I have ntpd 4.2.4p6 running on a Windows 7 RC machine. >From the command prompt, when I enter: ping <pc-name>, ping works correctly, but seems to be using an IPv6 address. I guess this must be an auto-assigned address, as I have no IPv6 network as such. If I enter: ntpq -c rv <pc-name>, I get the error message:
ntpq: read: no such file or directory This PC is primarily an IPv4 pc, and if I enter the command with the IPv4 numeric address: ntpq -c rv 1.2.3.4, it works as expected. If I add an entry to etc/hosts 1.2.3.4 pc-name, the ntpq -c rv <ip-name> works correctly I can't reproduce the problem on a Windows Vista PC running ntp 4.2.5p181. So, with PCs having both IPv4 and IPv6 running, is there a difference between ntp 4.2.4 and 4.2.5 which would explain such behaviour? Thanks, David _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ntp.org/mailman/listinfo/questions
