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Time Synchronization with NTP

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Introduction to NTP

Overview
NTP (Network Time Protocol) provides accurate and syncronised time across the Internet. This introductory article will try to show you how to use NTP to control and synchronize your system clock.

First approach
NTP is organised in a hierarchical client-server model. In the top of this hierarchy there are a small number of machines known as reference clocks. A reference clock is known as stratum 0 and is typically a cesium clock or a Global Positioning System (GPS) that receives time from satellites. Attached to these machines there are the so-called stratum 1 servers (that is, stratum 0 clients), which are the top level time servers available to the Internet, that is, they are the best NTP servers available. Note: in the NTP lingo measure for synchronization distance is termed as stratum: the number of steps that a system lies from a primary time source. Following this hierarchy, the next level in the structure are the stratum 2 servers which in turn are the clients for stratum 1 servers. The lowest level of the hierarchy is made up by stratum 16 servers. Generally speaking, every server syncronized with a stratum n server is termed as being at stratum n+1 level. So, there are a few stratum 1 servers which are referenced by stratum 2 servers, wich in turn are refenced by stratum 3 servers, which are referenced by stratum 4 and so on. NTP servers operating in the same stratum may be associated with others in a peer to peer basis, so they may decide who has the higher quality of time and then can synchronise to the most accurate. In addition to the client-server model and the peer to peer model, a server may broadcast time to a broadcast or multicast IP addresses and

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clients may be configured to synchronise to these broadcast time signals. So, at this point we know that NTP clients can operate with NTP servers in three ways: in a client-server basis in a peer to peer mode sending the time using broadcast/multicast How does it work Whenever ntpd starts it checks its configuration file (/etc/ntp.conf) to determine syncronization sources, authentication options, monitoring options, access control and other operating options. It also checks the frequency file (/etc/ntp/drift) that contains the latest estimate of clock frequency error. If specified, it will also look for a file containing the authentication keys (/etc/ntp/keys). Note that the path and/or name of these configuration files may vary in your system. Check the -c command line option. Once the NTP daemon is up and running, it will operate by exchanging packets (time and sanity check exchanges) with its configured servers at poll intervals and its behaviour will depend on the delay between the local time and its reference servers. Basically, the process starts when the NTP client sends a packet containing its timestamp to a server. When the server receives such a packet, it will in turn store its own timestamp and a transmit timestamp into the packet and send it back to the client. When the client receives the packet it will log its receipt time in order to estimate the travelling time of the packet. The packet exchange takes place until a NTP server is accepted as a synchronization source, which take about five minutes. The NTP daemon tries to adjust the clock in small steps and will continue until the client gets the accurate time. If the delay between both the server and client is big enough the daemon will terminate and you will need to adjust the time manually and start the daemon again.

Sample ntp.conf configuration file


server 134.214.100.6 server swisstime.ee.ethz.ch peer 192.168.100.125 peer 192.168.100.126 peer 192.168.100.127 driftfile /etc/ntp/drift #multicastclient # listen on default 224.0.1.1 #broadcastdelay 0.008 authenticate no #keys /etc/ntp/keys

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#trustedkey #requestkey #controlkey

65535 65535 65535

# by default ignore all ntp packets restrict 0.0.0.0 mask 0.0.0.0 ignore # allow localhost restrict 127.0.0.1 mask 255.255.255.255 # accept restrict restrict restrict packets from... 192.168.100.125 mask 255.255.255.255 192.168.100.126 mask 255.255.255.255 192.168.100.127 mask 255.255.255.255

Take a look at references below to understand the configuration options. References NTP homepage ntpd Network time protocol (version 3) specification Public NTP Time Servers

NTP Basics
NTP stands for Network Time Protocol, and it is an Internet protocol used to synchronize the clocks of computers to some time reference. NTP is an Internet standard protocol originally developed by Professor David L. Mills at the University of Delaware.

SNTP (Simple Network Time Protocol) is basically also NTP, but lacks some internal algorithms that are not needed for all types of servers. Time should be synchronized Time usually just advances. If you have communicating programs running on different computers, time still should even advance if you switch from one computer to another. Obviously if one system is ahead of the others, the others are behind that particular one. From the perspective of an external observer, switching between these systems would cause time to jump forward and back, a non-desirable effect. As a consequence, isolated networks may run their own wrong time, but as soon as you connect to the Internet, effects will be visible. Just imagine some EMail message arrived five minutes before it was sent, and there even was a reply two minutes before the message was sent. Basic features of NTP NTP needs some reference clock that defines the true time to operate. All clocks are set towards that true time. (It will not just make all systems agree on some time, but will make them agree upon the true time as defined by some standard.)

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NTP uses UTC as reference time

NTP is a fault-tolerant protocol that will automatically select the best of several available time sources to synchronize to. Multiple candidates can be combined to minimize the accumulated error. Temporarily or permanently insane time sources will be detected and avoided.

NTP is highly scalable: A synchronization network may consist of several reference clocks. Each node of such a network can exchange time information either bidirectional or unidirectional. Propagating time from one node to another forms a hierarchical graph with reference clocks at the top.

Having available several time sources, NTP can select the best candidates to build its estimate of the current time. The protocol is highly accurate, using a resolution of less than a nanosecond (about 2^-32 seconds). (The popular protocol used by rdate and defined in [RFC 868] only uses a resolution of one second).

Even when a network connection is temporarily unavailable, NTP can use measurements from the past to estimate current time and error. UTC (Universal Time Coordinated) UTC (Universal Time Coordinated, Temps Universel Coordonn) is an official standard for the current time. UTC evolved from the former GMT (Greenwich Mean Time) that once was used to set the clocks on ships before they left for a long journey. Later GMT had been adopted as the world's standard time. One of the reasons that GMT had been replaced as official standard time was the fact that it was based on the mean solar time. Newer methods of time measurement showed that the mean solar time varied a lot by itself.The following list will explain the main components of UTC: Universal means that the time can be used everywhere in the world, meaning that it is independent from time zones (i.e. it's not local time). To convert UTC to local time, one would have to add or subtract the local time zone.

Coordinated means that several institutions contribute their estimate of the current time, and UTC is built by combining these estimates.

NTP on Unix and Windows 2000


In this example we show, how to synchronize your Linux, Solaris and Windows 2000 Server (Primary Domain Controller) with the Public NTP Time Server: swisstime.ethz.ch Public NTP Server in Switzerland

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swisstime.ethz.ch (129.132.2.21) Location: Integrated Systems Laboratory, Swiss Fed. Inst. of Technology, CH 8092 Zurich, Switzerland Geographic Coordinates: 47:23N, 8:32E Synchronization: NTP primary (DCF77 clock), Sun-4/SunOS 4.1.4 Service Area: Switzerland/Europe Access Policy: open access Contact: Christoph Wicki (time@iis.ee.ethz.ch)

Configuration on Unix
Unix Workstation as NTP Client The NTP client program ntpdate sets the system clock once. As real clocks drift, you need periodic corrections. Basically you can run ntpdate in a cron job hourly or daily, but your machine won't be an NTP server then. Crontab entry to update the system clock once a day 0 2 * * * /usr/sbin/ntpdate -s -b -p 8 -u 129.132.2.21 -b

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Force the time to be stepped using the settimeofday() system call, rather than slewed (default) using the adjtime() system call. This option should be used when called from a startup file at boot time. -p samples Specify the number of samples to be acquired from each server as the integer samples, with values from 1 to 8 inclusive. The default is 4. -s Divert logging output from the standard output (default) to the system syslog facility. This is designed primarily for convenience of cron scripts. -u Direct ntpdate to use an unprivileged port or outgoing packets. This is most useful when behind a firewall that blocks incoming traffic to privileged ports, and you want to synchronise with hosts beyond the firewall. Note that the -d option always uses unprivileged ports. Unix Workstation as NTP Server First of all you have to download the NTP sources from www.ntp.org. On RedHat Linux 7.0 / 7.1 the NTP server ntpd is already included in the distribution. The NTP server ntpd will learn and remember the clock drift and it will correct it autonomously, even if there is no reachable server. Therefore large clock steps can be avoided while the machine is synchronized to some reference clock. In addition ntpd will maintain error estimates and statistics, and finally it can offer NTP service for other machines. Look at the Startup Script in /etc/rc.d/init.d/ntpd start() { # Adjust time to make life easy for ntpd if [ -f /etc/ntp/step-tickers ]; then echo -n $"Synchronizing with time server: " /usr/sbin/ntpdate -s -b -p 8 -u \ `/bin/sed -e 's/#.*//' /etc/ntp/step-tickers` success echo fi # Start daemons. echo -n $"Starting $prog: " daemon ntpd RETVAL=$? echo [ $RETVAL -eq 0 ] && touch /var/lock/subsys/ntpd return $RETVAL }

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Insert swisstime.ethz.ch or more NTP Servers to /etc/ntp/step-tickers 129.132.2.21 Edit the configuration file /etc/ntp.conf server 127.127.1.0 # local clock server 129.132.2.21 # swisstime.ethz.ch (stratum 1) driftfile /etc/ntp/drift multicastclient # listen on default 224.0.1.1 broadcastdelay 0.008 Start NTP Server and check /var/log/messages # /etc/rc.d/init.d/ntpd start Troubleshooting One of the quickest commands to verify that ntpd is still up and running as desired is ntpq -p. That command will show all peers used and configured together with their corner performance data. # ntpq -p remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter ===================================================================== LOCAL(0) LOCAL(0) 3 l 9 64 377 0.000 0.000 0.000 *swisstime.ethz. .DCFa. 1 u 17 64 377 25.088 -10.040 1.071 To obtain a current list 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 this 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, and the current estimated delay, offset and dispersion of the peer, all in milliseconds. # ntpq -c pee swisstime.ethz.ch remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter ==================================================================== *GENERIC(0) .DCFa. 0 l 14 16 377 0.000 0.126 0.170 LOCAL(0) LOCAL(0) 6 l 13 64 377 0.000 0.000 10.010 sns2-tss2.unige lantime 2 u 323 1024 377 11.000 0.014 1.770 +nz11.rz.uni-kar .DCF. 1 u 40 64 376 353.290 18.088 17.120 xjane.planNET.de .DCFa. 1 u 80 256 377 125.050 -38.018 0.210 +sombrero.cs.tu- .GPS. 1 u 49 64 377 36.070 1.159 0.790 # ntpdc ntpdc> peers Be sure that there is an entry for the the swisstime.ethz.ch server, and that there is an entry for your local net. The "st" (stratum) column for the ITD time servers should be "1" or "2", indicating that the time server are stratum-1/2 servers, e.g. they obtain their time from stratum-1 servers, which are directly connected to

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external time reference sources. If the stratum for any server is "16" then this server is not synchronizing successfully. remote local st poll reach delay offset disp ==================================================================== =LOCAL(0) 127.0.0.1 3 64 377 0.00000 0.000000 0.00095 =cosmos.hsz.akad 5.0.0.0 16 64 0 0.00000 0.000000 0.00000 *swisstime.ethz. 192.168.138.29 1 128 377 0.02658 -0.001197 0.00215

Configuration on Windows 2000 Workstation


Windows 2000 (Win2K) uses a time service, known as Windows Time Synchronization Service (Win32Time), to ensure that all Win2K computers on your network use a common time. The W32Time Service is a fully compliant implementation of the Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) as detailed in IETF RFC 1769. SNTP uses UDP port 123 by default. If you want to synchronize your time server with an SNTP server on the Internet, make sure that port is available. Select a NTP server, using net time /setsntp:swisstime.ethz.ch Start the W32time service with net start W32Time You can also set the start option of the Windows Time Synchronization Service (W32Time) to Automatic, so the service will start when Windows/2000 starts. Set the following Registry Entries for the W32Time Service (marked in blue color) The registry values are located in the following registry key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\W32Time\Parameters AvoidTimeSyncOnWan : REG_DWORD (optional) Prevents the computer from synchronizing with a computer that is in another site. 0 = the site of the time source is ignored [default] 1 = the computer does not synchronize with a time source that is in a different site

GetDcBackoffMaxTimes : REG_DWORD (optional) The maximum number of times to double the backoff interval when successive attempts to find a domain controller do not succeed. An event is logged every time a wait of the maximum length occurs. 0 = the wait between successive attempts is always the minimum and no event is logged 7 = [default]

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GetDcBackoffMinutes : REG_DWORD (optional) The initial number of minutes to wait before looking for a domain controller if the last attempt did not succeed. 15 = [default]

LocalNTP : REG_DWORD Used to start the SNTP server. 0 = do not start the SNTP server unless this computer is a domain controller [default] 1 = always start the SNTP server

NtpServer : REG_SZ (swisstime.ethz.ch) NtpServer : REG_SZ (optional) Used to manually configure the time source. Set this to the DNS name or IP address of the NTP server to synchronize from. You can modify this from the command line by using the net time command. Value is blank by default

Period : REG_DWORD or REG_SZ Used to control how often the time service synchronizes. If a string value is specified, it must be one of special ones listed below. 0 = once a day 65535, "BiDaily" = once every 2 days 65534, "Tridaily" = once every 3 days 65533, "Weekly" = once every week (7 days) 65532, "SpecialSkew" = once every 45 minutes until 3 good synchronizations occur, then once every 8 hours (3 per day) [default] 65531, "DailySpecialSkew" = once every 45 minutes until 1 good synchronization occurs, then once every day freq = freq times per day

ReliableTimeSource : REG_DWORD (optional) Used to indicate that this computer has reliable time. 0 = do not mark this computer as having reliable time [default] 1 = mark this computer as having reliable time (this is only useful on a domain controller)

Type : REG_SZ Used to control how a computer synchronizes. Nt5DS = synchronize to domain hierarchy [default] NTP = synchronize to manually configured source NoSync = do not synchronize time The Nt5DS setting may not use a manual configured source. The Adj and msSkewPerDay values are used to preserve information about the computer's clock between restarts. Do not manually edit these values.

More Information
For further information about NTP in Windows/2000 see

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http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q224/7/99.asp http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q216/7/34.asp http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q223/1/84.asp http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/q120/9/44.asp http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/articles/Q232/2/55.asp http://labmice.techtarget.com/windows2000/timesynch.htm For further information about NTP see http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~ntp/

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