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ntpq(1M)
Name
| Synopsis
| Description
| Options
| Usage
| Attributes
| See Also
| Bugs
Name
ntpq– standard Network Time Protocol
query program
Synopsis
/usr/sbin/ntpq [-inp] [-c command] [host] [...]
Description
ntpq queries NTP
servers which implement the recommended NTP
mode 6 control message format, about current state. It can also request changes
in that state. The program can be run in interactive mode; or it can be controlled
using command line arguments. Requests to read and write arbitrary variables
can be assembled, with raw and pretty-printed output options
available. By sending multiple queries to the server, ntpq
can also obtain and print a list of peers in a common format.
If one or more request options are included on the command line, ntpq sends each of the requests to NTP
servers running on each of the hosts given as command line arguments. By default, ntpq sends its requests to localhost, if hosts
are not included on the command line. If no request options are given, ntpq attempts to read commands from the standard input and execute
them on the NTP server running on the first
host given on the command line. Again, ntpq defaults to localhost if no other host is specified.
ntpq uses NTP mode
6 packets to communicate with an NTP server.
Thus, it can be used to query any compatible server on the network that permits
queries. Since NTP is a UDP protocol, this communication will be somewhat unreliable, especially
over large distances. ntpq makes one attempt to retransmit
requests; requests timeout if the remote host is not heard from within a suitable
period.
Options
Command line options are described below. Specifying a command line
option other than -i or -n causes the specified
query (queries) to be sent, immediately to the indicated host(s). Otherwise, ntpq attempts to read interactive format commands from standard
input.
-
-c
-
Interpret
the next argument as an interactive format command and add it to the list
of commands to be executed on the specified host(s). Multiple -c
options may be given.
-
-i
-
Operate in interactive
mode; write prompts to standard output and read commands from standard input.
-
-n
-
Output all host
addresses in dotted-quad numeric format rather than converting them to canonical
host names.
-
-p
-
Print a list
of the peers known to the server as well as a summary of their state. This
is equivalent to the peers interactive command. See USAGE below.
Usage
Interactive format commands consist of a keyword followed by up to four
arguments. Only enough characters of the full keyword to uniquely identify
the command need be typed. Normally, the output of a command is sent to standard
output; but this output may be written to a file by appending a `>', followed
by a file name, to the command line.
Interactive Commands
A number of interactive
format commands are executed entirely within the ntpq program
itself. They do not result in NTP mode 6
requests being sent to a server. If no request options are included on the
command line, and if the standard input is a terminal device, ntpq prompts for these commands. The interactive commands are described
below:
-
? [command_keyword
]
-
A `?' by itself prints a list of all
the command keywords known to the current version of ntpq.
A `?' followed by a command keyword prints function and usage information
about the command.
-
timeoutmilliseconds
-
Specifies a time out period for responses to server queries.
The default is about 5000 milliseconds. Since ntpq retries
each query once after a time out, the total waiting time for a time out is
twice the time out value that is set.
-
delaymilliseconds
-
Specifies a time interval to be added to timestamps included
in requests which require authentication. This command is used to enable (unreliable)
server reconfiguration over long delay network paths or between machines whose
clocks are unsynchronized. Currently, the server does not require time stamps
in authenticated requests. Thus, this command may be obsolete.
-
hosthostname
-
Set the name of the host to which future queries are to be
sent. Hostname may be either a host name or a numeric
address.
-
keyid #
-
Specify of a key number to be used to authenticate configuration
requests. This number must correspond to a key number the server has been
configured to use for this purpose.
-
passwd
-
Allow
the user to specify a password at the command line. This will
be used to authenticate configuration requests. If an authenticating key has
been specified (see keyid above), this password must correspond
to this key. ntpq does not echo the password as it is
typed.
-
hostnames yes | no
-
If “yes” is specified, host names are printed
in information displays. If “no” is given, numeric addresses
are printed instead. The default is “yes” unless modified using
the command line -n switch.
-
raw
-
Print all
output from query commands exactly as it is received from the remote server.
The only formatting/filtering done on the data is to transform non- ASCII data into printable form.
-
cooked
-
Causes
output from query commands to be “cooked”. The values of variables
recognized by the server are reformatted, so that they can be more easily
read. Variables which ntpq thinks should have a decodable
value, but do not, are marked with a trailing `?'.
-
ntpversion[ 1 | 2 | 3 ]
-
Sets the NTP
version number which ntpq claims in packets (defaults is
3). Note that mode 6 control messages (and modes, for that matter) did not
exist in NTP version 1. There appear to
be no servers left which demand version 1.
-
authenticate[ yes | no ]
-
The command authenticate yes instructs ntpq to send authentication with
all requests it makes. Normally ntpq does not authenticate
requests unless they are write requests. Authenticated requests cause some
servers to handle requests slightly differently, and can occasionally cause
a slowed response if you turn authentication on before doing a peer display. addvars variable_name[=value] [ ,. . . ] rmvars variable_name [ ,. . . ] clearvars
The data carried by NTP mode 6 messages
consists of a list of items of the form
variable_name=value
where the “=value”
is ignored, and can be omitted, in requests to the server to read variables. ntpq maintains an internal list in which data to be included in
control messages can be assembled, and sent. This is accomplished with the readlist and writelist commands described below.
The addvars command allows variables and their optional
values to be added to the list. If more than one variable is to be added,
the list should be comma-separated, and it should not contain white space.
The rmvars command can be used to remove individual variables
from the list; the clearlist command removes all variables
from the list.
-
debug[ more | less | off ]
-
Turns internal query program debugging
on and off.
-
quit
-
Exit ntpq.
Control Message Commands
Each peer known to an
NTP server has a 16 bit integer association identifier assigned to
it. NTP control messages which carry peer
variables must identify the peer that the values correspond to, by including
its association ID. An association ID of 0 is special. It indicates the variables
are system variables, whose names are drawn from a separate name space.
Control message commands send one or more NTP mode 6 messages to the server, and cause the data returned to be
printed in some format. Most commands currently implemented send a single
message and expect a single response. The current exceptions are the peers mreadlist and mreadvar
commands. The peers command sends a preprogrammed series
of messages to obtain the data it needs. The mreadlist
and mreadvar commands, iterate over a range of associations.
Control message commands are described below:
-
associations
-
Obtains and prints a list of association identifiers and peer statuses
for in-spec peers of the server being queried. The list is printed in columns.
The first of these is an index that numbers the associations from 1, for internal
use. The second column contains the actual association identifier returned
by the server and the third the status word for the peer. This is followed
by a number of columns containing data decoded from the status word. Note
that the data returned by the associations command is
cached internally in ntpq. The index is then of use when
dealing with “dumb” servers which use association identifiers
that are hard for humans to type. For any subsequent commands which require
an association identifier as an argument, the identifier can be specified
by using the form, &index. Here index is taken from the previous list.
-
lassociations
-
Obtains and prints a list of association identifiers and peer statuses for
all associations for which the server is maintaining state.
This command differs from the associations command only
for servers which retain state for out-of-spec
client associations. Such associations are normally omitted from the display
when the associations command is used, but are included
in the output of lassociations.
-
passociations
-
Prints association data concerning in-spec peers from the internally cached
list of associations. This command performs identically to the associations command except that it displays the internally stored data rather
than making a new query.
-
lpassociations
-
Print data for all associations, including out-of-spec client associations,
from the internally cached list of associations. This command differs from
passociations only when dealing with servers which retain
state for out-of-spec client associations.
-
pstatusassocID
-
Sends a read status request to the server for the given association.
The names and values of the peer variables returned will be printed. Note
that the status word from the header is displayed preceding the variables,
both in hexadecimal and in pigeon English.
-
readvar [ assoc
] [ variable_name[=value]
[ ,. . . ] ]
-
Requests that the
values of the specified variables be returned by the server by sending a read
variables request. If the association ID
is omitted or is given as zero the variables are system variables, otherwise
they are peer variables and the values returned will be those of the corresponding
peer. Omitting the variable list will send a request with no data which should
induce the server to return a default display.
-
rv [ assocID
] [ variable_name[=value]
[ ,. . . ] ]
-
An easy-to-type
short form for the readvar command.
-
writevar assocID variable_name=value [ ,. . . ]
-
Like the readvar request, except the specified
variables are written instead of read.
-
readlist [ assocID
]
-
Requests that the values of the variables in the internal
variable list be returned by the server. If the association ID is omitted or is 0 the variables are assumed to be system variables.
Otherwise they are treated as peer variables. If the internal variable list
is empty a request is sent without data, which should induce the remote server
to return a default display.
-
rl [ assocID
]
-
An easy-to-type short form of the readlist command.
-
writelist [ assocID
]
-
Like the readlist request, except
the internal list variables are written instead of read.
-
mreadvar assocID assocID [ variable_name[=value] [ ,. . . ] ]
-
Like the readvar command except the query is done for each
of a range of (nonzero) association IDs. This range is determined from the
association list cached by the most recent associations
command.
-
mrv assocID assocID [ variable_name[=value] [ ,. . . ] ]
-
An easy-to-type short form of the mreadvar command.
-
mreadlistassocID assocID
-
Like the readlist
command except the query is done for each of a range of (nonzero) association
IDs. This range is determined from the association list cached by the most
recent associations command.
-
mrlassocID assocID
-
An easy-to-type short form of the mreadlist
command.
-
clockvar [ assocID
] [ variable_name[=value]
[ ,. . . ] ]
-
Requests that a list
of the server's clock variables be sent. Servers which have a radio clock
or other external synchronization respond positively to this. If the association
identifier is omitted or zero the request is for the variables of the “system
clock”. This request generally gets a positive response from all servers
with a clock. Some servers may treat clocks as pseudo-peers and, hence, can
possibly have more than one clock connected at once. For these servers, referencing
the appropriate peer association ID shows
the variables of a particular clock. Omitting the variable list causes the
server to return a default variable display.
-
cv [ assocID
] [ variable_name[=value]
[ ,. . . ] ]
-
An easy-to-type short
form of the clockvar command.
-
peers
-
Obtains
a list of in-spec peers of the server, along with a summary of each peer's
state. Summary information includes:
-
The address of the remote peer
-
The reference ID (0.0.0.0
if the ref ID is unknown)
-
The stratum of the remote peer
-
The type of the peer (local, unicast, multicast or broadcast)
when the last packet was received
-
The polling interval in seconds
-
The reachability register, in octal
-
The current estimated delay offset and dispersion of the peer,
all in milliseconds.
The character in the left margin indicates the fate of this peer in
the clock selection process. The codes mean:
-
SPACE
-
Discarded due to high stratum and/or failed sanity checks.
-
x
-
Designated
falsticker by the intersection algorithm.
-
.
-
Culled from
the end of the candidate list.
-
-
-
Discarded
by the clustering algorithm.
-
+
-
Included in
the final selection set.
-
#
-
Selected for
synchronization; but distance exceeds maximum.
-
*
-
Selected for
synchronization.
-
o
-
Selected for
synchronization, pps signal in use.
Since the peers command depends on the ability to
parse the values in the responses it gets, it may fail to work from time to
time with servers which poorly control the data formats.
The contents of the host field may be given in one of four forms. It
may be a host name, an IP address, a reference clock implementation name with
its parameter or, REFCLK(implementation number, parameter).
On “hostnames no” only IP-addresses will be displayed.
-
lpeers
-
Like peers, except a summary of all associations for which the server
is maintaining state is printed. This can produce a much longer list of peers
from inadequate servers.
-
opeers
-
An old
form of the peers command with the reference ID replaced
by the local interface address.
Attributes
See Also
Bugs
The peers command is non-atomic. It may occasionally
result in spurious error messages about invalid associations occurring and
terminating the command.
The timeout value is a fixed constant. As a result, it often waits a
long time to timeout, since the fixed value assumes sort of a worst case.
The program should improve the time out estimate as it sends queries to a
particular host; but it does not.
SunOS 5.10 Last Revised 12 July 2004
Name
| Synopsis
| Description
| Options
| Usage
| Attributes
| See Also
| Bugs
|