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The Network Time Protocol daemon (ntpd) is an operating system program that maintains the system time in synchronization with time servers using the Network Time Protocol (NTP).
Description
editThe ntpd program is an operating-system daemon that sets and maintains a computer system's system time in synchronization with Internet-standard time servers. It is a complete implementation of the Network Time Protocol (NTP) version 4, but retains compatibility with versions 1, 2, and 3 as defined by RFC 1059, RFC 1119, and RFC 1305, respectively. ntpd performs most computations in 64-bit floating point arithmetic and uses 64-bit fixed point operations only when necessary to preserve the ultimate precision, about 232 picoseconds. While ordinary workstations and networks cannot achieve the ultimate precision as of 2015[update], future processors and networks may require it.
xntpd is the Network Time Protocol version three (1992) daemon software. The "x" was added to the name because the branch of code that eventually became NTPv3 was "experimental". The name of the software changed back to "ntpd" for version four[when?] because the inventor of NTP, Dave Mills, decided that something probably should not remain "experimental" for about twenty years in the absence of dramatic change.
ntpd uses a single configuration-file to run the daemon in server and/or client modes. The configuration file, usually named ntp.conf, is located in the /etc directory. Other important files include the drift file, which ntpd uses to correct for hardware-clock skew in the absence of a connection to a more accurate upstream time-server.
Implementations
editNTP implementations
editNTP (RFC 5905):
- The NTP Reference Implementation from The NTP Project at the University of Delaware.
- Windows Port of NTPD – Free Windows port of The NTP Reference Implementation from http://www.ntp.org with an easy-to-use installer
- NTPsec a hardened implementation derived from NTP Classic, Dave Mills's original.
- chrony – chronyd implements the NTP protocol and can act as either a client or a server.
- OpenNTPD – A portable Simple NTPD implementation by the OpenBSD group
Simple NTP (SNTP) implementations
editSNTP (RFC 4330):
- clockspeed – A simplest available and secure suite of NTP/SNTP client, clock skew eliminator, and precise time synchronization server and client
- dntpd – A simple client ntpd in DragonFly BSD
- ConnMan – ConnMan contains an NTP implementation.
- BusyBox, since version 1.16.2, has included an SNTP client and server based on OpenNTP.
- systemd-timesyncd – A Linux and systemd specific client implementation of SNTP.
See also
editReferences
edit- ntpd - Network Time Protocol (NTP) daemon Mills, D. L. The University of Delaware, USA. 2005. (Date Accessed: 19 August 2005)
External links
edit- Official NTP Documentation for the current development release
- NTP Community Support Information
- NTP Development Collaboration
- NTP Mailing Lists
- NTP Software Archive
- NTP Documentation Archive for current development and all stable releases of the NTP codebase
- OpenNTP manual pages
- How To: CentOS / Red Hat Linux Configure an NTP Client And Server
- Generic Linux notes
- Setting up NTP on Windows
- Setting up on Linux/Windows/Macintosh the NTP Servers Pooling