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

NAME
       timed --	time server daemon

SYNOPSIS
       timed [-dtM] [-i	network	| -n network] [-F host ...]

DESCRIPTION
       The  timed utility is a time server daemon which	is normally invoked at
       boot time from the rc.conf(5) file.  It synchronizes  the  host's  time
       with the	time of	other machines,	which are also running timed, in a lo-
       cal area	network.  These	time servers will slow down the	clocks of some
       machines	and speed up the clocks	of others to bring them	to the average
       network	time.	The average network time is computed from measurements
       of clock	differences using the ICMP timestamp request message.

       The following options are available:

       -d      Enable debugging	mode; do not detach from the terminal.

       -i network
	       Add network to the list of networks to ignore.  All other  net-
	       works  to  which	 the machine is	directly connected are used by
	       timed.  This option may be specified multiple times to add more
	       than one	network	to the list.

       -F host ...
	       -   Create a list of trusted hosts.
	       -   Can take one	or more	parameters.
	       -   timed will only accept trusted hosts	 as  masters.	If  it
		   finds  an  untrusted	host claiming to be master, timed will
		   suppress incoming messages from that	host and  call	for  a
		   new election.
	       -   Use real host names (resolvable by RDNS) not	aliases	(eg in
		   named(8) parlance: use A names, not C names).
	       -   Use full names eg time1.domain.com not time1.
	       -   -F  automatically  includes	the functionality of -M	(so -M
		   does	not need to asserted).
	       -   If -F is not	specified, all hosts on	connected networks are
		   treated as trustworthy.

       -M      Allow this host to become a timed master	if necessary.

       -n network
	       Add network to the list of allowed networks.   All  other  net-
	       works to	which the machine is directly connected	are ignored by
	       timed.  This option may be specified multiple times to add more
	       than one	network	to the list.

       -t      Enable  tracing	of  received  messages	and  log  to  the file
	       /var/log/timed.log.  Tracing can	be  turned  on	or  off	 while
	       timed is	running	with the timedc(8) utility.

       The  -n	and  -i	 flags are mutually exclusive and require as arguments
       real networks to	which the host is  connected  (see  networks(5)).   If
       neither flag is specified, timed	will listen on all connected networks.

       A timed running without the -M nor -F flags will	always remain a	slave.
       If  the -F flag is not used, timed will treat all machines as trustwor-
       thy.

       The timed utility is based on a master-slave  scheme.   When  timed  is
       started	on a machine, it asks the master for the network time and sets
       the host's clock	to that	time.  After that, it accepts  synchronization
       messages	 periodically  sent by the master and calls adjtime(2) to per-
       form the	needed corrections on the host's clock.

       It also communicates with date(1) in order to set  the  date  globally,
       and  with  timedc(8),  a	timed control utility.	If the machine running
       the master becomes unreachable, the slaves will elect a new master from
       among those slaves which	are running with at least one of the -M	and -F
       flags.

       At startup timed	normally checks	for a master time server on each  net-
       work  to	which it is connected, except as modified by the -n and	-i op-
       tions described above.  It will request	synchronization	 service  from
       the  first  master server located.  If permitted	by the -M or -F	flags,
       it will provide synchronization service on  any	attached  networks  on
       which  no trusted master	server was detected.  Such a server propagates
       the time	computed by the	top-level master.  The timed utility will  pe-
       riodically  check  for  the  presence of	a master on those networks for
       which it	is operating as	a slave.   If  it  finds  that	there  are  no
       trusted	masters	 on  a	network, it will begin the election process on
       that network.

       One way to synchronize a	group of machines is to	use  ntpd(8)  to  syn-
       chronize	 the clock of one machine to a distant standard	or a radio re-
       ceiver and -F hostname to tell its timed	to trust only itself.

       Messages	printed	by the kernel on the system console occur with	inter-
       rupts  disabled.	 This means that the clock stops while they are	print-
       ing.  A machine with many disk or network hardware problems and	conse-
       quent messages cannot keep good time by itself.	Each message typically
       causes  the clock to lose a dozen milliseconds.	A time daemon can cor-
       rect the	result.

       Messages	in the system log about	machines that failed to	 respond  usu-
       ally  indicate  machines	 that  crashed or were turned off.  Complaints
       about machines that failed to respond to	initial	time settings are  of-
       ten associated with "multi-homed" machines that looked for time masters
       on  more	than one network and eventually	chose to become	a slave	on the
       other network.

WARNINGS
       Temporal	chaos will result if two or more time daemons attempt  to  ad-
       just  the same clock.  If both timed and	another	time daemon are	run on
       the same	machine, ensure	that the -F flag is used, so that timed	 never
       attempts	to adjust the local clock.

       The  protocol  is  based	on UDP/IP broadcasts.  All machines within the
       range of	a broadcast that are using the TSP  protocol  must  cooperate.
       There  cannot  be more than a single administrative domain using	the -F
       flag among all machines reached by a broadcast packet.  Failure to fol-
       low this	rule is	usually	indicated by complaints	concerning "untrusted"
       machines	in the system log.

FILES
       /var/log/timed.log	 tracing file for timed
       /var/log/timed.masterlog	 log file for master timed

SEE ALSO
       date(1),	adjtime(2), gettimeofday(2),  icmp(4),	networks(5),  ntpd(8),
       timedc(8)

       R.  Gusella  and	 S.  Zatti, TSP: The Time Synchronization Protocol for
       UNIX 4.3BSD.

HISTORY
       The timed utility appeared in 4.3BSD.

FreeBSD	14.3		       February	11, 2008		      TIMED(8)

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