Devon wrote:

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> On Sunday 18 November 2001 07:33 am, Devon wrote:
>
> > I believe /sbin/ntpq -p will do the trick.
> >
> > [root@enigma root]# ntpq -p
> > remote       refid      st t when poll reach   delay   offset
> > jitter ===============================================
> > +bonehed.lcs.mit .GPS.   1 u  869 1024  377   48.546    4.924   6.723
> > +tick.usno.navy. .PSC.     1 u  841 1024  377   61.899   12.004 11.965
> > *tock.usno.navy. .PSC.    1 u  824 1024  377   37.280    0.016  6.736
>
> Rereading your post,
> If you're trying to check the ntp status of a remote host, you can do:
> ntpq -p hostname, as well.
>
> - -D

That's it!  Thanks.  I sure feel dumb.  I have been under the assumption
that I could not run ntpq as a user since I first started using it years
ago.  Probably before I learned about user paths being different than
root's.  Thanks again.

Bret



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