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

NAME
       sntp -- standard	Simple Network Time Protocol client program

SYNOPSIS
       sntp  [-flags]  [-flag  [value]]	 [--option-name[[=|  ]value]]  [ host-
	    name-or-IP ...]

DESCRIPTION
       sntp can	be used	as an SNTP client to query a NTP or  SNTP  server  and
       either  display the time	or set the local system's time (given suitable
       privilege).  It can be run as an	interactive command  or	 from  a  cron
       job.  NTP (the Network Time Protocol) and SNTP (the Simple Network Time
       Protocol) are defined and described by RFC 5905.

       The default is to write the estimated correct local date	and time (i.e.
       not  UTC)  to  the  standard  output  in	 a  format  like:  '1996-10-15
       20:17:25.123 (+0800) +4.567 +/- 0.089 [host] IP sN' where the '(+0800)'
       means that to get to UTC	from the reported local	time one  must	add  8
       hours  and  0  minutes, the '+4.567' indicates the local	clock is 4.567
       seconds behind the correct time (so 4.567 seconds must be added to  the
       local clock to get it to	be correct).  Note that	the number of decimals
       printed	for  this value	will change based on the reported precision of
       the server.  '+/- 0.089'	is the reported	synchronization	 distance  (in
       seconds), which represents the maximum error due	to all causes.	If the
       server  does not	report valid data needed to calculate the synchroniza-
       tion distance, this will	be reported as '+/- ?'.	 If the	host  is  dif-
       ferent  from the	IP, both will be displayed.  Otherwise,	only the IP is
       displayed.  Finally, the	stratum	of the host is reported	and  the  leap
       indicator is decoded and	displayed.

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 the 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 the following host names	on the command
	       line to the IPv6	namespace.

       -a auth-keynumber, --authentication=auth-keynumber
	       Enable authentication with the key auth-keynumber.  This	option
	       takes an	integer	number as its argument.

	       Enable  authentication using the	key specified in this option's
	       argument.  The argument of this option is the keyid,  a	number
	       specified  in  the  keyfile  as this key's identifier.  See the
	       keyfile option (-k) for more details.

       -b broadcast-address, --broadcast=broadcast-address
	       Listen to the address specified for broadcast time sync.	  This
	       option may appear an unlimited number of	times.

	       If  specified sntp will listen to the specified address for NTP
	       broadcasts.  The	default	maximum	wait time  can	(and  probably
	       should) be modified with	-t.

       -c host-name, --concurrent=host-name
	       Concurrently query all IPs returned for host-name.  This	option
	       may appear an unlimited number of times.

	       Requests	 from  an  NTP	"client" to a "server" should never be
	       sent more rapidly than one every	2 seconds.   By	 default,  any
	       IPs  returned  as  part of a DNS	lookup are assumed to be for a
	       single instance of ntpd,	and therefore sntp will	 send  queries
	       to  these IPs one after another,	with a 2-second	gap in between
	       each query.

	       The -c or --concurrent flag says	that any IPs returned for  the
	       DNS lookup of the supplied host-name are	on different machines,
	       so we can send concurrent queries.

       -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.

       -g milliseconds,	--gap=milliseconds
	       The gap (in milliseconds) between time requests.	  This	option
	       takes   an   integer  number  as	 its  argument.	  The  default
	       milliseconds for	this option is:
		    50

	       Since we're only	going to use the first valid response  we  get
	       and  there is benefit to	specifying a good number of servers to
	       query, separate the queries we send out by the specified	number
	       of milliseconds.

       -K file-name, --kod=file-name
	       KoD history filename.  The default file-name  for  this	option
	       is:
		    /var/db/ntp-kod

	       Specifies the filename to be used for the persistent history of
	       KoD  responses received from servers.  If the file does not ex-
	       ist, a warning message will be displayed.  The file will	not be
	       created.

       -k file-name, --keyfile=file-name
	       Look in this file for the key specified with -a.	  The  default
	       file-name for this option is:
		    /etc/ntp.keys

	       This  option  specifies	the keyfile.  sntp will	search for the
	       key specified with -a keyno in this file.  See ntp.keys(5)  for
	       more information.

       -l file-name, --logfile=file-name
	       Log to specified	logfile.

	       This  option  causes  the  client  to write log messages	to the
	       specified logfile.

       -M number, --steplimit=number
	       Adjustments less	than steplimit msec will be slewed.  This  op-
	       tion  takes  an	integer	 number	as its argument.  The value of
	       number is constrained to	being:
		   greater than	or equal to 0

	       If the time adjustment is less than steplimit milliseconds,
	       slew the	amount using adjtime(2).  Otherwise, step the correc-
	       tion using settimeofday(2).  The	default	value is 0, which
	       means all adjustments will be stepped.  This is a feature, as
	       different situations demand different values.

       -o number, --ntpversion=number
	       Send int	as our NTP protocol version.  This option takes	an in-
	       teger number as its argument.  The value	of number is con-
	       strained	to being:
		   in the range	 0 through 7
	       The default number for this option is:
		    4

	       When sending requests to	a remote server, tell them we are run-
	       ning NTP	protocol version ntpversion .

       -r, --usereservedport
	       Use the NTP Reserved Port (port 123).

	       Use port	123, which is reserved for NTP,	for our	network	commu-
	       nications.

       -S, --step
	       OK to 'step' the	time with settimeofday(2).

       -s, --slew
	       OK to 'slew' the	time with adjtime(2).

       -t seconds, --timeout=seconds
	       The number of seconds to	wait for responses.  This option takes
	       an integer number as its	argument.  The default seconds for
	       this option is:
		    5

	       When waiting for	a reply, sntp will wait	the number of seconds
	       specified before	giving up.  The	default	should be more than
	       enough for a unicast response.  If sntp is only waiting for a
	       broadcast response a longer timeout is likely needed.

       --wait, --no-wait
	       Wait for	pending	replies	(if not	setting	the time).  The
	       no-wait form will disable the option.  This option is enabled
	       by default.

	       If we are not setting the time, wait for	all pending responses.

       -?, --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:
	 SNTP_<option-name> or SNTP
       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
       sntp ntpserver.somewhere
	       is the simplest use of this program and can be run  as  an  un-
	       privileged  command  to check the current time and error	in the
	       local clock.

       sntp -Ss	-M 128 ntpserver.somewhere
	       With suitable privilege,	run as a command  or  from  a  cron(8)
	       job,  sntp -Ss -M 128 ntpserver.somewhere will request the time
	       from the	server,	and if that server reports that	it is synchro-
	       nized then if the offset	adjustment is less than	128  millisec-
	       onds  the  correction  will be slewed, and if the correction is
	       more than 128 milliseconds the correction  will be stepped.

       sntp -S ntpserver.somewhere
	       With suitable privilege,	run as a command  or  from  a  cron(8)
	       job,  sntp  -S  ntpserver.somewhere  will  set (step) the local
	       clock from a synchronized specified server,  like  the  (depre-
	       cated) ntpdate(8), or rdate(8) commands.

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.

AUTHORS
       Johannes	Maximilian Kuehn
       Harlan Stenn
       Dave Hart

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

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

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

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

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