I think you should prefer openntpd over ntpd, because I think openntpd
is developed by openbsd, which means more secure ...
Howdy,
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
openntpd seems to be easier to set up according to wiki.gentoo.org.
The list's advice would be much appreciated.
On 08/10/2016 09:27 AM, james wrote:
>
> Googling produces little on this package, but the man pages.
> I even tried to stop and restart the daemon, but that makes no
> difference but to verifyh that openntp is actually the daemon running::
> Starting OpenNTPD ...
>
&g
Why don't you just use openntpd ( or whatever it's called)?
Hello,
So I do not use 'lvm' on this system. So after adding net-misc/openntpd
and setting it up per the wiki, I got this strange message::
# /etc/init.d/ntpd restart
* Caching service dependencies ...
File descriptor 3 (pipe:[25250801]) leaked on lvm invocation. Parent PID
1159: /bin/sh
OpenNTPD ...
Any hints on using this net-misc/openntpd ?
There's no "ntpdate" executable in openntpd, but you can tell it to
force an update whenever you start the daemon by adding "-s" to your
NTPD_OPTS in /etc/conf.d/ntpd.
If you do that and restart the daemon, you should wind
* Peng [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2005-04-20 10:30]:
I'm sorry to ask something so basic, but is there an Idiot's Guide to
Time Syncronization on Gentoo Linux anywhere? I just can't figure the
dumb thing out. :-(
try openntpd which is as simple as emerge openntpd
I don't remember if I had to change
On 1/5/2011 12:04 AM, Thanasis wrote:
I think you should prefer openntpd over ntpd, because I think openntpd
is developed by openbsd, which means more secure ...
I tried openntp a couple years ago. It was a giant pain in the ass.
IIRC it was combination of crap defaults, poor docs
On Sat, Jul 26, 2014 at 5:05 AM, Alexander Kapshuk
alexander.kaps...@gmail.com wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
openntpd seems to be easier to set up according to wiki.gentoo.org.
The list's advice would be much appreciated
Le Sunday 31 October 2010 17:35:56, Jacob Todd a écrit :
Why don't you just use openntpd ( or whatever it's called)?
ntp service (such as openntpd or regular ntp itself) doesn't lookup at the
time printed on the desktop ! They work in utc time, furnishing a stable base
of time. It's the os
On Sat, 26 Jul 2014 15:05:23 +0300, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
chrony - no competition, even for servers. ntpd is way overrated,
unnecessarily hard to setup correctly, fragile and contrary to
popular belief
On 07/26/2014 03:31 PM, Holger Hoffstätte wrote:
On Sat, 26 Jul 2014 15:05:23 +0300, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
chrony - no competition, even for servers. ntpd is way overrated,
unnecessarily hard to setup
On 07/26/2014 03:31 PM, Holger Hoffstätte wrote:
On Sat, 26 Jul 2014 15:05:23 +0300, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
chrony - no competition, even for servers. ntpd is way overrated,
unnecessarily hard to setup
On Thu, 06. Mar, John J. Foster spammed my inbox with
Hi all - it's been awhile
snip
Is this common?
Is there any way around it? I'm not really sure why openntpd didn't
work.
I tried out vmware with a windows VM and it was always fast. I have recently
read an article on virtualization timing
Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Howdy,
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
openntpd seems to be easier to set up according to wiki.gentoo.org.
The list's advice would be much appreciated.
I have used ntp before, seen others recommend
On 07/26/2014 03:18 PM, Dale wrote:
Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Howdy,
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
openntpd seems to be easier to set up according to wiki.gentoo.org.
The list's advice would be much appreciated.
I have used ntp
On Friday 22 September 2006 14:26, Mick wrote:
For a laptop . . .
What do/would you use and why?
I can't be bothered setting my clock manually anymore and thought of moving
on with the times (pun intended). :)
openntpd, it's easy. Install, run.
--
Mike Williams
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org
alternative is
OpenNTPD btw, http://www.openntpd.org/
Am 03.04.2013 12:21, schrieb Marc Stürmer:
Just two different hammers for the same nail.
Sure. I just like the quicker syncing/adjusting of chrony.
Another alternative is
OpenNTPD btw, http://www.openntpd.org/
I will have a look as well ;-)
Thanks, Stefan
On Wednesday 10 Aug 2016 08:27:53 james wrote:
> Any hints on using this net-misc/openntpd ?
No, but have you thought of using chrony instead? It's served me well for
many years and I don't get any impression of bloat. That's just an informal
opinion; I haven't looked into it clos
the
VM rebooting solvles the problem, as vmplayer must initially get the
date and time from the host, but it sure doesn't keep it right after
that. I tried openntpd, but it kept setting the time further and further
off. I live in Fort Collins, Co and my locatime is set correctly
(America/Denver
Am Freitag, 27. Juli 2007 schrieb Aleksey V. Kunitskiy:
Hi,
I've just deployed my home server, of course using Gentoo :)
I setup openntpd there and /var/log/messages says to me that every few
minutes clock is adjusted by ~100s. Is it a bug or I've missed smth?
chipset: nForce2
And, btw
kashani wrote:
On 1/5/2011 12:04 AM, Thanasis wrote:
I think you should prefer openntpd over ntpd, because I think openntpd
is developed by openbsd, which means more secure ...
I tried openntp a couple years ago. It was a giant pain in the
ass. IIRC it was combination of crap defaults
On Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 12:42 PM, Douglas J Hunley
doug.hun...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Jul 26, 2014 at 5:05 AM, Alexander Kapshuk
alexander.kaps...@gmail.com wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
openntpd seems to be easier to set
: command not found
Googling produces little on this package, but the man pages.
I even tried to stop and restart the daemon, but that makes no
difference but to verifyh that openntp is actually the daemon running::
Starting OpenNTPD ...
Any hints on using this net-misc/openntpd ?
James
My system clock is running extremely fast... so fast that even
openntpd (apparently) can't catch up!
I tried (oh how I tried) to get the regular ntp package to work.
I could correct my clock using ntpdate, but I could never get ntpd
to sync with any servers (see notes (*) below).
So I got fed
Hello everyone,
I'm trying to synchronize the system time with the help of rdate
(openNTPD is on the list in case of failure). I have one problem,
though: I connect to the Internet through a proxy server. I have set
up the necessary environment, but I doubt that rdate listens to it:
localhost
properly, though it works more or less 'out of the box'.
openntpd is a simplified ntp. It is very easy to set up, but has less
possibilities than the 'standard' ntp.
Both packages are lightweight, with very low system overhead.
Cheers, Dave
, and New York City is about as close as it gets
to me. Your message implies that there is some other program to get
time from a server. Is it ntpd?
Most people (made-up statistic) use NTP. There are a couple of different
implementations available; I personally think openntpd is the easiest
On Wednesday 03 Apr 2013 11:38:56 Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
Am 03.04.2013 12:21, schrieb Marc Stürmer:
Just two different hammers for the same nail.
Sure. I just like the quicker syncing/adjusting of chrony.
Another alternative is
OpenNTPD btw, http://www.openntpd.org/
I will have
in Advance,
N.
net-misc/ntp
net-misc/openntpd
net-misc/chrony
One of those should work. I think the plain ntp has been around the
longest. I couldn't get it to work right on my rig so I switched to
chrony. Basically, I would try ntp first then go from there if needed.
Hope that helps.
Dale
services are quite time sensitive.
Thanks in Advance,
N.
net-misc/ntp
net-misc/openntpd
net-misc/chrony
One of those should work. I think the plain ntp has been around the
longest. I couldn't get it to work right on my rig so I switched to
chrony. Basically, I would try ntp first then go from
the
machine, but when I return, time is way off. Shutting down Gentoo the
VM rebooting solvles the problem, as vmplayer must initially get the
date and time from the host, but it sure doesn't keep it right after
that. I tried openntpd, but it kept setting the time further and further
off. I live
,
Think that some other package fetches all these deps.
Check:
# dep -l net-misc/ntp
net-misc/ntp-4.2.0.20050303-r1:
!openntpd? !net-misc/openntpd
=sys-apps/portage-2.0.51 sys-apps/portage-2.1_pre5
=sys-libs/ncurses-5.2 sys-libs/ncurses-5.5-r1
On Thu, 2011-01-06 at 14:46 -0600, Dale wrote:
kashani wrote:
On 1/5/2011 12:04 AM, Thanasis wrote:
I think you should prefer openntpd over ntpd, because I think openntpd
is developed by openbsd, which means more secure ...
I tried openntp a couple years ago. It was a giant pain
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
you need to make sure ntp-client and ntpd (from openntpd) have been
started, and you have a valid time server.
Below I have included everything I hope will help you
-
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ emerge -vp openntpd
These are the packages
-workstation-tools
Good luck!
Mike
On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 1:00 PM, Chris Brennan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
you need to make sure ntp-client and ntpd (from openntpd) have been
started, and you have a valid time server.
Below I have included everything I
the system was fully up.
BillK
On Wed, 2005-08-31 at 17:13 -0500, Matt Garman wrote:
My system clock is running extremely fast... so fast that even
openntpd (apparently) can't catch up!
I tried (oh how I tried) to get the regular ntp package to work.
I could correct my clock using ntpdate, but I
Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
On 07/26/2014 03:31 PM, Holger Hoffstätte wrote:
On Sat, 26 Jul 2014 15:05:23 +0300, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
chrony - no competition, even for servers. ntpd is way overrated
On 07/26/2014 11:25 PM, Dale wrote:
Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
On 07/26/2014 03:31 PM, Holger Hoffstätte wrote:
On Sat, 26 Jul 2014 15:05:23 +0300, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
chrony - no competition, even
On Friday 27 July 2007 23:04, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
Don't know openntpd because I'm using ntpd, but: It seems the numbers are
decreasing, so it looks like normal operation. At some point time will be
adjusted completely.
Yes, it is OK. I've just found it on openbsd.org:
...Once your clock
USE flags (php,
apache2, etc.) brought me down to net-misc/ntp and 2 other
dependencies (libcap and swig), which I thought were acceptable.
You could also try openntpd. It seems to be lacking some features (ntpq
doesn't work against it, for example) but it will connect to an ntp server
and set
configuration work to get
it running properly, though it works more or less 'out of the box'.
openntpd is a simplified ntp. It is very easy to set up, but has less
possibilities than the 'standard' ntp.
Both packages are lightweight, with very low system overhead.
Cheers, Dave
I agree. I
/wiki/Time_Synchronization.
Our services are quite time sensitive.
Thanks in Advance,
N.
net-misc/ntp
net-misc/openntpd
net-misc/chrony
One of those should work. I think the plain ntp has been around the
longest. I couldn't get it to work right on my rig so I switched to
chrony
On Saturday 26 July 2014 12:31:55 Holger Hoffstätte wrote:
On Sat, 26 Jul 2014 15:05:23 +0300, Alexander Kapshuk wrote:
Which NTPd package would the list recommend using, ntp, openntpd, or
some other package?
chrony - no competition, even for servers. ntpd is way overrated,
unnecessarily
On 08/10/2016 10:48 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Wednesday 10 Aug 2016 08:27:53 james wrote:
Any hints on using this net-misc/openntpd ?
No, but have you thought of using chrony instead? It's served me well for
many years and I don't get any impression of bloat. That's just an informal
oblem? Remember that Gentoo is about choice. An "ewarn"
message might be appropriate about "missing functionality", but that's
about it.
2) Remember that Gentoo is about choice. Howsabout a USE flag that
pulls in a "virtual-ntpserver" ebuild? This could be satisf
openntpd, but it kept setting the time further and further
off. I live in Fort Collins, Co and my locatime is set correctly
(America/Denver). This is my 1st time playing with VM's. Is this common?
Is there any way around it? I'm not really sure why openntpd didn't
work.
Any and all help
of using ntpd/openntpd. The full daemons
are not the resource hogs they used to be, and are much better at
handling clock skew. They keep track of the skew, so they only do a
correction as often as needed. Using a daemon also helps keep the other
ntp servers from getting pounded at certain points
trying to synchronize the system time with the help of rdate
(openNTPD is on the list in case of failure). I have one problem,
though: I connect to the Internet through a proxy server. I have set
up the necessary environment, but I doubt that rdate listens to it:
localhost init.d # env | grep
noise and other
inaccuracies. For daily work that's really not a big deal, but if you are
going to use NTP I suggest you really use NTP and run a daemon. The
default config for both net-misc/ntp and openntpd does not listen on any
ports by default, so it shouldn't raise many security issues
time protocol
exists, as it does on OpenBSD - I don't have rdate on my Gentoo box.
Or you could try an ntpd - OpenNTPD for example. It's a lightweight NTP
Deamon and it's in portage. That should work with pool.ntp.org.
If you are familiar with all that, maybe some other servers may work
better
(a day ago) exchanged ntp for openntpd (from
OpenBSD) on a hardened router, because ntp wanted to lock too much memory
(RLIMIT_MEMLOCK - from 32K (default) - ~8 MB) and other minor issues.
HTH.Rumen
pgpQeBMSIHpnf.pgp
Description: PGP signature
.
Usually permission problems or in this case it/ntpd can't access /proc to
set time (cap_set_proc()).
Just a sidenote, recently (a day ago) exchanged ntp for openntpd (from
OpenBSD) on a hardened router, because ntp wanted to lock too much memory
(RLIMIT_MEMLOCK - from 32K (default) - ~8 MB
This is almost certainly a hardware problem. If it isn't a hardware
problem, it is at least not distribution specific. This doesn't really
belong in a Gentoo mailing list. That being said...
Some rhetorical questions (in no particular order):
Does the problem persist when you use Knoppix?
unmerged ntp and emerged openntpd. Does this look normal?
Jan 5 21:59:02 localhost ntpd[11410]: ntp engine ready
Jan 5 21:59:22 localhost ntpd[11410]: peer 72.26.217.210 now valid
Jan 5 21:59:23 localhost ntpd[11410]: peer 169.229.70.95 now valid
Jan 5 21:59:26 localhost ntpd[11410]: peer
and set your clock
using it, but then you still get network latency noise and other
inaccuracies. For daily work that's really not a big deal, but if you are
going to use NTP I suggest you really use NTP and run a daemon. The
default config for both net-misc/ntp and openntpd does not listen on any
imap imlib ipv6 jabber java
jpeg junit kde kdeenablefinal kdexdeltas lcms ldap libcaca libg++ libwww mad
matroska mhash mikmod mmx mng motif mp3 mpeg mppe-mppc mssql mysql nas
ncurses network nls nowin nvidia ogg oggvorbis openal opengl openntpd openssh
oss pam pcre pdflib perl png python qt
pam imap aac
apache2 bash-completion berkdb bidi bzip2 canna caps cjk clamav cpdflib crypt
dbus dbx dio ethereal examples expat flac freewnn gd gdm javascript ncurses
nls png jpeg junit ldap libclamav mcve ming openntpd mysqli nas netboot
openal tcpd spl spell snmp sockets soap python samba
hal imap imlib innodb isdnlog jpeg junit kde libg++ libwww
mad mikmod motif mp3 mpeg ncurses nls nodroproot nptl nptlonly nsplugin ogg
opengl openntpd oss pam pcre pdflib perl png pppd python qt qt3 qt4 quicktime
readline reflection sdl session spell spl ssl tcpd truetype truetype-fonts
type1
Hi,
I've just deployed my home server, of course using Gentoo :)
I setup openntpd there and /var/log/messages says to me that every few minutes
clock is adjusted by ~100s. Is it a bug or I've missed smth?
chipset: nForce2
And, btw, what is also strange - ntpd use different time in different log
-cron newmousefocus
nls nntp noepg nptl nptlonly nsplugin nspluginwrapper ntlm nut nvram
objc objc++ objc-gc odk ogg ogg123 ogm okteta openal openexr opengl
openmp openntpd optimisememory optimization optimized-qmake oscar
osdmaxitems oss otr p
am pango parentalrating parse-clocks pch pcre pcsc-lite
lzw
lzw-tiff memlimit mng motif mozilla mp3 mpeg ncurses nls nptl nptlonly
opengl openntpd pam pcre pdf pdflib perl plotutils png posix ppds pppd
python qt quicktime readline reflection samba sdl session simplexml
soap sockets spell spl ssl tcltk tcpd tiff tokenizer truetype
truetype-fonts type1-fonts
1,683 kB
[ebuild R ~] net-misc/ntp-4.2.6_p4 USE=caps ssl zeroconf -debug
-ipv6 -openntpd -parse-clocks -samba (-selinux) -snmp -vim-syntax 4,144 kB
[ebuild R ~] kde-base/kde-meta-4.8.1 USE=nls semantic-desktop
-accessibility (-aqua) -sdk 0 kB
[ebuild R] media-fonts/efont-unicode
/openntpd-3.7_p1
[ebuild N] kde-base/arts-3.4.3
[ebuild N] kde-base/kdelibs-3.4.3
[ebuild N] kde-base/vimpart-3.4.2
[ebuild N] app-arch/cabextract-1.1
[ebuild N] media-fonts/corefonts-1-r2
[ebuild N] sys-apps/kbd-1.12-r5
[ebuild N] media-libs/libdvdread-0.9.4
"nls -branding -debug
-imlib -session -startup-notification -static-libs -svg -xdg"
PYTHON_TARGETS="python2_7" 0 KiB
[ebuild R] media-video/transcode-1.1.7-r3::gentoo USE="X alsa iconv jpeg
lzo mp3 ogg sdl v4l vorbis x264 -a52 -aac (-altivec) -dv -dvd -imagemagick
-
U ] dev-python/ipaddress-1.0.17-r1::gentoo [1.0.16::gentoo]
PYTHON_TARGETS="python2_7 -pypy (-pypy3%)" 32 KiB
[ebuild U ] dev-vcs/mercurial-4.0.1::gentoo [3.9.2::gentoo] USE="tk
-bugzilla -emacs -gpg {-test}" PYTHON_TARGETS="python2_7" 4,738 KiB
[ebuild U ] dev-
ebuild U ] media-gfx/imagemagick-6.9.4.6:0/6.9.4.6::gentoo
[6.9.4.1:0/6.9.4.1::gentoo] USE="X bzip2 corefonts cxx jpeg lcms openmp pango
perl png svg tiff truetype xml zlib -autotrace -djvu -fftw -fontconfig -fpx
-graphviz -hdri -jbig -jpeg2k -lqr -lzma (-opencl) -openexr -postscrip
imidity++-2.14.0-r2::gentoo USE="X alsa flac
> gtk jack ncurses vorbis -ao -emacs -motif -nas -oss (-selinux) -slang -speex
> -tk" 0 KiB
> [ebuild R] media-gfx/graphicsmagick-1.3.28:0/1.3::gentoo USE="X bzip2
> cxx jpeg jpeg2k modules openmp png zlib -debug -fpx -imagemagic
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