it is used; the remaining subject fields are ignored.
862The certificate extension fields must not contain either
863a subject key identifier or a issuer key identifier field;
864however, an extended key usage field for a trusted host must
865contain the value
866.Cm trustRoot ; .
867Other extension fields are ignored.
868.Ss Authentication Commands
869.Bl -tag -width indent
870.It Ic autokey Op Ar logsec
871Specifies the interval between regenerations of the session key
872list used with the Autokey protocol.
873Note that the size of the key
874list for each association depends on this interval and the current
875poll interval.
876The default value is 12 (4096 s or about 1.1 hours).
877For poll intervals above the specified interval, a session key list
878with a single entry will be regenerated for every message
879sent.
880.It Ic controlkey Ar key
881Specifies the key identifier to use with the
882.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
883utility, which uses the standard
884protocol defined in RFC-1305.
885The
886.Ar key
887argument is
888the key identifier for a trusted key, where the value can be in the
889range 1 to 65,535, inclusive.
890.It Xo Ic crypto
891.Op Cm cert Ar file
892.Op Cm leap Ar file
893.Op Cm randfile Ar file
894.Op Cm host Ar file
895.Op Cm sign Ar file
896.Op Cm gq Ar file
897.Op Cm gqpar Ar file
898.Op Cm iffpar Ar file
899.Op Cm mvpar Ar file
900.Op Cm pw Ar password
901.Xc
902This command requires the OpenSSL library.
903It activates public key
904cryptography, selects the message digest and signature
905encryption scheme and loads the required private and public
906values described above.
907If one or more files are left unspecified,
908the default names are used as described above.
909Unless the complete path and name of the file are specified, the
910location of a file is relative to the keys directory specified
911in the
912.Ic keysdir
913command or default
914.Pa /usr/local/etc .
915Following are the subcommands:
916.Bl -tag -width indent
917.It Cm cert Ar file
918Specifies the location of the required host public certificate file.
919This overrides the link
920.Pa ntpkey_cert_ Ns Ar hostname
921in the keys directory.
922.It Cm gqpar Ar file
923Specifies the location of the optional GQ parameters file.
924This
925overrides the link
926.Pa ntpkey_gq_ Ns Ar hostname
927in the keys directory.
928.It Cm host Ar file
929Specifies the location of the required host key file.
930This overrides
931the link
932.Pa ntpkey_key_ Ns Ar hostname
933in the keys directory.
934.It Cm iffpar Ar file
935Specifies the location of the optional IFF parameters file.
936This overrides the link
937.Pa ntpkey_iff_ Ns Ar hostname
938in the keys directory.
939.It Cm leap Ar file
940Specifies the location of the optional leapsecond file.
941This overrides the link
942.Pa ntpkey_leap
943in the keys directory.
944.It Cm mvpar Ar file
945Specifies the location of the optional MV parameters file.
946This overrides the link
947.Pa ntpkey_mv_ Ns Ar hostname
948in the keys directory.
949.It Cm pw Ar password
950Specifies the password to decrypt files containing private keys and
951identity parameters.
952This is required only if these files have been
953encrypted.
954.It Cm randfile Ar file
955Specifies the location of the random seed file used by the OpenSSL
956library.
957The defaults are described in the main text above.
958.It Cm sign Ar file
959Specifies the location of the optional sign key file.
960This overrides
961the link
962.Pa ntpkey_sign_ Ns Ar hostname
963in the keys directory.
964If this file is
965not found, the host key is also the sign key.
966.El
967.It Ic keys Ar keyfile
968Specifies the complete path and location of the MD5 key file
969containing the keys and key identifiers used by
970.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc ,
971.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
972and
973.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
974when operating with symmetric key cryptography.
975This is the same operation as the
976.Fl k
977command line option.
978.It Ic keysdir Ar path
979This command specifies the default directory path for
980cryptographic keys, parameters and certificates.
981The default is
982.Pa /usr/local/etc/ .
983.It Ic requestkey Ar key
984Specifies the key identifier to use with the
985.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
986utility program, which uses a
987proprietary protocol specific to this implementation of
988.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc .
989The
990.Ar key
991argument is a key identifier
992for the trusted key, where the value can be in the range 1 to
99365,535, inclusive.
994.It Ic revoke Ar logsec
995Specifies the interval between re-randomization of certain
996cryptographic values used by the Autokey scheme, as a power of 2 in
997seconds.
998These values need to be updated frequently in order to
999deflect brute-force attacks on the algorithms of the scheme;
1000however, updating some values is a relatively expensive operation.
1001The default interval is 16 (65,536 s or about 18 hours).
1002For poll
1003intervals above the specified interval, the values will be updated
1004for every message sent.
1005.It Ic trustedkey Ar key ...
1006Specifies the key identifiers which are trusted for the
1007purposes of authenticating peers with symmetric key cryptography,
1008as well as keys used by the
1009.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
1010and
1011.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
1012programs.
1013The authentication procedures require that both the local
1014and remote servers share the same key and key identifier for this
1015purpose, although different keys can be used with different
1016servers.
1017The
1018.Ar key
1019arguments are 32-bit unsigned
1020integers with values from 1 to 65,535.
1021.El
1022.Ss Error Codes
1023The following error codes are reported via the NTP control
1024and monitoring protocol trap mechanism.
1025.Bl -tag -width indent
1026.It 101
1027.Pq bad field format or length
1028The packet has invalid version, length or format.
1029.It 102
1030.Pq bad timestamp
1031The packet timestamp is the same or older than the most recent received.
1032This could be due to a replay or a server clock time step.
1033.It 103
1034.Pq bad filestamp
1035The packet filestamp is the same or older than the most recent received.
1036This could be due to a replay or a key file generation error.
1037.It 104
1038.Pq bad or missing public key
1039The public key is missing, has incorrect format or is an unsupported type.
1040.It 105
1041.Pq unsupported digest type
1042The server requires an unsupported digest/signature scheme.
1043.It 106
1044.Pq mismatched digest types
1045Not used.
1046.It 107
1047.Pq bad signature length
1048The signature length does not match the current public key.
1049.It 108
1050.Pq signature not verified
1051The message fails the signature check.
1052It could be bogus or signed by a
1053different private key.
1054.It 109
1055.Pq certificate not verified
1056The certificate is invalid or signed with the wrong key.
1057.It 110
1058.Pq certificate not verified
1059The certificate is not yet valid or has expired or the signature could not
1060be verified.
1061.It 111
1062.Pq bad or missing cookie
1063The cookie is missing, corrupted or bogus.
1064.It 112
1065.Pq bad or missing leapseconds table
1066The leapseconds table is missing, corrupted or bogus.
1067.It 113
1068.Pq bad or missing certificate
1069The certificate is missing, corrupted or bogus.
1070.It 114
1071.Pq bad or missing identity
1072The identity key is missing, corrupt or bogus.
1073.El
1074.Sh Monitoring Support
1075.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1076includes a comprehensive monitoring facility suitable
1077for continuous, long term recording of server and client
1078timekeeping performance.
1079See the
1080.Ic statistics
1081command below
1082for a listing and example of each type of statistics currently
1083supported.
1084Statistic files are managed using file generation sets
1085and scripts in the
1086.Pa ./scripts
1087directory of the source code distribution.
1088Using
1089these facilities and
1090.Ux
1091.Xr cron 8
1092jobs, the data can be
1093automatically summarized and archived for retrospective analysis.
1094.Ss Monitoring Commands
1095.Bl -tag -width indent
1096.It Ic statistics Ar name ...
1097Enables writing of statistics records.
1098Currently, eight kinds of
1099.Ar name
1100statistics are supported.
1101.Bl -tag -width indent
1102.It Cm clockstats
1103Enables recording of clock driver statistics information.
1104Each update
1105received from a clock driver appends a line of the following form to
1106the file generation set named
1107.Cm clockstats :
1108.Bd -literal
110949213 525.624 127.127.4.1 93 226 00:08:29.606 D
1110.Ed
1111.Pp
1112The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and time
1113(seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
1114The next field shows the
1115clock address in dotted-quad notation.
1116The final field shows the last
1117timecode received from the clock in decoded ASCII format, where
1118meaningful.
1119In some clock drivers a good deal of additional information
1120can be gathered and displayed as well.
1121See information specific to each
1122clock for further details.
1123.It Cm cryptostats
1124This option requires the OpenSSL cryptographic software library.
1125It
1126enables recording of cryptographic public key protocol information.
1127Each message received by the protocol module appends a line of the
1128following form to the file generation set named
1129.Cm cryptostats :
1130.Bd -literal
113149213 525.624 127.127.4.1 message
1132.Ed
1133.Pp
1134The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and time
1135(seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
1136The next field shows the peer
1137address in dotted-quad notation, The final message field includes the
1138message type and certain ancillary information.
1139See the
1140.Sx Authentication Options
1141section for further information.
1142.It Cm loopstats
1143Enables recording of loop filter statistics information.
1144Each
1145update of the local clock outputs a line of the following form to
1146the file generation set named
1147.Cm loopstats :
1148.Bd -literal
114950935 75440.031 0.000006019 13.778190 0.000351733 0.0133806
1150.Ed
1151.Pp
1152The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and
1153time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
1154The next five fields
1155show time offset (seconds), frequency offset (parts per million -
1156PPM), RMS jitter (seconds), Allan deviation (PPM) and clock
1157discipline time constant.
1158.It Cm peerstats
1159Enables recording of peer statistics information.
1160This includes
1161statistics records of all peers of a NTP server and of special
1162signals, where present and configured.
1163Each valid update appends a
1164line of the following form to the current element of a file
1165generation set named
1166.Cm peerstats :
1167.Bd -literal
116848773 10847.650 127.127.4.1 9714 -0.001605376 0.000000000 0.001424877 0.000958674
1169.Ed
1170.Pp
1171The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and
1172time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
1173The next two fields
1174show the peer address in dotted-quad notation and status,
1175respectively.
1176The status field is encoded in hex in the format
1177described in Appendix A of the NTP specification RFC 1305.
1178The final four fields show the offset,
1179delay, dispersion and RMS jitter, all in seconds.
1180.It Cm rawstats
1181Enables recording of raw-timestamp statistics information.
1182This
1183includes statistics records of all peers of a NTP server and of
1184special signals, where present and configured.
1185Each NTP message
1186received from a peer or clock driver appends a line of the
1187following form to the file generation set named
1188.Cm rawstats :
1189.Bd -literal
119050928 2132.543 128.4.1.1 128.4.1.20 3102453281.584327000 3102453281.58622800031 02453332.540806000 3102453332.541458000
1191.Ed
1192.Pp
1193The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and
1194time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
1195The next two fields
1196show the remote peer or clock address followed by the local address
1197in dotted-quad notation.
1198The final four fields show the originate,
1199receive, transmit and final NTP timestamps in order.
1200The timestamp
1201values are as received and before processing by the various data
1202smoothing and mitigation algorithms.
1203.It Cm sysstats
1204Enables recording of ntpd statistics counters on a periodic basis.
1205Each
1206hour a line of the following form is appended to the file generation
1207set named
1208.Cm sysstats :
1209.Bd -literal
121050928 2132.543 36000 81965 0 9546 56 71793 512 540 10 147
1211.Ed
1212.Pp
1213The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and time
1214(seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
1215The remaining ten fields show
1216the statistics counter values accumulated since the last generated
1217line.
1218.Bl -tag -width indent
1219.It Time since restart Cm 36000
1220Time in hours since the system was last rebooted.
1221.It Packets received Cm 81965
1222Total number of packets received.
1223.It Packets processed Cm 0
1224Number of packets received in response to previous packets sent
1225.It Current version Cm 9546
1226Number of packets matching the current NTP version.
1227.It Previous version Cm 56
1228Number of packets matching the previous NTP version.
1229.It Bad version Cm 71793
1230Number of packets matching neither NTP version.
1231.It Access denied Cm 512
1232Number of packets denied access for any reason.
1233.It Bad length or format Cm 540
1234Number of packets with invalid length, format or port number.
1235.It Bad authentication Cm 10
1236Number of packets not verified as authentic.
1237.It Rate exceeded Cm 147
1238Number of packets discarded due to rate limitation.
1239.El
1240.It Cm statsdir Ar directory_path
1241Indicates the full path of a directory where statistics files
1242should be created (see below).
1243This keyword allows
1244the (otherwise constant)
1245.Cm filegen
1246filename prefix to be modified for file generation sets, which
1247is useful for handling statistics logs.
1248.It Cm filegen Ar name Xo
1249.Op Cm file Ar filename
1250.Op Cm type Ar typename
1251.Op Cm link | nolink
1252.Op Cm enable | disable
1253.Xc
1254Configures setting of generation file set name.
1255Generation
1256file sets provide a means for handling files that are
1257continuously growing during the lifetime of a server.
1258Server statistics are a typical example for such files.
1259Generation file sets provide access to a set of files used
1260to store the actual data.
1261At any time at most one element
1262of the set is being written to.
1263The type given specifies
1264when and how data will be directed to a new element of the set.
1265This way, information stored in elements of a file set
1266that are currently unused are available for administrational
1267operations without the risk of disturbing the operation of ntpd.
1268(Most important: they can be removed to free space for new data
1269produced.)
1270.Pp
1271Note that this command can be sent from the
1272.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
1273program running at a remote location.
1274.Bl -tag -width indent
1275.It Cm name
1276This is the type of the statistics records, as shown in the
1277.Cm statistics
1278command.
1279.It Cm file Ar filename
1280This is the file name for the statistics records.
1281Filenames of set
1282members are built from three concatenated elements
1283.Ar Cm prefix ,
1284.Ar Cm filename
1285and
1286.Ar Cm suffix :
1287.Bl -tag -width indent
1288.It Cm prefix
1289This is a constant filename path.
1290It is not subject to
1291modifications via the
1292.Ar filegen
1293option.
1294It is defined by the
1295server, usually specified as a compile-time constant.
1296It may,
1297however, be configurable for individual file generation sets
1298via other commands.
1299For example, the prefix used with
1300.Ar loopstats
1301and
1302.Ar peerstats
1303generation can be configured using the
1304.Ar statsdir
1305option explained above.
1306.It Cm filename
1307This string is directly concatenated to the prefix mentioned
1308above (no intervening
1309.Ql / ) .
1310This can be modified using
1311the file argument to the
1312.Ar filegen
1313statement.
1314No
1315.Pa ..
1316elements are
1317allowed in this component to prevent filenames referring to
1318parts outside the filesystem hierarchy denoted by
1319.Ar prefix .
1320.It Cm suffix
1321This part is reflects individual elements of a file set.
1322It is
1323generated according to the type of a file set.
1324.El
1325.It Cm type Ar typename
1326A file generation set is characterized by its type.
1327The following
1328types are supported:
1329.Bl -tag -width indent
1330.It Cm none
1331The file set is actually a single plain file.
1332.It Cm pid
1333One element of file set is used per incarnation of a ntpd
1334server.
1335This type does not perform any changes to file set
1336members during runtime, however it provides an easy way of
1337separating files belonging to different
1338.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1339server incarnations.
1340The set member filename is built by appending a
1341.Ql \&.
1342to concatenated
1343.Ar prefix
1344and
1345.Ar filename
1346strings, and
1347appending the decimal representation of the process ID of the
1348.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1349server process.
1350.It Cm day
1351One file generation set element is created per day.
1352A day is
1353defined as the period between 00:00 and 24:00 UTC.
1354The file set
1355member suffix consists of a
1356.Ql \&.
1357and a day specification in
1358the form
1359.Cm YYYYMMdd .
1360.Cm YYYY
1361is a 4-digit year number (e.g., 1992).
1362.Cm MM
1363is a two digit month number.
1364.Cm dd
1365is a two digit day number.
1366Thus, all information written at 10 December 1992 would end up
1367in a file named
1368.Ar prefix
1369.Ar filename Ns .19921210 .
1370.It Cm week
1371Any file set member contains data related to a certain week of
1372a year.
1373The term week is defined by computing day-of-year
1374modulo 7.
1375Elements of such a file generation set are
1376distinguished by appending the following suffix to the file set
1377filename base: A dot, a 4-digit year number, the letter
1378.Cm W ,
1379and a 2-digit week number.
1380For example, information from January,
138110th 1992 would end up in a file with suffix
1382.No . Ns Ar 1992W1 .
1383.It Cm month
1384One generation file set element is generated per month.
1385The
1386file name suffix consists of a dot, a 4-digit year number, and
1387a 2-digit month.
1388.It Cm year
1389One generation file element is generated per year.
1390The filename
1391suffix consists of a dot and a 4 digit year number.
1392.It Cm age
1393This type of file generation sets changes to a new element of
1394the file set every 24 hours of server operation.
1395The filename
1396suffix consists of a dot, the letter
1397.Cm a ,
1398and an 8-digit number.
1399This number is taken to be the number of seconds the server is
1400running at the start of the corresponding 24-hour period.
1401Information is only written to a file generation by specifying
1402.Cm enable ;
1403output is prevented by specifying
1404.Cm disable .
1405.El
1406.It Cm link | nolink
1407It is convenient to be able to access the current element of a file
1408generation set by a fixed name.
1409This feature is enabled by
1410specifying
1411.Cm link
1412and disabled using
1413.Cm nolink .
1414If link is specified, a
1415hard link from the current file set element to a file without
1416suffix is created.
1417When there is already a file with this name and
1418the number of links of this file is one, it is renamed appending a
1419dot, the letter
1420.Cm C ,
1421and the pid of the
1422.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1423server process.
1424When the
1425number of links is greater than one, the file is unlinked.
1426This
1427allows the current file to be accessed by a constant name.
1428.It Cm enable \&| Cm disable
1429Enables or disables the recording function.
1430.El
1431.El
1432.El
1433.Sh Access Control Support
1434The
1435.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1436daemon implements a general purpose address/mask based restriction
1437list.
1438The list contains address/match entries sorted first
1439by increasing address values and and then by increasing mask values.
1440A match occurs when the bitwise AND of the mask and the packet
1441source address is equal to the bitwise AND of the mask and
1442address in the list.
1443The list is searched in order with the
1444last match found defining the restriction flags associated
1445with the entry.
1446Additional information and examples can be found in the
1447.Qq Notes on Configuring NTP and Setting up a NTP Subnet
1448page
1449(available as part of the HTML documentation
1450provided in
1451.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
1452.Pp
1453The restriction facility was implemented in conformance
1454with the access policies for the original NSFnet backbone
1455time servers.
1456Later the facility was expanded to deflect
1457cryptographic and clogging attacks.
1458While this facility may
1459be useful for keeping unwanted or broken or malicious clients
1460from congesting innocent servers, it should not be considered
1461an alternative to the NTP authentication facilities.
1462Source address based restrictions are easily circumvented
1463by a determined cracker.
1464.Pp
1465Clients can be denied service because they are explicitly
1466included in the restrict list created by the
1467.Ic restrict
1468command
1469or implicitly as the result of cryptographic or rate limit
1470violations.
1471Cryptographic violations include certificate
1472or identity verification failure; rate limit violations generally
1473result from defective NTP implementations that send packets
1474at abusive rates.
1475Some violations cause denied service
1476only for the offending packet, others cause denied service
1477for a timed period and others cause the denied service for
1478an indefinite period.
1479When a client or network is denied access
1480for an indefinite period, the only way at present to remove
1481the restrictions is by restarting the server.
1482.Ss The Kiss-of-Death Packet
1483Ordinarily, packets denied service are simply dropped with no
1484further action except incrementing statistics counters.
1485Sometimes a
1486more proactive response is needed, such as a server message that
1487explicitly requests the client to stop sending and leave a message
1488for the system operator.
1489A special packet format has been created
1490for this purpose called the "kiss-of-death" (KoD) packet.
1491KoD packets have the leap bits set unsynchronized and stratum set
1492to zero and the reference identifier field set to a four-byte
1493ASCII code.
1494If the
1495.Cm noserve
1496or
1497.Cm notrust
1498flag of the matching restrict list entry is set,
1499the code is "DENY"; if the
1500.Cm limited
1501flag is set and the rate limit
1502is exceeded, the code is "RATE".
1503Finally, if a cryptographic violation occurs, the code is "CRYP".
1504.Pp
1505A client receiving a KoD performs a set of sanity checks to
1506minimize security exposure, then updates the stratum and
1507reference identifier peer variables, sets the access
1508denied (TEST4) bit in the peer flash variable and sends
1509a message to the log.
1510As long as the TEST4 bit is set,
1511the client will send no further packets to the server.
1512The only way at present to recover from this condition is
1513to restart the protocol at both the client and server.
1514This
1515happens automatically at the client when the association times out.
1516It will happen at the server only if the server operator cooperates.
1517.Ss Access Control Commands
1518.Bl -tag -width indent
1519.It Xo Ic discard
1520.Op Cm average Ar avg
1521.Op Cm minimum Ar min
1522.Op Cm monitor Ar prob
1523.Xc
1524Set the parameters of the
1525.Cm limited
1526facility which protects the server from
1527client abuse.
1528The
1529.Cm average
1530subcommand specifies the minimum average packet
1531spacing in log2 seconds, defaulting to 3 (8s), while the
1532.Cm minimum
1533subcommand specifies the minimum packet spacing
1534in seconds, defaulting to 2.
1535Packets that violate these minima are discarded
1536and a kiss-o'-death packet returned if enabled.
1537The
1538.Ic monitor
1539subcommand indirectly specifies the probability of
1540replacing the oldest entry from the monitor (MRU)
1541list of recent requests used to enforce rate controls,
1542when that list is at its maximum size. The probability
1543of replacing the oldest entry is the age of that entry
1544in seconds divided by the
1545.Ic monitor
1546value, default 3000. For example, if the oldest entry
1547in the MRU list represents a request 300 seconds ago,
1548by default the probability of replacing it with an
1549entry representing the client request being processed
1550now is 10%. Conversely, if the oldest entry is more
1551than 3000 seconds old, the probability is 100%.
1552.It Xo Ic restrict address
1553.Op Cm mask Ar mask
1554.Op Cm ippeerlimit Ar int
1555.Op Ar flag ...
1556.Xc
1557The
1558.Ar address
1559argument expressed in
1560dotted-quad form is the address of a host or network.
1561Alternatively, the
1562.Ar address
1563argument can be a valid host DNS name.
1564The
1565.Ar mask
1566argument expressed in dotted-quad form defaults to
1567.Cm 255.255.255.255 ,
1568meaning that the
1569.Ar address
1570is treated as the address of an individual host.
1571A default entry (address
1572.Cm 0.0.0.0 ,
1573mask
1574.Cm 0.0.0.0 )
1575is always included and is always the first entry in the list.
1576Note that text string
1577.Cm default ,
1578with no mask option, may
1579be used to indicate the default entry.
1580The
1581.Cm ippeerlimit
1582directive limits the number of peer requests for each IP to
1583.Ar int ,
1584where a value of -1 means "unlimited", the current default.
1585A value of 0 means "none".
1586There would usually be at most 1 peering request per IP,
1587but if the remote peering requests are behind a proxy
1588there could well be more than 1 per IP.
1589In the current implementation,
1590.Cm flag
1591always
1592restricts access, i.e., an entry with no flags indicates that free
1593access to the server is to be given.
1594The flags are not orthogonal,
1595in that more restrictive flags will often make less restrictive
1596ones redundant.
1597The flags can generally be classed into two
1598categories, those which restrict time service and those which
1599restrict informational queries and attempts to do run-time
1600reconfiguration of the server.
1601One or more of the following flags
1602may be specified:
1603.Bl -tag -width indent
1604.It Cm ignore
1605Deny packets of all kinds, including
1606.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
1607and
1608.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
1609queries.
1610.It Cm kod
1611If this flag is set when an access violation occurs, a kiss-o'-death
1612(KoD) packet is sent.
1613KoD packets are rate limited to no more than one
1614per second.
1615If another KoD packet occurs within one second after the
1616last one, the packet is dropped.
1617.It Cm limited
1618Deny service if the packet spacing violates the lower limits specified
1619in the
1620.Ic discard
1621command.
1622A history of clients is kept using the
1623monitoring capability of
1624.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc .
1625Thus, monitoring is always active as
1626long as there is a restriction entry with the
1627.Cm limited
1628flag.
1629.It Cm lowpriotrap
1630Declare traps set by matching hosts to be low priority.
1631The
1632number of traps a server can maintain is limited (the current limit
1633is 3).
1634Traps are usually assigned on a first come, first served
1635basis, with later trap requestors being denied service.
1636This flag
1637modifies the assignment algorithm by allowing low priority traps to
1638be overridden by later requests for normal priority traps.
1639.It Cm noepeer
1640Deny ephemeral peer requests,
1641even if they come from an authenticated source.
1642Note that the ability to use a symmetric key for authentication may be restricted to
1643one or more IPs or subnets via the third field of the
1644.Pa ntp.keys
1645file.
1646This restriction is not enabled by default,
1647to maintain backward compatability.
1648Expect
1649.Cm noepeer
1650to become the default in ntp-4.4.
1651.It Cm nomodify
1652Deny
1653.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
1654and
1655.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
1656queries which attempt to modify the state of the
1657server (i.e., run time reconfiguration).
1658Queries which return
1659information are permitted.
1660.It Cm noquery
1661Deny
1662.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
1663and
1664.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
1665queries.
1666Time service is not affected.
1667.It Cm nopeer
1668Deny unauthenticated packets which would result in mobilizing a new association.
1669This includes
1670broadcast and symmetric active packets
1671when a configured association does not exist.
1672It also includes
1673.Cm pool
1674associations, so if you want to use servers from a
1675.Cm pool
1676directive and also want to use
1677.Cm nopeer
1678by default, you'll want a
1679.Cm "restrict source ..."
1680line as well that does
1681.Em not
1682include the
1683.Cm nopeer
1684directive.
1685.It Cm noserve
1686Deny all packets except
1687.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
1688and
1689.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
1690queries.
1691.It Cm notrap
1692Decline to provide mode 6 control message trap service to matching
1693hosts.
1694The trap service is a subsystem of the
1695.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
1696control message
1697protocol which is intended for use by remote event logging programs.
1698.It Cm notrust
1699Deny service unless the packet is cryptographically authenticated.
1700.It Cm ntpport
1701This is actually a match algorithm modifier, rather than a
1702restriction flag.
1703Its presence causes the restriction entry to be
1704matched only if the source port in the packet is the standard NTP
1705UDP port (123).
1706Both
1707.Cm ntpport
1708and
1709.Cm non-ntpport
1710may
1711be specified.
1712The
1713.Cm ntpport
1714is considered more specific and
1715is sorted later in the list.
1716.It Ic "serverresponse fuzz"
1717When reponding to server requests,
1718fuzz the low order bits of the
1719.Cm reftime .
1720.It Cm version
1721Deny packets that do not match the current NTP version.
1722.El
1723.Pp
1724Default restriction list entries with the flags ignore, interface,
1725ntpport, for each of the local host's interface addresses are
1726inserted into the table at startup to prevent the server
1727from attempting to synchronize to its own time.
1728A default entry is also always present, though if it is
1729otherwise unconfigured; no flags are associated
1730with the default entry (i.e., everything besides your own
1731NTP server is unrestricted).
1732.El
1733.Sh Automatic NTP Configuration Options
1734.Ss Manycasting
1735Manycasting is a automatic discovery and configuration paradigm
1736new to NTPv4.
1737It is intended as a means for a multicast client
1738to troll the nearby network neighborhood to find cooperating
1739manycast servers, validate them using cryptographic means
1740and evaluate their time values with respect to other servers
1741that might be lurking in the vicinity.
1742The intended result is that each manycast client mobilizes
1743client associations with some number of the "best"
1744of the nearby manycast servers, yet automatically reconfigures
1745to sustain this number of servers should one or another fail.
1746.Pp
1747Note that the manycasting paradigm does not coincide
1748with the anycast paradigm described in RFC-1546,
1749which is designed to find a single server from a clique
1750of servers providing the same service.
1751The manycast paradigm is designed to find a plurality
1752of redundant servers satisfying defined optimality criteria.
1753.Pp
1754Manycasting can be used with either symmetric key
1755or public key cryptography.
1756The public key infrastructure (PKI)
1757offers the best protection against compromised keys
1758and is generally considered stronger, at least with relatively
1759large key sizes.
1760It is implemented using the Autokey protocol and
1761the OpenSSL cryptographic library available from
1762.Li http://www.openssl.org/ .
1763The library can also be used with other NTPv4 modes
1764as well and is highly recommended, especially for broadcast modes.
1765.Pp
1766A persistent manycast client association is configured
1767using the
1768.Ic manycastclient
1769command, which is similar to the
1770.Ic server
1771command but with a multicast (IPv4 class
1772.Cm D
1773or IPv6 prefix
1774.Cm FF )
1775group address.
1776The IANA has designated IPv4 address 224.1.1.1
1777and IPv6 address FF05::101 (site local) for NTP.
1778When more servers are needed, it broadcasts manycast
1779client messages to this address at the minimum feasible rate
1780and minimum feasible time-to-live (TTL) hops, depending
1781on how many servers have already been found.
1782There can be as many manycast client associations
1783as different group address, each one serving as a template
1784for a future ephemeral unicast client/server association.
1785.Pp
1786Manycast servers configured with the
1787.Ic manycastserver
1788command listen on the specified group address for manycast
1789client messages.
1790Note the distinction between manycast client,
1791which actively broadcasts messages, and manycast server,
1792which passively responds to them.
1793If a manycast server is
1794in scope of the current TTL and is itself synchronized
1795to a valid source and operating at a stratum level equal
1796to or lower than the manycast client, it replies to the
1797manycast client message with an ordinary unicast server message.
1798.Pp
1799The manycast client receiving this message mobilizes
1800an ephemeral client/server association according to the
1801matching manycast client template, but only if cryptographically
1802authenticated and the server stratum is less than or equal
1803to the client stratum.
1804Authentication is explicitly required
1805and either symmetric key or public key (Autokey) can be used.
1806Then, the client polls the server at its unicast address
1807in burst mode in order to reliably set the host clock
1808and validate the source.
1809This normally results
1810in a volley of eight client/server at 2-s intervals
1811during which both the synchronization and cryptographic
1812protocols run concurrently.
1813Following the volley,
1814the client runs the NTP intersection and clustering
1815algorithms, which act to discard all but the "best"
1816associations according to stratum and synchronization
1817distance.
1818The surviving associations then continue
1819in ordinary client/server mode.
1820.Pp
1821The manycast client polling strategy is designed to reduce
1822as much as possible the volume of manycast client messages
1823and the effects of implosion due to near-simultaneous
1824arrival of manycast server messages.
1825The strategy is determined by the
1826.Ic manycastclient ,
1827.Ic tos
1828and
1829.Ic ttl
1830configuration commands.
1831The manycast poll interval is
1832normally eight times the system poll interval,
1833which starts out at the
1834.Cm minpoll
1835value specified in the
1836.Ic manycastclient ,
1837command and, under normal circumstances, increments to the
1838.Cm maxpolll
1839value specified in this command.
1840Initially, the TTL is
1841set at the minimum hops specified by the
1842.Ic ttl
1843command.
1844At each retransmission the TTL is increased until reaching
1845the maximum hops specified by this command or a sufficient
1846number client associations have been found.
1847Further retransmissions use the same TTL.
1848.Pp
1849The quality and reliability of the suite of associations
1850discovered by the manycast client is determined by the NTP
1851mitigation algorithms and the
1852.Cm minclock
1853and
1854.Cm minsane
1855values specified in the
1856.Ic tos
1857configuration command.
1858At least
1859.Cm minsane
1860candidate servers must be available and the mitigation
1861algorithms produce at least
1862.Cm minclock
1863survivors in order to synchronize the clock.
1864Byzantine agreement principles require at least four
1865candidates in order to correctly discard a single falseticker.
1866For legacy purposes,
1867.Cm minsane
1868defaults to 1 and
1869.Cm minclock
1870defaults to 3.
1871For manycast service
1872.Cm minsane
1873should be explicitly set to 4, assuming at least that
1874number of servers are available.
1875.Pp
1876If at least
1877.Cm minclock
1878servers are found, the manycast poll interval is immediately
1879set to eight times
1880.Cm maxpoll .
1881If less than
1882.Cm minclock
1883servers are found when the TTL has reached the maximum hops,
1884the manycast poll interval is doubled.
1885For each transmission
1886after that, the poll interval is doubled again until
1887reaching the maximum of eight times
1888.Cm maxpoll .
1889Further transmissions use the same poll interval and
1890TTL values.
1891Note that while all this is going on,
1892each client/server association found is operating normally
1893it the system poll interval.
1894.Pp
1895Administratively scoped multicast boundaries are normally
1896specified by the network router configuration and,
1897in the case of IPv6, the link/site scope prefix.
1898By default, the increment for TTL hops is 32 starting
1899from 31; however, the
1900.Ic ttl
1901configuration command can be
1902used to modify the values to match the scope rules.
1903.Pp
1904It is often useful to narrow the range of acceptable
1905servers which can be found by manycast client associations.
1906Because manycast servers respond only when the client
1907stratum is equal to or greater than the server stratum,
1908primary (stratum 1) servers fill find only primary servers
1909in TTL range, which is probably the most common objective.
1910However, unless configured otherwise, all manycast clients
1911in TTL range will eventually find all primary servers
1912in TTL range, which is probably not the most common
1913objective in large networks.
1914The
1915.Ic tos
1916command can be used to modify this behavior.
1917Servers with stratum below
1918.Cm floor
1919or above
1920.Cm ceiling
1921specified in the
1922.Ic tos
1923command are strongly discouraged during the selection
1924process; however, these servers may be temporally
1925accepted if the number of servers within TTL range is
1926less than
1927.Cm minclock .
1928.Pp
1929The above actions occur for each manycast client message,
1930which repeats at the designated poll interval.
1931However, once the ephemeral client association is mobilized,
1932subsequent manycast server replies are discarded,
1933since that would result in a duplicate association.
1934If during a poll interval the number of client associations
1935falls below
1936.Cm minclock ,
1937all manycast client prototype associations are reset
1938to the initial poll interval and TTL hops and operation
1939resumes from the beginning.
1940It is important to avoid
1941frequent manycast client messages, since each one requires
1942all manycast servers in TTL range to respond.
1943The result could well be an implosion, either minor or major,
1944depending on the number of servers in range.
1945The recommended value for
1946.Cm maxpoll
1947is 12 (4,096 s).
1948.Pp
1949It is possible and frequently useful to configure a host
1950as both manycast client and manycast server.
1951A number of hosts configured this way and sharing a common
1952group address will automatically organize themselves
1953in an optimum configuration based on stratum and
1954synchronization distance.
1955For example, consider an NTP
1956subnet of two primary servers and a hundred or more
1957dependent clients.
1958With two exceptions, all servers
1959and clients have identical configuration files including both
1960.Ic multicastclient
1961and
1962.Ic multicastserver
1963commands using, for instance, multicast group address
1964239.1.1.1.
1965The only exception is that each primary server
1966configuration file must include commands for the primary
1967reference source such as a GPS receiver.
1968.Pp
1969The remaining configuration files for all secondary
1970servers and clients have the same contents, except for the
1971.Ic tos
1972command, which is specific for each stratum level.
1973For stratum 1 and stratum 2 servers, that command is
1974not necessary.
1975For stratum 3 and above servers the
1976.Cm floor
1977value is set to the intended stratum number.
1978Thus, all stratum 3 configuration files are identical,
1979all stratum 4 files are identical and so forth.
1980.Pp
1981Once operations have stabilized in this scenario,
1982the primary servers will find the primary reference source
1983and each other, since they both operate at the same
1984stratum (1), but not with any secondary server or client,
1985since these operate at a higher stratum.
1986The secondary
1987servers will find the servers at the same stratum level.
1988If one of the primary servers loses its GPS receiver,
1989it will continue to operate as a client and other clients
1990will time out the corresponding association and
1991re-associate accordingly.
1992.Pp
1993Some administrators prefer to avoid running
1994.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1995continuously and run either
1996.Xr sntp 1sntpmdoc
1997or
1998.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
1999.Fl q
2000as a cron job.
2001In either case the servers must be
2002configured in advance and the program fails if none are
2003available when the cron job runs.
2004A really slick
2005application of manycast is with
2006.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2007.Fl q .
2008The program wakes up, scans the local landscape looking
2009for the usual suspects, selects the best from among
2010the rascals, sets the clock and then departs.
2011Servers do not have to be configured in advance and
2012all clients throughout the network can have the same
2013configuration file.
2014.Ss Manycast Interactions with Autokey
2015Each time a manycast client sends a client mode packet
2016to a multicast group address, all manycast servers
2017in scope generate a reply including the host name
2018and status word.
2019The manycast clients then run
2020the Autokey protocol, which collects and verifies
2021all certificates involved.
2022Following the burst interval
2023all but three survivors are cast off,
2024but the certificates remain in the local cache.
2025It often happens that several complete signing trails
2026from the client to the primary servers are collected in this way.
2027.Pp
2028About once an hour or less often if the poll interval
2029exceeds this, the client regenerates the Autokey key list.
2030This is in general transparent in client/server mode.
2031However, about once per day the server private value
2032used to generate cookies is refreshed along with all
2033manycast client associations.
2034In this case all
2035cryptographic values including certificates is refreshed.
2036If a new certificate has been generated since
2037the last refresh epoch, it will automatically revoke
2038all prior certificates that happen to be in the
2039certificate cache.
2040At the same time, the manycast
2041scheme starts all over from the beginning and
2042the expanding ring shrinks to the minimum and increments
2043from there while collecting all servers in scope.
2044.Ss Broadcast Options
2045.Bl -tag -width indent
2046.It Xo Ic tos
2047.Oo
2048.Cm bcpollbstep Ar gate
2049.Oc
2050.Xc
2051This command provides a way to delay,
2052by the specified number of broadcast poll intervals,
2053believing backward time steps from a broadcast server.
2054Broadcast time networks are expected to be trusted.
2055In the event a broadcast server's time is stepped backwards,
2056there is clear benefit to having the clients notice this change
2057as soon as possible.
2058Attacks such as replay attacks can happen, however,
2059and even though there are a number of protections built in to
2060broadcast mode, attempts to perform a replay attack are possible.
2061This value defaults to 0, but can be changed
2062to any number of poll intervals between 0 and 4.
2063.El
2064.Ss Manycast Options
2065.Bl -tag -width indent
2066.It Xo Ic tos
2067.Oo
2068.Cm ceiling Ar ceiling |
2069.Cm cohort { 0 | 1 } |
2070.Cm floor Ar floor |
2071.Cm minclock Ar minclock |
2072.Cm minsane Ar minsane
2073.Oc
2074.Xc
2075This command affects the clock selection and clustering
2076algorithms.
2077It can be used to select the quality and
2078quantity of peers used to synchronize the system clock
2079and is most useful in manycast mode.
2080The variables operate
2081as follows:
2082.Bl -tag -width indent
2083.It Cm ceiling Ar ceiling
2084Peers with strata above
2085.Cm ceiling
2086will be discarded if there are at least
2087.Cm minclock
2088peers remaining.
2089This value defaults to 15, but can be changed
2090to any number from 1 to 15.
2091.It Cm cohort Bro 0 | 1 Brc
2092This is a binary flag which enables (0) or disables (1)
2093manycast server replies to manycast clients with the same
2094stratum level.
2095This is useful to reduce implosions where
2096large numbers of clients with the same stratum level
2097are present.
2098The default is to enable these replies.
2099.It Cm floor Ar floor
2100Peers with strata below
2101.Cm floor
2102will be discarded if there are at least
2103.Cm minclock
2104peers remaining.
2105This value defaults to 1, but can be changed
2106to any number from 1 to 15.
2107.It Cm minclock Ar minclock
2108The clustering algorithm repeatedly casts out outlier
2109associations until no more than
2110.Cm minclock
2111associations remain.
2112This value defaults to 3,
2113but can be changed to any number from 1 to the number of
2114configured sources.
2115.It Cm minsane Ar minsane
2116This is the minimum number of candidates available
2117to the clock selection algorithm in order to produce
2118one or more truechimers for the clustering algorithm.
2119If fewer than this number are available, the clock is
2120undisciplined and allowed to run free.
2121The default is 1
2122for legacy purposes.
2123However, according to principles of
2124Byzantine agreement,
2125.Cm minsane
2126should be at least 4 in order to detect and discard
2127a single falseticker.
2128.El
2129.It Cm ttl Ar hop ...
2130This command specifies a list of TTL values in increasing
2131order, up to 8 values can be specified.
2132In manycast mode these values are used in turn
2133in an expanding-ring search.
2134The default is eight
2135multiples of 32 starting at 31.
2136.El
2137.Sh Reference Clock Support
2138The NTP Version 4 daemon supports some three dozen different radio,
2139satellite and modem reference clocks plus a special pseudo-clock
2140used for backup or when no other clock source is available.
2141Detailed descriptions of individual device drivers and options can
2142be found in the
2143.Qq Reference Clock Drivers
2144page
2145(available as part of the HTML documentation
2146provided in
2147.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
2148Additional information can be found in the pages linked
2149there, including the
2150.Qq Debugging Hints for Reference Clock Drivers
2151and
2152.Qq How To Write a Reference Clock Driver
2153pages
2154(available as part of the HTML documentation
2155provided in
2156.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
2157In addition, support for a PPS
2158signal is available as described in the
2159.Qq Pulse-per-second (PPS) Signal Interfacing
2160page
2161(available as part of the HTML documentation
2162provided in
2163.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
2164Many
2165drivers support special line discipline/streams modules which can
2166significantly improve the accuracy using the driver.
2167These are
2168described in the
2169.Qq Line Disciplines and Streams Drivers
2170page
2171(available as part of the HTML documentation
2172provided in
2173.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
2174.Pp
2175A reference clock will generally (though not always) be a radio
2176timecode receiver which is synchronized to a source of standard
2177time such as the services offered by the NRC in Canada and NIST and
2178USNO in the US.
2179The interface between the computer and the timecode
2180receiver is device dependent, but is usually a serial port.
2181A
2182device driver specific to each reference clock must be selected and
2183compiled in the distribution; however, most common radio, satellite
2184and modem clocks are included by default.
2185Note that an attempt to
2186configure a reference clock when the driver has not been compiled
2187or the hardware port has not been appropriately configured results
2188in a scalding remark to the system log file, but is otherwise non
2189hazardous.
2190.Pp
2191For the purposes of configuration,
2192.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2193treats
2194reference clocks in a manner analogous to normal NTP peers as much
2195as possible.
2196Reference clocks are identified by a syntactically
2197correct but invalid IP address, in order to distinguish them from
2198normal NTP peers.
2199Reference clock addresses are of the form
2200.Sm off
2201.Li 127.127. Ar t . Ar u ,
2202.Sm on
2203where
2204.Ar t
2205is an integer
2206denoting the clock type and
2207.Ar u
2208indicates the unit
2209number in the range 0-3.
2210While it may seem overkill, it is in fact
2211sometimes useful to configure multiple reference clocks of the same
2212type, in which case the unit numbers must be unique.
2213.Pp
2214The
2215.Ic server
2216command is used to configure a reference
2217clock, where the
2218.Ar address
2219argument in that command
2220is the clock address.
2221The
2222.Cm key ,
2223.Cm version
2224and
2225.Cm ttl
2226options are not used for reference clock support.
2227The
2228.Cm mode
2229option is added for reference clock support, as
2230described below.
2231The
2232.Cm prefer
2233option can be useful to
2234persuade the server to cherish a reference clock with somewhat more
2235enthusiasm than other reference clocks or peers.
2236Further
2237information on this option can be found in the
2238.Qq Mitigation Rules and the prefer Keyword
2239(available as part of the HTML documentation
2240provided in
2241.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp )
2242page.
2243The
2244.Cm minpoll
2245and
2246.Cm maxpoll
2247options have
2248meaning only for selected clock drivers.
2249See the individual clock
2250driver document pages for additional information.
2251.Pp
2252The
2253.Ic fudge
2254command is used to provide additional
2255information for individual clock drivers and normally follows
2256immediately after the
2257.Ic server
2258command.
2259The
2260.Ar address
2261argument specifies the clock address.
2262The
2263.Cm refid
2264and
2265.Cm stratum
2266options can be used to
2267override the defaults for the device.
2268There are two optional
2269device-dependent time offsets and four flags that can be included
2270in the
2271.Ic fudge
2272command as well.
2273.Pp
2274The stratum number of a reference clock is by default zero.
2275Since the
2276.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2277daemon adds one to the stratum of each
2278peer, a primary server ordinarily displays an external stratum of
2279one.
2280In order to provide engineered backups, it is often useful to
2281specify the reference clock stratum as greater than zero.
2282The
2283.Cm stratum
2284option is used for this purpose.
2285Also, in cases
2286involving both a reference clock and a pulse-per-second (PPS)
2287discipline signal, it is useful to specify the reference clock
2288identifier as other than the default, depending on the driver.
2289The
2290.Cm refid
2291option is used for this purpose.
2292Except where noted,
2293these options apply to all clock drivers.
2294.Ss Reference Clock Commands
2295.Bl -tag -width indent
2296.It Xo Ic server
2297.Sm off
2298.Li 127.127. Ar t . Ar u
2299.Sm on
2300.Op Cm prefer
2301.Op Cm mode Ar int
2302.Op Cm minpoll Ar int
2303.Op Cm maxpoll Ar int
2304.Xc
2305This command can be used to configure reference clocks in
2306special ways.
2307The options are interpreted as follows:
2308.Bl -tag -width indent
2309.It Cm prefer
2310Marks the reference clock as preferred.
2311All other things being
2312equal, this host will be chosen for synchronization among a set of
2313correctly operating hosts.
2314See the
2315.Qq Mitigation Rules and the prefer Keyword
2316page
2317(available as part of the HTML documentation
2318provided in
2319.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp )
2320for further information.
2321.It Cm mode Ar int
2322Specifies a mode number which is interpreted in a
2323device-specific fashion.
2324For instance, it selects a dialing
2325protocol in the ACTS driver and a device subtype in the
2326parse
2327drivers.
2328.It Cm minpoll Ar int
2329.It Cm maxpoll Ar int
2330These options specify the minimum and maximum polling interval
2331for reference clock messages, as a power of 2 in seconds
2332For
2333most directly connected reference clocks, both
2334.Cm minpoll
2335and
2336.Cm maxpoll
2337default to 6 (64 s).
2338For modem reference clocks,
2339.Cm minpoll
2340defaults to 10 (17.1 m) and
2341.Cm maxpoll
2342defaults to 14 (4.5 h).
2343The allowable range is 4 (16 s) to 17 (36.4 h) inclusive.
2344.El
2345.It Xo Ic fudge
2346.Sm off
2347.Li 127.127. Ar t . Ar u
2348.Sm on
2349.Op Cm time1 Ar sec
2350.Op Cm time2 Ar sec
2351.Op Cm stratum Ar int
2352.Op Cm refid Ar string
2353.Op Cm mode Ar int
2354.Op Cm flag1 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2355.Op Cm flag2 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2356.Op Cm flag3 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2357.Op Cm flag4 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2358.Xc
2359This command can be used to configure reference clocks in
2360special ways.
2361It must immediately follow the
2362.Ic server
2363command which configures the driver.
2364Note that the same capability
2365is possible at run time using the
2366.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
2367program.
2368The options are interpreted as
2369follows:
2370.Bl -tag -width indent
2371.It Cm time1 Ar sec
2372Specifies a constant to be added to the time offset produced by
2373the driver, a fixed-point decimal number in seconds.
2374This is used
2375as a calibration constant to adjust the nominal time offset of a
2376particular clock to agree with an external standard, such as a
2377precision PPS signal.
2378It also provides a way to correct a
2379systematic error or bias due to serial port or operating system
2380latencies, different cable lengths or receiver internal delay.
2381The
2382specified offset is in addition to the propagation delay provided
2383by other means, such as internal DIPswitches.
2384Where a calibration
2385for an individual system and driver is available, an approximate
2386correction is noted in the driver documentation pages.
2387Note: in order to facilitate calibration when more than one
2388radio clock or PPS signal is supported, a special calibration
2389feature is available.
2390It takes the form of an argument to the
2391.Ic enable
2392command described in
2393.Sx Miscellaneous Options
2394page and operates as described in the
2395.Qq Reference Clock Drivers
2396page
2397(available as part of the HTML documentation
2398provided in
2399.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) .
2400.It Cm time2 Ar secs
2401Specifies a fixed-point decimal number in seconds, which is
2402interpreted in a driver-dependent way.
2403See the descriptions of
2404specific drivers in the
2405.Qq Reference Clock Drivers
2406page
2407(available as part of the HTML documentation
2408provided in
2409.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ).
2410.It Cm stratum Ar int
2411Specifies the stratum number assigned to the driver, an integer
2412between 0 and 15.
2413This number overrides the default stratum number
2414ordinarily assigned by the driver itself, usually zero.
2415.It Cm refid Ar string
2416Specifies an ASCII string of from one to four characters which
2417defines the reference identifier used by the driver.
2418This string
2419overrides the default identifier ordinarily assigned by the driver
2420itself.
2421.It Cm mode Ar int
2422Specifies a mode number which is interpreted in a
2423device-specific fashion.
2424For instance, it selects a dialing
2425protocol in the ACTS driver and a device subtype in the
2426parse
2427drivers.
2428.It Cm flag1 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2429.It Cm flag2 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2430.It Cm flag3 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2431.It Cm flag4 Cm 0 \&| Cm 1
2432These four flags are used for customizing the clock driver.
2433The
2434interpretation of these values, and whether they are used at all,
2435is a function of the particular clock driver.
2436However, by
2437convention
2438.Cm flag4
2439is used to enable recording monitoring
2440data to the
2441.Cm clockstats
2442file configured with the
2443.Ic filegen
2444command.
2445Further information on the
2446.Ic filegen
2447command can be found in
2448.Sx Monitoring Options .
2449.El
2450.El
2451.Sh Miscellaneous Options
2452.Bl -tag -width indent
2453.It Ic broadcastdelay Ar seconds
2454The broadcast and multicast modes require a special calibration
2455to determine the network delay between the local and remote
2456servers.
2457Ordinarily, this is done automatically by the initial
2458protocol exchanges between the client and server.
2459In some cases,
2460the calibration procedure may fail due to network or server access
2461controls, for example.
2462This command specifies the default delay to
2463be used under these circumstances.
2464Typically (for Ethernet), a
2465number between 0.003 and 0.007 seconds is appropriate.
2466The default
2467when this command is not used is 0.004 seconds.
2468.It Ic calldelay Ar delay
2469This option controls the delay in seconds between the first and second
2470packets sent in burst or iburst mode to allow additional time for a modem
2471or ISDN call to complete.
2472.It Ic driftfile Ar driftfile
2473This command specifies the complete path and name of the file used to
2474record the frequency of the local clock oscillator.
2475This is the same
2476operation as the
2477.Fl f
2478command line option.
2479If the file exists, it is read at
2480startup in order to set the initial frequency and then updated once per
2481hour with the current frequency computed by the daemon.
2482If the file name is
2483specified, but the file itself does not exist, the starts with an initial
2484frequency of zero and creates the file when writing it for the first time.
2485If this command is not given, the daemon will always start with an initial
2486frequency of zero.
2487.Pp
2488The file format consists of a single line containing a single
2489floating point number, which records the frequency offset measured
2490in parts-per-million (PPM).
2491The file is updated by first writing
2492the current drift value into a temporary file and then renaming
2493this file to replace the old version.
2494This implies that
2495.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2496must have write permission for the directory the
2497drift file is located in, and that file system links, symbolic or
2498otherwise, should be avoided.
2499.It Ic dscp Ar value
2500This option specifies the Differentiated Services Control Point (DSCP) value,
2501a 6-bit code.
2502The default value is 46, signifying Expedited Forwarding.
2503.It Xo Ic enable
2504.Oo
2505.Cm auth | Cm bclient |
2506.Cm calibrate | Cm kernel |
2507.Cm mode7 | Cm monitor |
2508.Cm ntp | Cm stats |
2509.Cm peer_clear_digest_early |
2510.Cm unpeer_crypto_early | Cm unpeer_crypto_nak_early | Cm unpeer_digest_early
2511.Oc
2512.Xc
2513.It Xo Ic disable
2514.Oo
2515.Cm auth | Cm bclient |
2516.Cm calibrate | Cm kernel |
2517.Cm mode7 | Cm monitor |
2518.Cm ntp | Cm stats |
2519.Cm peer_clear_digest_early |
2520.Cm unpeer_crypto_early | Cm unpeer_crypto_nak_early | Cm unpeer_digest_early
2521.Oc
2522.Xc
2523Provides a way to enable or disable various server options.
2524Flags not mentioned are unaffected.
2525Note that all of these flags
2526can be controlled remotely using the
2527.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
2528utility program.
2529.Bl -tag -width indent
2530.It Cm auth
2531Enables the server to synchronize with unconfigured peers only if the
2532peer has been correctly authenticated using either public key or
2533private key cryptography.
2534The default for this flag is
2535.Ic enable .
2536.It Cm bclient
2537Enables the server to listen for a message from a broadcast or
2538multicast server, as in the
2539.Ic multicastclient
2540command with default
2541address.
2542The default for this flag is
2543.Ic disable .
2544.It Cm calibrate
2545Enables the calibrate feature for reference clocks.
2546The default for
2547this flag is
2548.Ic disable .
2549.It Cm kernel
2550Enables the kernel time discipline, if available.
2551The default for this
2552flag is
2553.Ic enable
2554if support is available, otherwise
2555.Ic disable .
2556.It Cm mode7
2557Enables processing of NTP mode 7 implementation-specific requests
2558which are used by the deprecated
2559.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
2560program.
2561The default for this flag is disable.
2562This flag is excluded from runtime configuration using
2563.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc .
2564The
2565.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
2566program provides the same capabilities as
2567.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
2568using standard mode 6 requests.
2569.It Cm monitor
2570Enables the monitoring facility.
2571See the
2572.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc
2573program
2574and the
2575.Ic monlist
2576command or further information.
2577The
2578default for this flag is
2579.Ic enable .
2580.It Cm ntp
2581Enables time and frequency discipline.
2582In effect, this switch opens and
2583closes the feedback loop, which is useful for testing.
2584The default for
2585this flag is
2586.Ic enable .
2587.It Cm peer_clear_digest_early
2588By default, if
2589.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2590is using autokey and it
2591receives a crypto-NAK packet that
2592passes the duplicate packet and origin timestamp checks
2593the peer variables are immediately cleared.
2594While this is generally a feature
2595as it allows for quick recovery if a server key has changed,
2596a properly forged and appropriately delivered crypto-NAK packet
2597can be used in a DoS attack.
2598If you have active noticable problems with this type of DoS attack
2599then you should consider
2600disabling this option.
2601You can check your
2602.Cm peerstats
2603file for evidence of any of these attacks.
2604The
2605default for this flag is
2606.Ic enable .
2607.It Cm stats
2608Enables the statistics facility.
2609See the
2610.Sx Monitoring Options
2611section for further information.
2612The default for this flag is
2613.Ic disable .
2614.It Cm unpeer_crypto_early
2615By default, if
2616.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2617receives an autokey packet that fails TEST9,
2618a crypto failure,
2619the association is immediately cleared.
2620This is almost certainly a feature,
2621but if, in spite of the current recommendation of not using autokey,
2622you are
2623.B still
2624using autokey
2625.B and
2626you are seeing this sort of DoS attack
2627disabling this flag will delay
2628tearing down the association until the reachability counter
2629becomes zero.
2630You can check your
2631.Cm peerstats
2632file for evidence of any of these attacks.
2633The
2634default for this flag is
2635.Ic enable .
2636.It Cm unpeer_crypto_nak_early
2637By default, if
2638.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2639receives a crypto-NAK packet that
2640passes the duplicate packet and origin timestamp checks
2641the association is immediately cleared.
2642While this is generally a feature
2643as it allows for quick recovery if a server key has changed,
2644a properly forged and appropriately delivered crypto-NAK packet
2645can be used in a DoS attack.
2646If you have active noticable problems with this type of DoS attack
2647then you should consider
2648disabling this option.
2649You can check your
2650.Cm peerstats
2651file for evidence of any of these attacks.
2652The
2653default for this flag is
2654.Ic enable .
2655.It Cm unpeer_digest_early
2656By default, if
2657.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2658receives what should be an authenticated packet
2659that passes other packet sanity checks but
2660contains an invalid digest
2661the association is immediately cleared.
2662While this is generally a feature
2663as it allows for quick recovery,
2664if this type of packet is carefully forged and sent
2665during an appropriate window it can be used for a DoS attack.
2666If you have active noticable problems with this type of DoS attack
2667then you should consider
2668disabling this option.
2669You can check your
2670.Cm peerstats
2671file for evidence of any of these attacks.
2672The
2673default for this flag is
2674.Ic enable .
2675.El
2676.It Ic includefile Ar includefile
2677This command allows additional configuration commands
2678to be included from a separate file.
2679Include files may
2680be nested to a depth of five; upon reaching the end of any
2681include file, command processing resumes in the previous
2682configuration file.
2683This option is useful for sites that run
2684.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2685on multiple hosts, with (mostly) common options (e.g., a
2686restriction list).
2687.It Xo Ic interface
2688.Oo
2689.Cm listen | Cm ignore | Cm drop
2690.Oc
2691.Oo
2692.Cm all | Cm ipv4 | Cm ipv6 | Cm wildcard
2693.Ar name | Ar address
2694.Oo Cm / Ar prefixlen
2695.Oc
2696.Oc
2697.Xc
2698The
2699.Cm interface
2700directive controls which network addresses
2701.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2702opens, and whether input is dropped without processing.
2703The first parameter determines the action for addresses
2704which match the second parameter.
2705The second parameter specifies a class of addresses,
2706or a specific interface name,
2707or an address.
2708In the address case,
2709.Ar prefixlen
2710determines how many bits must match for this rule to apply.
2711.Cm ignore
2712prevents opening matching addresses,
2713.Cm drop
2714causes
2715.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2716to open the address and drop all received packets without examination.
2717Multiple
2718.Cm interface
2719directives can be used.
2720The last rule which matches a particular address determines the action for it.
2721.Cm interface
2722directives are disabled if any
2723.Fl I ,
2724.Fl -interface ,
2725.Fl L ,
2726or
2727.Fl -novirtualips
2728command-line options are specified in the configuration file,
2729all available network addresses are opened.
2730The
2731.Cm nic
2732directive is an alias for
2733.Cm interface .
2734.It Ic leapfile Ar leapfile
2735This command loads the IERS leapseconds file and initializes the
2736leapsecond values for the next leapsecond event, leapfile expiration
2737time, and TAI offset.
2738The file can be obtained directly from the IERS at
2739.Li https://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/ntp/leap-seconds.list
2740or
2741.Li ftp://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/ntp/leap-seconds.list .
2742The
2743.Cm leapfile
2744is scanned when
2745.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2746processes the
2747.Cm leapfile directive or when
2748.Cm ntpd detects that the
2749.Ar leapfile
2750has changed.
2751.Cm ntpd
2752checks once a day to see if the
2753.Ar leapfile
2754has changed.
2755The
2756.Xr update-leap 1update_leapmdoc
2757script can be run to see if the
2758.Ar leapfile
2759should be updated.
2760.It Ic leapsmearinterval Ar seconds
2761This EXPERIMENTAL option is only available if
2762.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2763was built with the
2764.Cm --enable-leap-smear
2765option to the
2766.Cm configure
2767script.
2768It specifies the interval over which a leap second correction will be applied.
2769Recommended values for this option are between
27707200 (2 hours) and 86400 (24 hours).
2771.Sy DO NOT USE THIS OPTION ON PUBLIC-ACCESS SERVERS!
2772See http://bugs.ntp.org/2855 for more information.
2773.It Ic logconfig Ar configkeyword
2774This command controls the amount and type of output written to
2775the system
2776.Xr syslog 3
2777facility or the alternate
2778.Ic logfile
2779log file.
2780By default, all output is turned on.
2781All
2782.Ar configkeyword
2783keywords can be prefixed with
2784.Ql = ,
2785.Ql +
2786and
2787.Ql - ,
2788where
2789.Ql =
2790sets the
2791.Xr syslog 3
2792priority mask,
2793.Ql +
2794adds and
2795.Ql -
2796removes
2797messages.
2798.Xr syslog 3
2799messages can be controlled in four
2800classes
2801.Po
2802.Cm clock ,
2803.Cm peer ,
2804.Cm sys
2805and
2806.Cm sync
2807.Pc .
2808Within these classes four types of messages can be
2809controlled: informational messages
2810.Po
2811.Cm info
2812.Pc ,
2813event messages
2814.Po
2815.Cm events
2816.Pc ,
2817statistics messages
2818.Po
2819.Cm statistics
2820.Pc
2821and
2822status messages
2823.Po
2824.Cm status
2825.Pc .
2826.Pp
2827Configuration keywords are formed by concatenating the message class with
2828the event class.
2829The
2830.Cm all
2831prefix can be used instead of a message class.
2832A
2833message class may also be followed by the
2834.Cm all
2835keyword to enable/disable all
2836messages of the respective message class.
2837Thus, a minimal log configuration
2838could look like this:
2839.Bd -literal
2840logconfig =syncstatus +sysevents
2841.Ed
2842.Pp
2843This would just list the synchronizations state of
2844.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc
2845and the major system events.
2846For a simple reference server, the
2847following minimum message configuration could be useful:
2848.Bd -literal
2849logconfig =syncall +clockall
2850.Ed
2851.Pp
2852This configuration will list all clock information and
2853synchronization information.
2854All other events and messages about
2855peers, system events and so on is suppressed.
2856.It Ic logfile Ar logfile
2857This command specifies the location of an alternate log file to
2858be used instead of the default system
2859.Xr syslog 3
2860facility.
2861This is the same operation as the
2862.Fl l
2863command line option.
2864.It Xo Ic mru
2865.Oo
2866.Cm maxdepth Ar count | Cm maxmem Ar kilobytes |
2867.Cm mindepth Ar count | Cm maxage Ar seconds |
2868.Cm initialloc Ar count | Cm initmem Ar kilobytes |
2869.Cm incalloc Ar count | Cm incmem Ar kilobytes
2870.Oc
2871.Xc
2872Controls size limite of the monitoring facility's Most Recently Used
2873(MRU) list
2874of client addresses, which is also used by the
2875rate control facility.
2876.Bl -tag -width indent
2877.It Ic maxdepth Ar count
2878.It Ic maxmem Ar kilobytes
2879Equivalent upper limits on the size of the MRU list, in terms of entries or kilobytes.
2880The acutal limit will be up to
2881.Cm incalloc
2882entries or
2883.Cm incmem
2884kilobytes larger.
2885As with all of the
2886.Cm mru
2887options offered in units of entries or kilobytes, if both
2888.Cm maxdepth
2889and
2890.Cm maxmem are used, the last one used controls.
2891The default is 1024 kilobytes.
2892.It Cm mindepth Ar count
2893Lower limit on the MRU list size.
2894When the MRU list has fewer than
2895.Cm mindepth
2896entries, existing entries are never removed to make room for newer ones,
2897regardless of their age.
2898The default is 600 entries.
2899.It Cm maxage Ar seconds
2900Once the MRU list has
2901.Cm mindepth
2902entries and an additional client is to ba added to the list,
2903if the oldest entry was updated more than
2904.Cm maxage
2905seconds ago, that entry is removed and its storage is reused.
2906If the oldest entry was updated more recently the MRU list is grown,
2907subject to
2908.Cm maxdepth / moxmem .
2909The default is 64 seconds.
2910.It Cm initalloc Ar count
2911.It Cm initmem Ar kilobytes
2912Initial memory allocation at the time the monitoringfacility is first enabled,
2913in terms of the number of entries or kilobytes.
2914The default is 4 kilobytes.
2915.It Cm incalloc Ar count
2916.It Cm incmem Ar kilobytes
2917Size of additional memory allocations when growing the MRU list, in entries or kilobytes.
2918The default is 4 kilobytes.
2919.El
2920.It Ic nonvolatile Ar threshold
2921Specify the
2922.Ar threshold
2923delta in seconds before an hourly change to the
2924.Cm driftfile
2925(frequency file) will be written, with a default value of 1e-7 (0.1 PPM).
2926The frequency file is inspected each hour.
2927If the difference between the current frequency and the last value written
2928exceeds the threshold, the file is written and the
2929.Cm threshold
2930becomes the new threshold value.
2931If the threshold is not exceeeded, it is reduced by half.
2932This is intended to reduce the number of file writes
2933for embedded systems with nonvolatile memory.
2934.It Ic phone Ar dial ...
2935This command is used in conjunction with
2936the ACTS modem driver (type 18)
2937or the JJY driver (type 40, mode 100 - 180).
2938For the ACTS modem driver (type 18), the arguments consist of
2939a maximum of 10 telephone numbers used to dial USNO, NIST, or European
2940time service.
2941For the JJY driver (type 40 mode 100 - 180), the argument is
2942one telephone number used to dial the telephone JJY service.
2943The Hayes command ATDT is normally prepended to the number.
2944The number can contain other modem control codes as well.
2945.It Xo Cm pollskewlist
2946.Oo
2947.Ar poll
2948.Ar early late
2949.Oc
2950.Ar ...
2951.Oo
2952.Cm default
2953.Ar early late
2954.Oc
2955.Xc
2956Enable skewing of our poll requests to our servers.
2957.Ar poll
2958is a number between 3 and 17 inclusive, identifying a specific poll interval.
2959A poll interval is 2^n seconds in duration,
2960so a poll value of 3 corresponds to 8 seconds
2961and
2962a poll interval of 17 corresponds to
2963131,072 seconds, or about a day and a half.
2964The next two numbers must be between 0 and one-half of the poll interval,
2965inclusive.
2966Ar early
2967specifies how early the poll may start,
2968while
2969Ar late
2970specifies how late the poll may be delayed.
2971With no arguments, internally specified default values are chosen.
2972.It Xo Ic reset
2973.Oo
2974.Ic allpeers
2975.Oc
2976.Oo
2977.Ic auth
2978.Oc
2979.Oo
2980.Ic ctl
2981.Oc
2982.Oo
2983.Ic io
2984.Oc
2985.Oo
2986.Ic mem
2987.Oc
2988.Oo
2989.Ic sys
2990.Oc
2991.Oo
2992.Ic timer
2993.Oc
2994.Xc
2995Reset one or more groups of counters maintained by
2996.Cm ntpd
2997and exposed by
2998.Cm ntpq
2999and
3000.Cm ntpdc .
3001.It Xo Ic rlimit
3002.Oo
3003.Cm memlock Ar Nmegabytes |
3004.Cm stacksize Ar N4kPages
3005.Cm filenum Ar Nfiledescriptors
3006.Oc
3007.Xc
3008.Bl -tag -width indent
3009.It Cm memlock Ar Nmegabytes
3010Specify the number of megabytes of memory that should be
3011allocated and locked.
3012Probably only available under Linux, this option may be useful
3013when dropping root (the
3014.Fl i
3015option).
3016The default is 32 megabytes on non-Linux machines, and -1 under Linux.
3017-1 means "do not lock the process into memory".
30180 means "lock whatever memory the process wants into memory".
3019.It Cm stacksize Ar N4kPages
3020Specifies the maximum size of the process stack on systems with the
3021.Fn mlockall
3022function.
3023Defaults to 50 4k pages (200 4k pages in OpenBSD).
3024.It Cm filenum Ar Nfiledescriptors
3025Specifies the maximum number of file descriptors ntpd may have open at once.
3026Defaults to the system default.
3027.El
3028.It Ic saveconfigdir Ar directory_path
3029Specify the directory in which to write configuration snapshots
3030requested with
3031.Cm ntpq 's
3032.Cm saveconfig
3033command.
3034If
3035.Cm saveconfigdir
3036does not appear in the configuration file,
3037.Cm saveconfig
3038requests are rejected by
3039.Cm ntpd .
3040.It Ic saveconfig Ar filename
3041Write the current configuration, including any runtime
3042modifications given with
3043.Cm :config
3044or
3045.Cm config-from-file
3046to the
3047.Cm ntpd
3048host's
3049.Ar filename
3050in the
3051.Cm saveconfigdir .
3052This command will be rejected unless the
3053.Cm saveconfigdir
3054directive appears in
3055.Cm ntpd 's
3056configuration file.
3057.Ar filename
3058can use
3059.Xr strftime 3
3060format directives to substitute the current date and time,
3061for example,
3062.Cm saveconfig\ ntp-%Y%m%d-%H%M%S.conf .
3063The filename used is stored in the system variable
3064.Cm savedconfig .
3065Authentication is required.
3066.It Ic setvar Ar variable Op Cm default
3067This command adds an additional system variable.
3068These
3069variables can be used to distribute additional information such as
3070the access policy.
3071If the variable of the form
3072.Sm off
3073.Va name = Ar value
3074.Sm on
3075is followed by the
3076.Cm default
3077keyword, the
3078variable will be listed as part of the default system variables
3079.Po
3080.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
3081.Ic rv
3082command
3083.Pc ) .
3084These additional variables serve
3085informational purposes only.
3086They are not related to the protocol
3087other that they can be listed.
3088The known protocol variables will
3089always override any variables defined via the
3090.Ic setvar
3091mechanism.
3092There are three special variables that contain the names
3093of all variable of the same group.
3094The
3095.Va sys_var_list
3096holds
3097the names of all system variables.
3098The
3099.Va peer_var_list
3100holds
3101the names of all peer variables and the
3102.Va clock_var_list
3103holds the names of the reference clock variables.
3104.It Cm sysinfo
3105Display operational summary.
3106.It Cm sysstats
3107Show statistics counters maintained in the protocol module.
3108.It Xo Ic tinker
3109.Oo
3110.Cm allan Ar allan |
3111.Cm dispersion Ar dispersion |
3112.Cm freq Ar freq |
3113.Cm huffpuff Ar huffpuff |
3114.Cm panic Ar panic |
3115.Cm step Ar step |
3116.Cm stepback Ar stepback |
3117.Cm stepfwd Ar stepfwd |
3118.Cm stepout Ar stepout
3119.Oc
3120.Xc
3121This command can be used to alter several system variables in
3122very exceptional circumstances.
3123It should occur in the
3124configuration file before any other configuration options.
3125The
3126default values of these variables have been carefully optimized for
3127a wide range of network speeds and reliability expectations.
3128In
3129general, they interact in intricate ways that are hard to predict
3130and some combinations can result in some very nasty behavior.
3131Very
3132rarely is it necessary to change the default values; but, some
3133folks cannot resist twisting the knobs anyway and this command is
3134for them.
3135Emphasis added: twisters are on their own and can expect
3136no help from the support group.
3137.Pp
3138The variables operate as follows:
3139.Bl -tag -width indent
3140.It Cm allan Ar allan
3141The argument becomes the new value for the minimum Allan
3142intercept, which is a parameter of the PLL/FLL clock discipline
3143algorithm.
3144The value in log2 seconds defaults to 7 (1024 s), which is also the lower
3145limit.
3146.It Cm dispersion Ar dispersion
3147The argument becomes the new value for the dispersion increase rate,
3148normally .000015 s/s.
3149.It Cm freq Ar freq
3150The argument becomes the initial value of the frequency offset in
3151parts-per-million.
3152This overrides the value in the frequency file, if
3153present, and avoids the initial training state if it is not.
3154.It Cm huffpuff Ar huffpuff
3155The argument becomes the new value for the experimental
3156huff-n'-puff filter span, which determines the most recent interval
3157the algorithm will search for a minimum delay.
3158The lower limit is
3159900 s (15 m), but a more reasonable value is 7200 (2 hours).
3160There
3161is no default, since the filter is not enabled unless this command
3162is given.
3163.It Cm panic Ar panic
3164The argument is the panic threshold, normally 1000 s.
3165If set to zero,
3166the panic sanity check is disabled and a clock offset of any value will
3167be accepted.
3168.It Cm step Ar step
3169The argument is the step threshold, which by default is 0.128 s.
3170It can
3171be set to any positive number in seconds.
3172If set to zero, step
3173adjustments will never occur.
3174Note: The kernel time discipline is
3175disabled if the step threshold is set to zero or greater than the
3176default.
3177.It Cm stepback Ar stepback
3178The argument is the step threshold for the backward direction,
3179which by default is 0.128 s.
3180It can
3181be set to any positive number in seconds.
3182If both the forward and backward step thresholds are set to zero, step
3183adjustments will never occur.
3184Note: The kernel time discipline is
3185disabled if
3186each direction of step threshold are either
3187set to zero or greater than .5 second.
3188.It Cm stepfwd Ar stepfwd
3189As for stepback, but for the forward direction.
3190.It Cm stepout Ar stepout
3191The argument is the stepout timeout, which by default is 900 s.
3192It can
3193be set to any positive number in seconds.
3194If set to zero, the stepout
3195pulses will not be suppressed.
3196.El
3197.It Cm writevar Ar assocID\ name = value [,...]
3198Write (create or update) the specified variables.
3199If the
3200.Cm assocID
3201is zero, the variablea re from the
3202system variables
3203name space, otherwise they are from the
3204peer variables
3205name space.
3206The
3207.Cm assocID
3208is required, as the same name can occur in both name spaces.
3209.It Xo Ic trap Ar host_address
3210.Op Cm port Ar port_number
3211.Op Cm interface Ar interface_address
3212.Xc
3213This command configures a trap receiver at the given host
3214address and port number for sending messages with the specified
3215local interface address.
3216If the port number is unspecified, a value
3217of 18447 is used.
3218If the interface address is not specified, the
3219message is sent with a source address of the local interface the
3220message is sent through.
3221Note that on a multihomed host the
3222interface used may vary from time to time with routing changes.
3223.It Cm ttl Ar hop ...
3224This command specifies a list of TTL values in increasing order.
3225Up to 8 values can be specified.
3226In
3227.Cm manycast
3228mode these values are used in-turn in an expanding-ring search.
3229The default is eight multiples of 32 starting at 31.
3230.Pp
3231The trap receiver will generally log event messages and other
3232information from the server in a log file.
3233While such monitor
3234programs may also request their own trap dynamically, configuring a
3235trap receiver will ensure that no messages are lost when the server
3236is started.
3237.It Cm hop Ar ...
3238This command specifies a list of TTL values in increasing order, up to 8
3239values can be specified.
3240In manycast mode these values are used in turn in
3241an expanding-ring search.
3242The default is eight multiples of 32 starting at
324331.
3244.El
3245	_END_PROG_MDOC_DESCRIP;
3246};
3247
3248doc-section	= {
3249  ds-type	= 'FILES';
3250  ds-format	= 'mdoc';
3251  ds-text	= <<- _END_MDOC_FILES
3252.Bl -tag -width /etc/ntp.drift -compact
3253.It Pa /etc/ntp.conf
3254the default name of the configuration file
3255.It Pa ntp.keys
3256private MD5 keys
3257.It Pa ntpkey
3258RSA private key
3259.It Pa ntpkey_ Ns Ar host
3260RSA public key
3261.It Pa ntp_dh
3262Diffie-Hellman agreement parameters
3263.El
3264	_END_MDOC_FILES;
3265};
3266
3267doc-section	= {
3268  ds-type	= 'SEE ALSO';
3269  ds-format	= 'mdoc';
3270  ds-text	= <<- _END_MDOC_SEE_ALSO
3271.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc ,
3272.Xr ntpdc 1ntpdcmdoc ,
3273.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc
3274.Pp
3275In addition to the manual pages provided,
3276comprehensive documentation is available on the world wide web
3277at
3278.Li http://www.ntp.org/ .
3279A snapshot of this documentation is available in HTML format in
3280.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp .
3281.Rs
3282.%A David L. Mills
3283.%T Network Time Protocol (Version 4)
3284.%O RFC5905
3285.Re
3286	_END_MDOC_SEE_ALSO;
3287};
3288
3289doc-section	= {
3290  ds-type	= 'BUGS';
3291  ds-format	= 'mdoc';
3292  ds-text	= <<- _END_MDOC_BUGS
3293The syntax checking is not picky; some combinations of
3294ridiculous and even hilarious options and modes may not be
3295detected.
3296.Pp
3297The
3298.Pa ntpkey_ Ns Ar host
3299files are really digital
3300certificates.
3301These should be obtained via secure directory
3302services when they become universally available.
3303	_END_MDOC_BUGS;
3304};
3305
3306doc-section	= {
3307  ds-type	= 'NOTES';
3308  ds-format	= 'mdoc';
3309  ds-text	= <<- _END_MDOC_NOTES
3310This document was derived from FreeBSD.
3311	_END_MDOC_NOTES;
3312};
3313