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NTPDC(8)		    System Manager's Manual		      NTPDC(8)

NAME
       ntpdc --	vendor-specific	NTPD control program

SYNOPSIS
       ntpdc [-flags] [-flag [value]] [--option-name[[=| ]value]] [ host ...]

DESCRIPTION
       ntpdc is	deprecated.  Please use	ntpq(8)	instead	- it can do everything
       ntpdc used to do, and it	does so	using a	much more sane interface.

       ntpdc  is  a  utility  program  used to query ntpd(8) about its current
       state and to request changes in that state.  It uses NTP	mode 7 control
       message formats described in the	source code.  The program may  be  run
       either  in interactive mode or controlled using command line arguments.
       Extensive state and statistics information  is  available  through  the
       ntpdc  interface.   In  addition,  nearly all the configuration options
       which can be specified at startup using ntpd's configuration  file  may
       also be specified at run	time using ntpdc.

OPTIONS
       -4, --ipv4
	       Force IPv4 DNS name resolution.	This option must not appear in
	       combination with	any of the following options: ipv6.

	       Force  DNS  resolution  of  following host names	on the command
	       line to the IPv4	namespace.

       -6, --ipv6
	       Force IPv6 DNS name resolution.	This option must not appear in
	       combination with	any of the following options: ipv4.

	       Force DNS resolution of following host  names  on  the  command
	       line to the IPv6	namespace.

       -c cmd, --command=cmd
	       run  a  command	and exit.  This	option may appear an unlimited
	       number of times.

	       The following argument is interpreted as	an interactive	format
	       command	and is added to	the list of commands to	be executed on
	       the specified host(s).

       -d, --debug-level
	       Increase	debug verbosity	level.	This option may	appear an  un-
	       limited number of times.

       -D number, --set-debug-level=number
	       Set  the	 debug verbosity level.	 This option may appear	an un-
	       limited number of times.	 This option takes an  integer	number
	       as its argument.

       -i, --interactive
	       Force  ntpq  to	operate	in interactive mode.  This option must
	       not appear in combination with any of  the  following  options:
	       command,	listpeers, peers, showpeers.

	       Force  ntpq  to	operate	 in interactive	mode.  Prompts will be
	       written to the standard output and commands read	from the stan-
	       dard input.

       -l, --listpeers
	       Print a list of the peers.  This	option must not	appear in com-
	       bination	with any of the	following options: command.

	       Print a list of the peers known to the server as	well as	a sum-
	       mary of their state. This is equivalent to the 'listpeers'  in-
	       teractive command.

       -n, --numeric
	       numeric host addresses.

	       Output  all host	addresses in dotted-quad numeric format	rather
	       than converting to the canonical	host names.

       -p, --peers
	       Print a list of the peers.  This	option must not	appear in com-
	       bination	with any of the	following options: command.

	       Print a list of the peers known to the server as	well as	a sum-
	       mary of their state. This is equivalent to the 'peers' interac-
	       tive command.

       -s, --showpeers
	       Show a list of the peers.  This option must not appear in  com-
	       bination	with any of the	following options: command.

	       Print a list of the peers known to the server as	well as	a sum-
	       mary of their state. This is equivalent to the 'dmpeers'	inter-
	       active command.

       -u, --unconnected
	       Use  unconnected	 UDP to	communicate with ntpd (default on Win-
	       dows).

	       Open an unconnected UDP association to  ntpd  (the  default  on
	       Windows).

       -?, --help
	       Display usage information and exit.

       -!, --more-help
	       Pass the	extended usage information through a pager.

       -> [cfgfile], --save-opts [=cfgfile]
	       Save the	option state to	cfgfile.  The default is the last con-
	       figuration  file	 listed	 in the	OPTION PRESETS section,	below.
	       The command will	exit after updating the	config file.

       -< cfgfile, --load-opts=cfgfile,	--no-load-opts
	       Load options from cfgfile.  The no-load-opts form will  disable
	       the  loading of earlier config/rc/ini files.  --no-load-opts is
	       handled early, out of order.

       --version [{v|c|n}]
	       Output version of program and exit.  The	default	mode is	`v', a
	       simple version.	The `c'	mode will print	copyright  information
	       and `n' will print the full copyright notice.

OPTION PRESETS
       Any option that is not marked as	not presettable	may be preset by load-
       ing  values from	configuration ("RC" or ".INI") file(s) and values from
       environment variables named:
	 NTPDC_<option-name> or	NTPDC
       The environmental presets take precedence (are  processed  later	 than)
       the  configuration  files.   The	homerc files are "$HOME", and ".".  If
       any of these are	directories, then the  file  .ntprc  is	 searched  for
       within those directories.

USAGE
       If  one	or  more request options are included on the command line when
       ntpdc is	executed, each of the requests will be sent to the NTP servers
       running on each of the hosts given as command line arguments, or	on lo-
       calhost by default.  If no request options are given,  ntpdc  will  at-
       tempt to	read commands from the standard	input and execute these	on the
       NTP  server  running on the first host given on the command line, again
       defaulting to localhost when no other host  is  specified.   The	 ntpdc
       utility	will  prompt  for commands if the standard input is a terminal
       device.

       The ntpdc utility uses NTP mode 7 packets to communicate	with  the  NTP
       server,	and  hence  can	 be used to query any compatible server	on the
       network which permits it.  Note that since NTP is a UDP	protocol  this
       communication  will  be somewhat	unreliable, especially over large dis-
       tances in terms of network topology.  The ntpdc utility	makes  no  at-
       tempt  to retransmit requests, and will time requests out if the	remote
       host is not heard from within a suitable	timeout	time.

       The operation of	ntpdc are specific to the particular implementation of
       the ntpd(8) daemon and can be expected to work only with	this and maybe
       some previous versions of the daemon.  Requests	from  a	 remote	 ntpdc
       utility	which  affect  the state of the	local server must be authenti-
       cated, which requires both the remote program and local server share  a
       common key and key identifier.

       Note  that  in  contexts	 where a host name is expected,	a -4 qualifier
       preceding the host name forces DNS resolution to	 the  IPv4  namespace,
       while  a	 -6  qualifier	forces	DNS  resolution	to the IPv6 namespace.
       Specifying a command line option	other than -i or  -n  will  cause  the
       specified  query	 (queries) to be sent to the indicated host(s) immedi-
       ately.  Otherwise, ntpdc	will attempt to	read interactive  format  com-
       mands from the standard input.

   Interactive Commands
       Interactive  format  commands  consist of a keyword followed by zero to
       four arguments.	Only enough characters of the full keyword to uniquely
       identify	the command need be typed.  The	output of a  command  is  nor-
       mally  sent  to the standard output, but	optionally the output of indi-
       vidual commands may be sent to a	file by	appending a `>', followed by a
       file name, to the command line.

       A number	of interactive format commands are  executed  entirely	within
       the ntpdc utility itself	and do not result in NTP mode 7	requests being
       sent to a server.  These	are described following.

       ? command_keyword

       help command_keyword
	       A  `?'  will  print a list of all the command keywords known to
	       this incarnation	of ntpdc.  A `?' followed by a command keyword
	       will print function and usage information  about	 the  command.
	       This  command  is probably a better source of information about
	       ntpq(8) than this manual	page.

       delay milliseconds
	       Specify a time interval to be added to timestamps  included  in
	       requests	 which require authentication.	This is	used to	enable
	       (unreliable) server reconfiguration  over  long	delay  network
	       paths or	between	machines whose clocks are unsynchronized.  Ac-
	       tually  the server does not now require timestamps in authenti-
	       cated requests, so this command may be obsolete.

       host hostname
	       Set the host to which future queries will  be  sent.   Hostname
	       may be either a host name or a numeric address.

       hostnames [yes |	no]
	       If yes is specified, host names are printed in information dis-
	       plays.	If  no is specified, numeric addresses are printed in-
	       stead.  The default is yes, unless modified using  the  command
	       line -n switch.

       keyid keyid
	       This  command  allows  the  specification of a key number to be
	       used to authenticate configuration requests.  This must	corre-
	       spond to	a key number the server	has been configured to use for
	       this purpose.

       quit    Exit ntpdc.

       passwd  This  command prompts you to type in a password (which will not
	       be echoed) which	will be	used to	authenticate configuration re-
	       quests.	The password must correspond to	the key	configured for
	       use by the NTP server for this purpose if such requests are  to
	       be successful.

       timeout milliseconds
	       Specify	a timeout period for responses to server queries.  The
	       default is about	8000 milliseconds.  Note that since ntpdc  re-
	       tries  each  query once after a timeout,	the total waiting time
	       for a timeout will be twice the timeout value set.

   Control Message Commands
       Query commands result in	NTP mode 7 packets containing requests for in-
       formation being sent to the server.  These are  read-only  commands  in
       that they make no modification of the server configuration state.

       listpeers
	       Obtains	and  prints  a	brief  list of the peers for which the
	       server is maintaining state.  These should include all  config-
	       ured  peer associations as well as those	peers whose stratum is
	       such that they are considered by	the server to be possible  fu-
	       ture synchronization candidates.

       peers   Obtains	a  list	 of  peers for which the server	is maintaining
	       state, along with a summary of that state.  Summary information
	       includes	the address of the remote peer,	 the  local  interface
	       address	(0.0.0.0 if a local address has	yet to be determined),
	       the stratum of the remote peer (a stratum of 16	indicates  the
	       remote  peer  is	unsynchronized), the polling interval, in sec-
	       onds, the reachability register,	in octal, and the current  es-
	       timated	delay,	offset and dispersion of the peer, all in sec-
	       onds.

	       The character in	the left margin	indicates the mode  this  peer
	       entry  is  operating in.	 A `+' denotes symmetric active, a `-'
	       indicates symmetric passive, a `=' means	the remote  server  is
	       being polled in client mode, a `^' indicates that the server is
	       broadcasting  to	 this  address,	 a `~' denotes that the	remote
	       peer is sending broadcasts and a	`~' denotes  that  the	remote
	       peer  is	sending	broadcasts and a `*' marks the peer the	server
	       is currently synchronizing to.

	       The contents of the host	field may be one of  four  forms.   It
	       may  be a host name, an IP address, a reference clock implemen-
	       tation name with	its parameter or REFCLK(implementation_number,
	       parameter).  On hostnames no only  IP-addresses	will  be  dis-
	       played.

       dmpeers
	       A  slightly different peer summary list.	 Identical to the out-
	       put of the peers	command, except	for the	character in the left-
	       most column.  Characters	only appear beside  peers  which  were
	       included	 in  the final stage of	the clock selection algorithm.
	       A `.' indicates that this peer was cast off in the  falseticker
	       detection, while	a `+' indicates	that the peer made it through.
	       A  `*'  denotes	the peer the server is currently synchronizing
	       with.

       showpeer	peer_address [...]
	       Shows a detailed	display	of the current peer variables for  one
	       or  more	 peers.	 Most of these values are described in the NTP
	       Version 2 specification.

       pstats peer_address [...]
	       Show per-peer statistic counters	associated with	the  specified
	       peer(s).

       clockstat clock_peer_address [...]
	       Obtain and print	information concerning a peer clock.  The val-
	       ues  obtained  provide information on the setting of fudge fac-
	       tors and	other clock performance	information.

       kerninfo
	       Obtain and print	kernel phase-lock loop	operating  parameters.
	       This  information is available only if the kernel has been spe-
	       cially modified for a precision timekeeping function.

       loopinfo	[oneline | multiline]
	       Print the values	of selected loop filter	variables.   The  loop
	       filter  is the part of NTP which	deals with adjusting the local
	       system clock.  The `offset' is the last	offset	given  to  the
	       loop  filter by the packet processing code.  The	`frequency' is
	       the frequency error of the  local  clock	 in  parts-per-million
	       (ppm).	 The   `time_const'  controls  the  stiffness  of  the
	       phase-lock loop and thus	the speed at which it can adapt	to os-
	       cillator	drift.	The `watchdog timer' value is  the  number  of
	       seconds	which  have  elapsed  since the	last sample offset was
	       given to	the loop filter.  The oneline  and  multiline  options
	       specify	the format in which this information is	to be printed,
	       with multiline as the default.

       sysinfo
	       Print a variety of system state variables, i.e.,	state  related
	       to  the	local  server.	All except the last four lines are de-
	       scribed in the NTP Version 3 specification, RFC-1305.

	       The `system flags' show various system flags, some of which can
	       be set and cleared by the enable	and disable configuration com-
	       mands, respectively.  These are	the  auth,  bclient,  monitor,
	       pll,  pps  and  stats flags.  See the ntpd(8) documentation for
	       the meaning of these flags.  There  are	two  additional	 flags
	       which  are  read	 only,	the  kernel_pll	and kernel_pps.	 These
	       flags indicate the synchronization status  when	the  precision
	       time  kernel  modifications are in use.	The `kernel_pll' indi-
	       cates that the local clock is being disciplined by the  kernel,
	       while  the `kernel_pps' indicates the kernel discipline is pro-
	       vided by	the PPS	signal.

	       The `stability' is the residual frequency error remaining after
	       the system frequency correction is applied and is intended  for
	       maintenance  and	 debugging.  In	most architectures, this value
	       will initially decrease from as high as 500 ppm	to  a  nominal
	       value in	the range .01 to 0.1 ppm.  If it remains high for some
	       time after starting the daemon, something may be	wrong with the
	       local   clock,	or   the   value   of	the   kernel  variable
	       kern.clockrate.tick may be incorrect.

	       The `broadcastdelay' shows the default broadcast	delay, as  set
	       by the broadcastdelay configuration command.

	       The  `authdelay'	shows the default authentication delay,	as set
	       by the authdelay	configuration command.

       sysstats
	       Print statistics	counters maintained in the protocol module.

       memstats
	       Print statistics	counters related to memory allocation code.

       iostats
	       Print statistics	counters maintained in the  input-output  mod-
	       ule.

       timerstats
	       Print  statistics  counters maintained in the timer/event queue
	       support code.

       reslist
	       Obtain and print	the server's restriction list.	This  list  is
	       (usually)  printed  in  sorted order and	may help to understand
	       how the restrictions are	applied.

       monlist [version]
	       Obtain and print	traffic	counts collected and maintained	by the
	       monitor facility.  The version number should not	normally  need
	       to be specified.

       clkbug clock_peer_address [...]
	       Obtain  debugging  information  for  a  reference clock driver.
	       This information	is provided only by some clock drivers and  is
	       mostly undecodable without a copy of the	driver source in hand.

   Runtime Configuration Requests
       All  requests which cause state changes in the server are authenticated
       by the server using a configured	NTP key	(the facility can also be dis-
       abled by	the server by not configuring a	key).  The key number and  the
       corresponding  key  must	also be	made known to ntpdc.  This can be done
       using the keyid and passwd commands, the	latter of which	will prompt at
       the terminal for	a password to use as the  encryption  key.   You  will
       also be prompted	automatically for both the key number and password the
       first  time a command which would result	in an authenticated request to
       the server is given.  Authentication  not  only	provides  verification
       that  the requester has permission to make such changes,	but also gives
       an extra	degree of protection again transmission	errors.

       Authenticated requests always include a timestamp in the	 packet	 data,
       which  is included in the computation of	the authentication code.  This
       timestamp is compared by	the server to its receive time stamp.  If they
       differ by more than a small amount the request is  rejected.   This  is
       done  for  two  reasons.	  First, it makes simple replay	attacks	on the
       server, by someone who might be able to overhear	traffic	on  your  LAN,
       much  more  difficult.	Second,	 it makes it more difficult to request
       configuration changes to	your server from topologically	remote	hosts.
       While  the reconfiguration facility will	work well with a server	on the
       local host, and may work	adequately between time-synchronized hosts  on
       the  same  LAN,	it  will  work very poorly for more distant hosts.  As
       such, if	reasonable passwords are chosen, care is taken in the distrib-
       ution and protection of keys and	appropriate  source  address  restric-
       tions are applied, the run time reconfiguration facility	should provide
       an adequate level of security.

       The following commands all make authenticated requests.

       addpeer peer_address [keyid] [version] [prefer]
	       Add  a configured peer association at the given address and op-
	       erating in symmetric active mode.  Note that an existing	 asso-
	       ciation	with the same peer may be deleted when this command is
	       executed, or may	simply be converted to conform to the new con-
	       figuration, as appropriate.  If the optional keyid is a nonzero
	       integer,	all outgoing packets to	the remote server will have an
	       authentication field attached encrypted with this key.  If  the
	       value  is 0 (or not given) no authentication will be done.  The
	       version can be 1, 2 or 3	and defaults to	3.  The	prefer keyword
	       indicates a preferred peer (and thus will be used primarily for
	       clock synchronisation if	possible).  The	 preferred  peer  also
	       determines  the	validity  of the PPS signal - if the preferred
	       peer is suitable	for synchronisation so is the PPS signal.

       addserver peer_address [keyid] [version]	[prefer]
	       Identical to the	addpeer	command,  except  that	the  operating
	       mode is client.

       broadcast peer_address [keyid] [version]	[prefer]
	       Identical  to  the  addpeer  command, except that the operating
	       mode is broadcast.  In this case	a valid	key identifier and key
	       are required.  The peer_address parameter can be	the  broadcast
	       address	of  the	local network or a multicast group address as-
	       signed to NTP.  If a  multicast	address,  a  multicast-capable
	       kernel is required.

       unconfig	peer_address [...]
	       This  command  causes the configured bit	to be removed from the
	       specified peer(s).  In many cases this will cause the peer  as-
	       sociation  to be	deleted.  When appropriate, however, the asso-
	       ciation may persist in an unconfigured mode if the remote  peer
	       is willing to continue on in this fashion.

       fudge peer_address [time1] [time2] [stratum] [refid]
	       This command provides a way to set certain data for a reference
	       clock.  See the source listing for further information.

       enable  [auth  |	 bclient  | calibrate |	kernel | monitor | ntp | pps |
	       stats]

       disable [auth | bclient | calibrate | kernel | monitor |	ntp  |	pps  |
	       stats]
	       These  commands	operate	 in  the  same	way  as	the enable and
	       disable configuration file commands of ntpd(8).

	       auth    Enables the server  to  synchronize  with  unconfigured
		       peers only if the peer has been correctly authenticated
		       using  either  public  key or private key cryptography.
		       The default for this flag is enable.

	       bclient
		       Enables the server to  listen  for  a  message  from  a
		       broadcast  or  multicast	 server,  as in	the multicast-
		       client command with default address.  The  default  for
		       this flag is disable.

	       calibrate
		       Enables	the  calibrate	feature	 for reference clocks.
		       The default for this flag is disable.

	       kernel  Enables the kernel time discipline, if available.   The
		       default	for  this  flag	is enable if support is	avail-
		       able, otherwise disable.

	       monitor
		       Enables the monitoring facility.	 See the documentation
		       here about the monlist command or further  information.
		       The default for this flag is enable.

	       ntp     Enables time and	frequency discipline.  In effect, this
		       switch  opens  and  closes  the feedback	loop, which is
		       useful for testing.  The	default	for this flag  is  en-
		       able.

	       pps     Enables	the  pulse-per-second  (PPS)  signal when fre-
		       quency and time is disciplined by  the  precision  time
		       kernel  modifications.	See  the  "A  Kernel Model for
		       Precision Timekeeping" (available as part of  the  HTML
		       documentation  provided in /usr/share/doc/ntp) page for
		       further information.  The default for this flag is dis-
		       able.

	       stats   Enables the statistics facility.	 See  the  "Monitoring
		       Options"	 section  of  ntp.conf(5) for further informa-
		       tion.  The default for this flag	is disable.

       restrict	address	mask flag [...]
	       This command operates in	the same way as	the restrict  configu-
	       ration file commands of ntpd(8).

       unrestrict address mask flag [...]
	       Unrestrict the matching entry from the restrict list.

       delrestrict address mask	[ntpport]
	       Delete the matching entry from the restrict list.

       readkeys
	       Causes  the current set of authentication keys to be purged and
	       a new set to be obtained	by rereading the keys file (which must
	       have been specified in the ntpd(8) configuration	 file).	  This
	       allows  encryption  keys	 to  be	changed	without	restarting the
	       server.

       trustedkey keyid	[...]

       untrustedkey keyid [...]
	       These commands operate in the same way as  the  trustedkey  and
	       untrustedkey configuration file commands	of ntpd(8).

       authinfo
	       Returns	information  concerning	the authentication module, in-
	       cluding known keys and counts of	 encryptions  and  decryptions
	       which have been done.

       traps   Display	the  traps  set	in the server.	See the	source listing
	       for further information.

       addtrap address [port] [interface]
	       Set a trap for asynchronous messages.  See the  source  listing
	       for further information.

       clrtrap address [port] [interface]
	       Clear a trap for	asynchronous messages.	See the	source listing
	       for further information.

       reset   Clear the statistics counters in	various	modules	of the server.
	       See the source listing for further information.

ENVIRONMENT
       See OPTION PRESETS for configuration environment	variables.

FILES
       See OPTION PRESETS for configuration files.

EXIT STATUS
       One of the following exit values	will be	returned:

       0  (EXIT_SUCCESS)
	       Successful program execution.

       1  (EXIT_FAILURE)
	       The operation failed or the command syntax was not valid.

       66  (EX_NOINPUT)
	       A specified configuration file could not	be loaded.

       70  (EX_SOFTWARE)
	       libopts had an internal operational error.  Please report it to
	       autogen-users@lists.sourceforge.net.  Thank you.

SEE ALSO
       ntp.conf(5), ntpd(8)

       David L.	Mills, Network Time Protocol (Version 3), RFC1305.

AUTHORS
       The formatting directives in this document came from FreeBSD.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright  (C)  1992-2024  The  University of Delaware and Network Time
       Foundation all rights reserved.	This program  is  released  under  the
       terms of	the NTP	license, <http://ntp.org/license>.

BUGS
       The ntpdc utility is a crude hack.  Much	of the information it shows is
       deadly  boring and could	only be	loved by its implementer.  The program
       was designed so that new	(and temporary)	features were easy to hack in,
       at great	expense	to the program's ease of use.  Despite this, the  pro-
       gram is occasionally useful.

       Please report bugs to http://bugs.ntp.org .

       Please send bug reports to: https://bugs.ntp.org, bugs@ntp.org

NOTES
       This manual page	was AutoGen-erated from	the ntpdc option definitions.

FreeBSD	Ports 14.quarterly	  May 25 2024			      NTPDC(8)

Want to link to this manual page? Use this URL:
<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=ntpdc&sektion=8&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+14.3.quarterly>

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