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diff --git a/contrib/ntp/ntpd/invoke-ntp.conf.texi b/contrib/ntp/ntpd/invoke-ntp.conf.texi new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d7a9d13 --- /dev/null +++ b/contrib/ntp/ntpd/invoke-ntp.conf.texi @@ -0,0 +1,2677 @@ +@node ntp.conf Notes +@section Notes about ntp.conf +@pindex ntp.conf +@cindex Network Time Protocol (NTP) daemon configuration file format +@ignore +# +# EDIT THIS FILE WITH CAUTION (invoke-ntp.conf.texi) +# +# It has been AutoGen-ed June 29, 2015 at 04:30:28 PM by AutoGen 5.18.5 +# From the definitions ntp.conf.def +# and the template file agtexi-file.tpl +@end ignore + + + +The +@code{ntp.conf} +configuration file is read at initial startup by the +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +daemon in order to specify the synchronization sources, +modes and other related information. +Usually, it is installed in the +@file{/etc} +directory, +but could be installed elsewhere +(see the daemon's +@code{-c} +command line option). + +The file format is similar to other +@sc{unix} +configuration files. +Comments begin with a +@quoteleft{}#@quoteright{} +character and extend to the end of the line; +blank lines are ignored. +Configuration commands consist of an initial keyword +followed by a list of arguments, +some of which may be optional, separated by whitespace. +Commands may not be continued over multiple lines. +Arguments may be host names, +host addresses written in numeric, dotted-quad form, +integers, floating point numbers (when specifying times in seconds) +and text strings. + +The rest of this page describes the configuration and control options. +The +"Notes on Configuring NTP and Setting up an NTP Subnet" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}) +contains an extended discussion of these options. +In addition to the discussion of general +@ref{Configuration Options}, +there are sections describing the following supported functionality +and the options used to control it: +@itemize @bullet +@item +@ref{Authentication Support} +@item +@ref{Monitoring Support} +@item +@ref{Access Control Support} +@item +@ref{Automatic NTP Configuration Options} +@item +@ref{Reference Clock Support} +@item +@ref{Miscellaneous Options} +@end itemize + +Following these is a section describing +@ref{Miscellaneous Options}. +While there is a rich set of options available, +the only required option is one or more +@code{pool}, +@code{server}, +@code{peer}, +@code{broadcast} +or +@code{manycastclient} +commands. +@node Configuration Support +@subsection Configuration Support +Following is a description of the configuration commands in +NTPv4. +These commands have the same basic functions as in NTPv3 and +in some cases new functions and new arguments. +There are two +classes of commands, configuration commands that configure a +persistent association with a remote server or peer or reference +clock, and auxiliary commands that specify environmental variables +that control various related operations. +@subsubsection Configuration Commands +The various modes are determined by the command keyword and the +type of the required IP address. +Addresses are classed by type as +(s) a remote server or peer (IPv4 class A, B and C), (b) the +broadcast address of a local interface, (m) a multicast address (IPv4 +class D), or (r) a reference clock address (127.127.x.x). +Note that +only those options applicable to each command are listed below. +Use +of options not listed may not be caught as an error, but may result +in some weird and even destructive behavior. + +If the Basic Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6 (RFC-2553) +is detected, support for the IPv6 address family is generated +in addition to the default support of the IPv4 address family. +In a few cases, including the reslist billboard generated +by ntpdc, IPv6 addresses are automatically generated. +IPv6 addresses can be identified by the presence of colons +@quotedblleft{}:@quotedblright{} +in the address field. +IPv6 addresses can be used almost everywhere where +IPv4 addresses can be used, +with the exception of reference clock addresses, +which are always IPv4. + +Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a +@code{-4} +qualifier preceding +the host name forces DNS resolution to the IPv4 namespace, +while a +@code{-6} +qualifier forces DNS resolution to the IPv6 namespace. +See IPv6 references for the +equivalent classes for that address family. +@table @asis +@item @code{pool} @kbd{address} @code{[@code{burst}]} @code{[@code{iburst}]} @code{[@code{version} @kbd{version}]} @code{[@code{prefer}]} @code{[@code{minpoll} @kbd{minpoll}]} @code{[@code{maxpoll} @kbd{maxpoll}]} +@item @code{server} @kbd{address} @code{[@code{key} @kbd{key} @kbd{|} @code{autokey}]} @code{[@code{burst}]} @code{[@code{iburst}]} @code{[@code{version} @kbd{version}]} @code{[@code{prefer}]} @code{[@code{minpoll} @kbd{minpoll}]} @code{[@code{maxpoll} @kbd{maxpoll}]} +@item @code{peer} @kbd{address} @code{[@code{key} @kbd{key} @kbd{|} @code{autokey}]} @code{[@code{version} @kbd{version}]} @code{[@code{prefer}]} @code{[@code{minpoll} @kbd{minpoll}]} @code{[@code{maxpoll} @kbd{maxpoll}]} +@item @code{broadcast} @kbd{address} @code{[@code{key} @kbd{key} @kbd{|} @code{autokey}]} @code{[@code{version} @kbd{version}]} @code{[@code{prefer}]} @code{[@code{minpoll} @kbd{minpoll}]} @code{[@code{ttl} @kbd{ttl}]} +@item @code{manycastclient} @kbd{address} @code{[@code{key} @kbd{key} @kbd{|} @code{autokey}]} @code{[@code{version} @kbd{version}]} @code{[@code{prefer}]} @code{[@code{minpoll} @kbd{minpoll}]} @code{[@code{maxpoll} @kbd{maxpoll}]} @code{[@code{ttl} @kbd{ttl}]} +@end table + +These five commands specify the time server name or address to +be used and the mode in which to operate. +The +@kbd{address} +can be +either a DNS name or an IP address in dotted-quad notation. +Additional information on association behavior can be found in the +"Association Management" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). +@table @asis +@item @code{pool} +For type s addresses, this command mobilizes a persistent +client mode association with a number of remote servers. +In this mode the local clock can synchronized to the +remote server, but the remote server can never be synchronized to +the local clock. +@item @code{server} +For type s and r addresses, this command mobilizes a persistent +client mode association with the specified remote server or local +radio clock. +In this mode the local clock can synchronized to the +remote server, but the remote server can never be synchronized to +the local clock. +This command should +@emph{not} +be used for type +b or m addresses. +@item @code{peer} +For type s addresses (only), this command mobilizes a +persistent symmetric-active mode association with the specified +remote peer. +In this mode the local clock can be synchronized to +the remote peer or the remote peer can be synchronized to the local +clock. +This is useful in a network of servers where, depending on +various failure scenarios, either the local or remote peer may be +the better source of time. +This command should NOT be used for type +b, m or r addresses. +@item @code{broadcast} +For type b and m addresses (only), this +command mobilizes a persistent broadcast mode association. +Multiple +commands can be used to specify multiple local broadcast interfaces +(subnets) and/or multiple multicast groups. +Note that local +broadcast messages go only to the interface associated with the +subnet specified, but multicast messages go to all interfaces. +In broadcast mode the local server sends periodic broadcast +messages to a client population at the +@kbd{address} +specified, which is usually the broadcast address on (one of) the +local network(s) or a multicast address assigned to NTP. +The IANA +has assigned the multicast group address IPv4 224.0.1.1 and +IPv6 ff05::101 (site local) exclusively to +NTP, but other nonconflicting addresses can be used to contain the +messages within administrative boundaries. +Ordinarily, this +specification applies only to the local server operating as a +sender; for operation as a broadcast client, see the +@code{broadcastclient} +or +@code{multicastclient} +commands +below. +@item @code{manycastclient} +For type m addresses (only), this command mobilizes a +manycast client mode association for the multicast address +specified. +In this case a specific address must be supplied which +matches the address used on the +@code{manycastserver} +command for +the designated manycast servers. +The NTP multicast address +224.0.1.1 assigned by the IANA should NOT be used, unless specific +means are taken to avoid spraying large areas of the Internet with +these messages and causing a possibly massive implosion of replies +at the sender. +The +@code{manycastserver} +command specifies that the local server +is to operate in client mode with the remote servers that are +discovered as the result of broadcast/multicast messages. +The +client broadcasts a request message to the group address associated +with the specified +@kbd{address} +and specifically enabled +servers respond to these messages. +The client selects the servers +providing the best time and continues as with the +@code{server} +command. +The remaining servers are discarded as if never +heard. +@end table + +Options: +@table @asis +@item @code{autokey} +All packets sent to and received from the server or peer are to +include authentication fields encrypted using the autokey scheme +described in +@ref{Authentication Options}. +@item @code{burst} +when the server is reachable, send a burst of eight packets +instead of the usual one. +The packet spacing is normally 2 s; +however, the spacing between the first and second packets +can be changed with the calldelay command to allow +additional time for a modem or ISDN call to complete. +This is designed to improve timekeeping quality +with the +@code{server} +command and s addresses. +@item @code{iburst} +When the server is unreachable, send a burst of eight packets +instead of the usual one. +The packet spacing is normally 2 s; +however, the spacing between the first two packets can be +changed with the calldelay command to allow +additional time for a modem or ISDN call to complete. +This is designed to speed the initial synchronization +acquisition with the +@code{server} +command and s addresses and when +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +is started with the +@code{-q} +option. +@item @code{key} @kbd{key} +All packets sent to and received from the server or peer are to +include authentication fields encrypted using the specified +@kbd{key} +identifier with values from 1 to 65534, inclusive. +The +default is to include no encryption field. +@item @code{minpoll} @kbd{minpoll} +@item @code{maxpoll} @kbd{maxpoll} +These options specify the minimum and maximum poll intervals +for NTP messages, as a power of 2 in seconds +The maximum poll +interval defaults to 10 (1,024 s), but can be increased by the +@code{maxpoll} +option to an upper limit of 17 (36.4 h). +The +minimum poll interval defaults to 6 (64 s), but can be decreased by +the +@code{minpoll} +option to a lower limit of 4 (16 s). +@item @code{noselect} +Marks the server as unused, except for display purposes. +The server is discarded by the selection algroithm. +@item @code{prefer} +Marks the server as preferred. +All other things being equal, +this host will be chosen for synchronization among a set of +correctly operating hosts. +See the +"Mitigation Rules and the prefer Keyword" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}) +for further information. +@item @code{ttl} @kbd{ttl} +This option is used only with broadcast server and manycast +client modes. +It specifies the time-to-live +@kbd{ttl} +to +use on broadcast server and multicast server and the maximum +@kbd{ttl} +for the expanding ring search with manycast +client packets. +Selection of the proper value, which defaults to +127, is something of a black art and should be coordinated with the +network administrator. +@item @code{version} @kbd{version} +Specifies the version number to be used for outgoing NTP +packets. +Versions 1-4 are the choices, with version 4 the +default. +@end table +@subsubsection Auxiliary Commands +@table @asis +@item @code{broadcastclient} +This command enables reception of broadcast server messages to +any local interface (type b) address. +Upon receiving a message for +the first time, the broadcast client measures the nominal server +propagation delay using a brief client/server exchange with the +server, then enters the broadcast client mode, in which it +synchronizes to succeeding broadcast messages. +Note that, in order +to avoid accidental or malicious disruption in this mode, both the +server and client should operate using symmetric-key or public-key +authentication as described in +@ref{Authentication Options}. +@item @code{manycastserver} @kbd{address} @kbd{...} +This command enables reception of manycast client messages to +the multicast group address(es) (type m) specified. +At least one +address is required, but the NTP multicast address 224.0.1.1 +assigned by the IANA should NOT be used, unless specific means are +taken to limit the span of the reply and avoid a possibly massive +implosion at the original sender. +Note that, in order to avoid +accidental or malicious disruption in this mode, both the server +and client should operate using symmetric-key or public-key +authentication as described in +@ref{Authentication Options}. +@item @code{multicastclient} @kbd{address} @kbd{...} +This command enables reception of multicast server messages to +the multicast group address(es) (type m) specified. +Upon receiving +a message for the first time, the multicast client measures the +nominal server propagation delay using a brief client/server +exchange with the server, then enters the broadcast client mode, in +which it synchronizes to succeeding multicast messages. +Note that, +in order to avoid accidental or malicious disruption in this mode, +both the server and client should operate using symmetric-key or +public-key authentication as described in +@ref{Authentication Options}. +@item @code{mdnstries} @kbd{number} +If we are participating in mDNS, +after we have synched for the first time +we attempt to register with the mDNS system. +If that registration attempt fails, +we try again at one minute intervals for up to +@code{mdnstries} +times. +After all, +@code{ntpd} +may be starting before mDNS. +The default value for +@code{mdnstries} +is 5. +@end table +@node Authentication Support +@subsection Authentication Support +Authentication support allows the NTP client to verify that the +server is in fact known and trusted and not an intruder intending +accidentally or on purpose to masquerade as that server. +The NTPv3 +specification RFC-1305 defines a scheme which provides +cryptographic authentication of received NTP packets. +Originally, +this was done using the Data Encryption Standard (DES) algorithm +operating in Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) mode, commonly called +DES-CBC. +Subsequently, this was replaced by the RSA Message Digest +5 (MD5) algorithm using a private key, commonly called keyed-MD5. +Either algorithm computes a message digest, or one-way hash, which +can be used to verify the server has the correct private key and +key identifier. + +NTPv4 retains the NTPv3 scheme, properly described as symmetric key +cryptography and, in addition, provides a new Autokey scheme +based on public key cryptography. +Public key cryptography is generally considered more secure +than symmetric key cryptography, since the security is based +on a private value which is generated by each server and +never revealed. +With Autokey all key distribution and +management functions involve only public values, which +considerably simplifies key distribution and storage. +Public key management is based on X.509 certificates, +which can be provided by commercial services or +produced by utility programs in the OpenSSL software library +or the NTPv4 distribution. + +While the algorithms for symmetric key cryptography are +included in the NTPv4 distribution, public key cryptography +requires the OpenSSL software library to be installed +before building the NTP distribution. +Directions for doing that +are on the Building and Installing the Distribution page. + +Authentication is configured separately for each association +using the +@code{key} +or +@code{autokey} +subcommand on the +@code{peer}, +@code{server}, +@code{broadcast} +and +@code{manycastclient} +configuration commands as described in +@ref{Configuration Options} +page. +The authentication +options described below specify the locations of the key files, +if other than default, which symmetric keys are trusted +and the interval between various operations, if other than default. + +Authentication is always enabled, +although ineffective if not configured as +described below. +If a NTP packet arrives +including a message authentication +code (MAC), it is accepted only if it +passes all cryptographic checks. +The +checks require correct key ID, key value +and message digest. +If the packet has +been modified in any way or replayed +by an intruder, it will fail one or more +of these checks and be discarded. +Furthermore, the Autokey scheme requires a +preliminary protocol exchange to obtain +the server certificate, verify its +credentials and initialize the protocol + +The +@code{auth} +flag controls whether new associations or +remote configuration commands require cryptographic authentication. +This flag can be set or reset by the +@code{enable} +and +@code{disable} +commands and also by remote +configuration commands sent by a +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +program running in +another machine. +If this flag is enabled, which is the default +case, new broadcast client and symmetric passive associations and +remote configuration commands must be cryptographically +authenticated using either symmetric key or public key cryptography. +If this +flag is disabled, these operations are effective +even if not cryptographic +authenticated. +It should be understood +that operating with the +@code{auth} +flag disabled invites a significant vulnerability +where a rogue hacker can +masquerade as a falseticker and seriously +disrupt system timekeeping. +It is +important to note that this flag has no purpose +other than to allow or disallow +a new association in response to new broadcast +and symmetric active messages +and remote configuration commands and, in particular, +the flag has no effect on +the authentication process itself. + +An attractive alternative where multicast support is available +is manycast mode, in which clients periodically troll +for servers as described in the +@ref{Automatic NTP Configuration Options} +page. +Either symmetric key or public key +cryptographic authentication can be used in this mode. +The principle advantage +of manycast mode is that potential servers need not be +configured in advance, +since the client finds them during regular operation, +and the configuration +files for all clients can be identical. + +The security model and protocol schemes for +both symmetric key and public key +cryptography are summarized below; +further details are in the briefings, papers +and reports at the NTP project page linked from +@code{http://www.ntp.org/}. +@subsubsection Symmetric-Key Cryptography +The original RFC-1305 specification allows any one of possibly +65,534 keys, each distinguished by a 32-bit key identifier, to +authenticate an association. +The servers and clients involved must +agree on the key and key identifier to +authenticate NTP packets. +Keys and +related information are specified in a key +file, usually called +@file{ntp.keys}, +which must be distributed and stored using +secure means beyond the scope of the NTP protocol itself. +Besides the keys used +for ordinary NTP associations, +additional keys can be used as passwords for the +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +utility programs. + +When +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +is first started, it reads the key file specified in the +@code{keys} +configuration command and installs the keys +in the key cache. +However, +individual keys must be activated with the +@code{trusted} +command before use. +This +allows, for instance, the installation of possibly +several batches of keys and +then activating or deactivating each batch +remotely using +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)}. +This also provides a revocation capability that can be used +if a key becomes compromised. +The +@code{requestkey} +command selects the key used as the password for the +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +utility, while the +@code{controlkey} +command selects the key used as the password for the +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +utility. +@subsubsection Public Key Cryptography +NTPv4 supports the original NTPv3 symmetric key scheme +described in RFC-1305 and in addition the Autokey protocol, +which is based on public key cryptography. +The Autokey Version 2 protocol described on the Autokey Protocol +page verifies packet integrity using MD5 message digests +and verifies the source with digital signatures and any of several +digest/signature schemes. +Optional identity schemes described on the Identity Schemes +page and based on cryptographic challenge/response algorithms +are also available. +Using all of these schemes provides strong security against +replay with or without modification, spoofing, masquerade +and most forms of clogging attacks. + +The Autokey protocol has several modes of operation +corresponding to the various NTP modes supported. +Most modes use a special cookie which can be +computed independently by the client and server, +but encrypted in transmission. +All modes use in addition a variant of the S-KEY scheme, +in which a pseudo-random key list is generated and used +in reverse order. +These schemes are described along with an executive summary, +current status, briefing slides and reading list on the +@ref{Autonomous Authentication} +page. + +The specific cryptographic environment used by Autokey servers +and clients is determined by a set of files +and soft links generated by the +@code{ntp-keygen(1ntpkeygenmdoc)} +program. +This includes a required host key file, +required certificate file and optional sign key file, +leapsecond file and identity scheme files. +The +digest/signature scheme is specified in the X.509 certificate +along with the matching sign key. +There are several schemes +available in the OpenSSL software library, each identified +by a specific string such as +@code{md5WithRSAEncryption}, +which stands for the MD5 message digest with RSA +encryption scheme. +The current NTP distribution supports +all the schemes in the OpenSSL library, including +those based on RSA and DSA digital signatures. + +NTP secure groups can be used to define cryptographic compartments +and security hierarchies. +It is important that every host +in the group be able to construct a certificate trail to one +or more trusted hosts in the same group. +Each group +host runs the Autokey protocol to obtain the certificates +for all hosts along the trail to one or more trusted hosts. +This requires the configuration file in all hosts to be +engineered so that, even under anticipated failure conditions, +the NTP subnet will form such that every group host can find +a trail to at least one trusted host. +@subsubsection Naming and Addressing +It is important to note that Autokey does not use DNS to +resolve addresses, since DNS can't be completely trusted +until the name servers have synchronized clocks. +The cryptographic name used by Autokey to bind the host identity +credentials and cryptographic values must be independent +of interface, network and any other naming convention. +The name appears in the host certificate in either or both +the subject and issuer fields, so protection against +DNS compromise is essential. + +By convention, the name of an Autokey host is the name returned +by the Unix +@code{gethostname(2)} +system call or equivalent in other systems. +By the system design +model, there are no provisions to allow alternate names or aliases. +However, this is not to say that DNS aliases, different names +for each interface, etc., are constrained in any way. + +It is also important to note that Autokey verifies authenticity +using the host name, network address and public keys, +all of which are bound together by the protocol specifically +to deflect masquerade attacks. +For this reason Autokey +includes the source and destinatino IP addresses in message digest +computations and so the same addresses must be available +at both the server and client. +For this reason operation +with network address translation schemes is not possible. +This reflects the intended robust security model where government +and corporate NTP servers are operated outside firewall perimeters. +@subsubsection Operation +A specific combination of authentication scheme (none, +symmetric key, public key) and identity scheme is called +a cryptotype, although not all combinations are compatible. +There may be management configurations where the clients, +servers and peers may not all support the same cryptotypes. +A secure NTPv4 subnet can be configured in many ways while +keeping in mind the principles explained above and +in this section. +Note however that some cryptotype +combinations may successfully interoperate with each other, +but may not represent good security practice. + +The cryptotype of an association is determined at the time +of mobilization, either at configuration time or some time +later when a message of appropriate cryptotype arrives. +When mobilized by a +@code{server} +or +@code{peer} +configuration command and no +@code{key} +or +@code{autokey} +subcommands are present, the association is not +authenticated; if the +@code{key} +subcommand is present, the association is authenticated +using the symmetric key ID specified; if the +@code{autokey} +subcommand is present, the association is authenticated +using Autokey. + +When multiple identity schemes are supported in the Autokey +protocol, the first message exchange determines which one is used. +The client request message contains bits corresponding +to which schemes it has available. +The server response message +contains bits corresponding to which schemes it has available. +Both server and client match the received bits with their own +and select a common scheme. + +Following the principle that time is a public value, +a server responds to any client packet that matches +its cryptotype capabilities. +Thus, a server receiving +an unauthenticated packet will respond with an unauthenticated +packet, while the same server receiving a packet of a cryptotype +it supports will respond with packets of that cryptotype. +However, unconfigured broadcast or manycast client +associations or symmetric passive associations will not be +mobilized unless the server supports a cryptotype compatible +with the first packet received. +By default, unauthenticated associations will not be mobilized +unless overridden in a decidedly dangerous way. + +Some examples may help to reduce confusion. +Client Alice has no specific cryptotype selected. +Server Bob has both a symmetric key file and minimal Autokey files. +Alice's unauthenticated messages arrive at Bob, who replies with +unauthenticated messages. +Cathy has a copy of Bob's symmetric +key file and has selected key ID 4 in messages to Bob. +Bob verifies the message with his key ID 4. +If it's the +same key and the message is verified, Bob sends Cathy a reply +authenticated with that key. +If verification fails, +Bob sends Cathy a thing called a crypto-NAK, which tells her +something broke. +She can see the evidence using the +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +program. + +Denise has rolled her own host key and certificate. +She also uses one of the identity schemes as Bob. +She sends the first Autokey message to Bob and they +both dance the protocol authentication and identity steps. +If all comes out okay, Denise and Bob continue as described above. + +It should be clear from the above that Bob can support +all the girls at the same time, as long as he has compatible +authentication and identity credentials. +Now, Bob can act just like the girls in his own choice of servers; +he can run multiple configured associations with multiple different +servers (or the same server, although that might not be useful). +But, wise security policy might preclude some cryptotype +combinations; for instance, running an identity scheme +with one server and no authentication with another might not be wise. +@subsubsection Key Management +The cryptographic values used by the Autokey protocol are +incorporated as a set of files generated by the +@code{ntp-keygen(1ntpkeygenmdoc)} +utility program, including symmetric key, host key and +public certificate files, as well as sign key, identity parameters +and leapseconds files. +Alternatively, host and sign keys and +certificate files can be generated by the OpenSSL utilities +and certificates can be imported from public certificate +authorities. +Note that symmetric keys are necessary for the +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +utility programs. +The remaining files are necessary only for the +Autokey protocol. + +Certificates imported from OpenSSL or public certificate +authorities have certian limitations. +The certificate should be in ASN.1 syntax, X.509 Version 3 +format and encoded in PEM, which is the same format +used by OpenSSL. +The overall length of the certificate encoded +in ASN.1 must not exceed 1024 bytes. +The subject distinguished +name field (CN) is the fully qualified name of the host +on which it is used; the remaining subject fields are ignored. +The certificate extension fields must not contain either +a subject key identifier or a issuer key identifier field; +however, an extended key usage field for a trusted host must +contain the value +@code{trustRoot};. +Other extension fields are ignored. +@subsubsection Authentication Commands +@table @asis +@item @code{autokey} @code{[@kbd{logsec}]} +Specifies the interval between regenerations of the session key +list used with the Autokey protocol. +Note that the size of the key +list for each association depends on this interval and the current +poll interval. +The default value is 12 (4096 s or about 1.1 hours). +For poll intervals above the specified interval, a session key list +with a single entry will be regenerated for every message +sent. +@item @code{controlkey} @kbd{key} +Specifies the key identifier to use with the +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +utility, which uses the standard +protocol defined in RFC-1305. +The +@kbd{key} +argument is +the key identifier for a trusted key, where the value can be in the +range 1 to 65,534, inclusive. +@item @code{crypto} @code{[@code{cert} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{leap} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{randfile} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{host} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{sign} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{gq} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{gqpar} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{iffpar} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{mvpar} @kbd{file}]} @code{[@code{pw} @kbd{password}]} +This command requires the OpenSSL library. +It activates public key +cryptography, selects the message digest and signature +encryption scheme and loads the required private and public +values described above. +If one or more files are left unspecified, +the default names are used as described above. +Unless the complete path and name of the file are specified, the +location of a file is relative to the keys directory specified +in the +@code{keysdir} +command or default +@file{/usr/local/etc}. +Following are the subcommands: +@table @asis +@item @code{cert} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the required host public certificate file. +This overrides the link +@file{ntpkey_cert_}@kbd{hostname} +in the keys directory. +@item @code{gqpar} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the optional GQ parameters file. +This +overrides the link +@file{ntpkey_gq_}@kbd{hostname} +in the keys directory. +@item @code{host} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the required host key file. +This overrides +the link +@file{ntpkey_key_}@kbd{hostname} +in the keys directory. +@item @code{iffpar} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the optional IFF parameters file.This +overrides the link +@file{ntpkey_iff_}@kbd{hostname} +in the keys directory. +@item @code{leap} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the optional leapsecond file. +This overrides the link +@file{ntpkey_leap} +in the keys directory. +@item @code{mvpar} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the optional MV parameters file. +This +overrides the link +@file{ntpkey_mv_}@kbd{hostname} +in the keys directory. +@item @code{pw} @kbd{password} +Specifies the password to decrypt files containing private keys and +identity parameters. +This is required only if these files have been +encrypted. +@item @code{randfile} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the random seed file used by the OpenSSL +library. +The defaults are described in the main text above. +@item @code{sign} @kbd{file} +Specifies the location of the optional sign key file. +This overrides +the link +@file{ntpkey_sign_}@kbd{hostname} +in the keys directory. +If this file is +not found, the host key is also the sign key. +@end table +@item @code{keys} @kbd{keyfile} +Specifies the complete path and location of the MD5 key file +containing the keys and key identifiers used by +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)}, +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +when operating with symmetric key cryptography. +This is the same operation as the +@code{-k} +command line option. +@item @code{keysdir} @kbd{path} +This command specifies the default directory path for +cryptographic keys, parameters and certificates. +The default is +@file{/usr/local/etc/}. +@item @code{requestkey} @kbd{key} +Specifies the key identifier to use with the +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +utility program, which uses a +proprietary protocol specific to this implementation of +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)}. +The +@kbd{key} +argument is a key identifier +for the trusted key, where the value can be in the range 1 to +65,534, inclusive. +@item @code{revoke} @kbd{logsec} +Specifies the interval between re-randomization of certain +cryptographic values used by the Autokey scheme, as a power of 2 in +seconds. +These values need to be updated frequently in order to +deflect brute-force attacks on the algorithms of the scheme; +however, updating some values is a relatively expensive operation. +The default interval is 16 (65,536 s or about 18 hours). +For poll +intervals above the specified interval, the values will be updated +for every message sent. +@item @code{trustedkey} @kbd{key} @kbd{...} +Specifies the key identifiers which are trusted for the +purposes of authenticating peers with symmetric key cryptography, +as well as keys used by the +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +programs. +The authentication procedures require that both the local +and remote servers share the same key and key identifier for this +purpose, although different keys can be used with different +servers. +The +@kbd{key} +arguments are 32-bit unsigned +integers with values from 1 to 65,534. +@end table +@subsubsection Error Codes +The following error codes are reported via the NTP control +and monitoring protocol trap mechanism. +@table @asis +@item 101 +(bad field format or length) +The packet has invalid version, length or format. +@item 102 +(bad timestamp) +The packet timestamp is the same or older than the most recent received. +This could be due to a replay or a server clock time step. +@item 103 +(bad filestamp) +The packet filestamp is the same or older than the most recent received. +This could be due to a replay or a key file generation error. +@item 104 +(bad or missing public key) +The public key is missing, has incorrect format or is an unsupported type. +@item 105 +(unsupported digest type) +The server requires an unsupported digest/signature scheme. +@item 106 +(mismatched digest types) +Not used. +@item 107 +(bad signature length) +The signature length does not match the current public key. +@item 108 +(signature not verified) +The message fails the signature check. +It could be bogus or signed by a +different private key. +@item 109 +(certificate not verified) +The certificate is invalid or signed with the wrong key. +@item 110 +(certificate not verified) +The certificate is not yet valid or has expired or the signature could not +be verified. +@item 111 +(bad or missing cookie) +The cookie is missing, corrupted or bogus. +@item 112 +(bad or missing leapseconds table) +The leapseconds table is missing, corrupted or bogus. +@item 113 +(bad or missing certificate) +The certificate is missing, corrupted or bogus. +@item 114 +(bad or missing identity) +The identity key is missing, corrupt or bogus. +@end table +@node Monitoring Support +@subsection Monitoring Support +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +includes a comprehensive monitoring facility suitable +for continuous, long term recording of server and client +timekeeping performance. +See the +@code{statistics} +command below +for a listing and example of each type of statistics currently +supported. +Statistic files are managed using file generation sets +and scripts in the +@file{./scripts} +directory of this distribution. +Using +these facilities and +@sc{unix} +@code{cron(8)} +jobs, the data can be +automatically summarized and archived for retrospective analysis. +@subsubsection Monitoring Commands +@table @asis +@item @code{statistics} @kbd{name} @kbd{...} +Enables writing of statistics records. +Currently, eight kinds of +@kbd{name} +statistics are supported. +@table @asis +@item @code{clockstats} +Enables recording of clock driver statistics information. +Each update +received from a clock driver appends a line of the following form to +the file generation set named +@code{clockstats}: +@verbatim +49213 525.624 127.127.4.1 93 226 00:08:29.606 D +@end verbatim + +The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and time +(seconds and fraction past UTC midnight). +The next field shows the +clock address in dotted-quad notation. +The final field shows the last +timecode received from the clock in decoded ASCII format, where +meaningful. +In some clock drivers a good deal of additional information +can be gathered and displayed as well. +See information specific to each +clock for further details. +@item @code{cryptostats} +This option requires the OpenSSL cryptographic software library. +It +enables recording of cryptographic public key protocol information. +Each message received by the protocol module appends a line of the +following form to the file generation set named +@code{cryptostats}: +@verbatim +49213 525.624 127.127.4.1 message +@end verbatim + +The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and time +(seconds and fraction past UTC midnight). +The next field shows the peer +address in dotted-quad notation, The final message field includes the +message type and certain ancillary information. +See the +@ref{Authentication Options} +section for further information. +@item @code{loopstats} +Enables recording of loop filter statistics information. +Each +update of the local clock outputs a line of the following form to +the file generation set named +@code{loopstats}: +@verbatim +50935 75440.031 0.000006019 13.778190 0.000351733 0.0133806 +@end verbatim + +The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and +time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight). +The next five fields +show time offset (seconds), frequency offset (parts per million - +PPM), RMS jitter (seconds), Allan deviation (PPM) and clock +discipline time constant. +@item @code{peerstats} +Enables recording of peer statistics information. +This includes +statistics records of all peers of a NTP server and of special +signals, where present and configured. +Each valid update appends a +line of the following form to the current element of a file +generation set named +@code{peerstats}: +@verbatim +48773 10847.650 127.127.4.1 9714 -0.001605376 0.000000000 0.001424877 0.000958674 +@end verbatim + +The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and +time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight). +The next two fields +show the peer address in dotted-quad notation and status, +respectively. +The status field is encoded in hex in the format +described in Appendix A of the NTP specification RFC 1305. +The final four fields show the offset, +delay, dispersion and RMS jitter, all in seconds. +@item @code{rawstats} +Enables recording of raw-timestamp statistics information. +This +includes statistics records of all peers of a NTP server and of +special signals, where present and configured. +Each NTP message +received from a peer or clock driver appends a line of the +following form to the file generation set named +@code{rawstats}: +@verbatim +50928 2132.543 128.4.1.1 128.4.1.20 3102453281.584327000 3102453281.58622800031 02453332.540806000 3102453332.541458000 +@end verbatim + +The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and +time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight). +The next two fields +show the remote peer or clock address followed by the local address +in dotted-quad notation. +The final four fields show the originate, +receive, transmit and final NTP timestamps in order. +The timestamp +values are as received and before processing by the various data +smoothing and mitigation algorithms. +@item @code{sysstats} +Enables recording of ntpd statistics counters on a periodic basis. +Each +hour a line of the following form is appended to the file generation +set named +@code{sysstats}: +@verbatim +50928 2132.543 36000 81965 0 9546 56 71793 512 540 10 147 +@end verbatim + +The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian Day) and time +(seconds and fraction past UTC midnight). +The remaining ten fields show +the statistics counter values accumulated since the last generated +line. +@table @asis +@item Time since restart @code{36000} +Time in hours since the system was last rebooted. +@item Packets received @code{81965} +Total number of packets received. +@item Packets processed @code{0} +Number of packets received in response to previous packets sent +@item Current version @code{9546} +Number of packets matching the current NTP version. +@item Previous version @code{56} +Number of packets matching the previous NTP version. +@item Bad version @code{71793} +Number of packets matching neither NTP version. +@item Access denied @code{512} +Number of packets denied access for any reason. +@item Bad length or format @code{540} +Number of packets with invalid length, format or port number. +@item Bad authentication @code{10} +Number of packets not verified as authentic. +@item Rate exceeded @code{147} +Number of packets discarded due to rate limitation. +@end table +@item @code{statsdir} @kbd{directory_path} +Indicates the full path of a directory where statistics files +should be created (see below). +This keyword allows +the (otherwise constant) +@code{filegen} +filename prefix to be modified for file generation sets, which +is useful for handling statistics logs. +@item @code{filegen} @kbd{name} @code{[@code{file} @kbd{filename}]} @code{[@code{type} @kbd{typename}]} @code{[@code{link} | @code{nolink}]} @code{[@code{enable} | @code{disable}]} +Configures setting of generation file set name. +Generation +file sets provide a means for handling files that are +continuously growing during the lifetime of a server. +Server statistics are a typical example for such files. +Generation file sets provide access to a set of files used +to store the actual data. +At any time at most one element +of the set is being written to. +The type given specifies +when and how data will be directed to a new element of the set. +This way, information stored in elements of a file set +that are currently unused are available for administrational +operations without the risk of disturbing the operation of ntpd. +(Most important: they can be removed to free space for new data +produced.) + +Note that this command can be sent from the +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +program running at a remote location. +@table @asis +@item @code{name} +This is the type of the statistics records, as shown in the +@code{statistics} +command. +@item @code{file} @kbd{filename} +This is the file name for the statistics records. +Filenames of set +members are built from three concatenated elements +@code{prefix}, +@code{filename} +and +@code{suffix}: +@table @asis +@item @code{prefix} +This is a constant filename path. +It is not subject to +modifications via the +@kbd{filegen} +option. +It is defined by the +server, usually specified as a compile-time constant. +It may, +however, be configurable for individual file generation sets +via other commands. +For example, the prefix used with +@kbd{loopstats} +and +@kbd{peerstats} +generation can be configured using the +@kbd{statsdir} +option explained above. +@item @code{filename} +This string is directly concatenated to the prefix mentioned +above (no intervening +@quoteleft{}/@quoteright{}). +This can be modified using +the file argument to the +@kbd{filegen} +statement. +No +@file{..} +elements are +allowed in this component to prevent filenames referring to +parts outside the filesystem hierarchy denoted by +@kbd{prefix}. +@item @code{suffix} +This part is reflects individual elements of a file set. +It is +generated according to the type of a file set. +@end table +@item @code{type} @kbd{typename} +A file generation set is characterized by its type. +The following +types are supported: +@table @asis +@item @code{none} +The file set is actually a single plain file. +@item @code{pid} +One element of file set is used per incarnation of a ntpd +server. +This type does not perform any changes to file set +members during runtime, however it provides an easy way of +separating files belonging to different +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +server incarnations. +The set member filename is built by appending a +@quoteleft{}.@quoteright{} +to concatenated +@kbd{prefix} +and +@kbd{filename} +strings, and +appending the decimal representation of the process ID of the +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +server process. +@item @code{day} +One file generation set element is created per day. +A day is +defined as the period between 00:00 and 24:00 UTC. +The file set +member suffix consists of a +@quoteleft{}.@quoteright{} +and a day specification in +the form +@code{YYYYMMdd}. +@code{YYYY} +is a 4-digit year number (e.g., 1992). +@code{MM} +is a two digit month number. +@code{dd} +is a two digit day number. +Thus, all information written at 10 December 1992 would end up +in a file named +@kbd{prefix} +@kbd{filename}.19921210. +@item @code{week} +Any file set member contains data related to a certain week of +a year. +The term week is defined by computing day-of-year +modulo 7. +Elements of such a file generation set are +distinguished by appending the following suffix to the file set +filename base: A dot, a 4-digit year number, the letter +@code{W}, +and a 2-digit week number. +For example, information from January, +10th 1992 would end up in a file with suffix +.No . Ns Ar 1992W1 . +@item @code{month} +One generation file set element is generated per month. +The +file name suffix consists of a dot, a 4-digit year number, and +a 2-digit month. +@item @code{year} +One generation file element is generated per year. +The filename +suffix consists of a dot and a 4 digit year number. +@item @code{age} +This type of file generation sets changes to a new element of +the file set every 24 hours of server operation. +The filename +suffix consists of a dot, the letter +@code{a}, +and an 8-digit number. +This number is taken to be the number of seconds the server is +running at the start of the corresponding 24-hour period. +Information is only written to a file generation by specifying +@code{enable}; +output is prevented by specifying +@code{disable}. +@end table +@item @code{link} | @code{nolink} +It is convenient to be able to access the current element of a file +generation set by a fixed name. +This feature is enabled by +specifying +@code{link} +and disabled using +@code{nolink}. +If link is specified, a +hard link from the current file set element to a file without +suffix is created. +When there is already a file with this name and +the number of links of this file is one, it is renamed appending a +dot, the letter +@code{C}, +and the pid of the ntpd server process. +When the +number of links is greater than one, the file is unlinked. +This +allows the current file to be accessed by a constant name. +@item @code{enable} @code{|} @code{disable} +Enables or disables the recording function. +@end table +@end table +@end table +@node Access Control Support +@subsection Access Control Support +The +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +daemon implements a general purpose address/mask based restriction +list. +The list contains address/match entries sorted first +by increasing address values and and then by increasing mask values. +A match occurs when the bitwise AND of the mask and the packet +source address is equal to the bitwise AND of the mask and +address in the list. +The list is searched in order with the +last match found defining the restriction flags associated +with the entry. +Additional information and examples can be found in the +"Notes on Configuring NTP and Setting up a NTP Subnet" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). + +The restriction facility was implemented in conformance +with the access policies for the original NSFnet backbone +time servers. +Later the facility was expanded to deflect +cryptographic and clogging attacks. +While this facility may +be useful for keeping unwanted or broken or malicious clients +from congesting innocent servers, it should not be considered +an alternative to the NTP authentication facilities. +Source address based restrictions are easily circumvented +by a determined cracker. + +Clients can be denied service because they are explicitly +included in the restrict list created by the restrict command +or implicitly as the result of cryptographic or rate limit +violations. +Cryptographic violations include certificate +or identity verification failure; rate limit violations generally +result from defective NTP implementations that send packets +at abusive rates. +Some violations cause denied service +only for the offending packet, others cause denied service +for a timed period and others cause the denied service for +an indefinate period. +When a client or network is denied access +for an indefinate period, the only way at present to remove +the restrictions is by restarting the server. +@subsubsection The Kiss-of-Death Packet +Ordinarily, packets denied service are simply dropped with no +further action except incrementing statistics counters. +Sometimes a +more proactive response is needed, such as a server message that +explicitly requests the client to stop sending and leave a message +for the system operator. +A special packet format has been created +for this purpose called the "kiss-of-death" (KoD) packet. +KoD packets have the leap bits set unsynchronized and stratum set +to zero and the reference identifier field set to a four-byte +ASCII code. +If the +@code{noserve} +or +@code{notrust} +flag of the matching restrict list entry is set, +the code is "DENY"; if the +@code{limited} +flag is set and the rate limit +is exceeded, the code is "RATE". +Finally, if a cryptographic violation occurs, the code is "CRYP". + +A client receiving a KoD performs a set of sanity checks to +minimize security exposure, then updates the stratum and +reference identifier peer variables, sets the access +denied (TEST4) bit in the peer flash variable and sends +a message to the log. +As long as the TEST4 bit is set, +the client will send no further packets to the server. +The only way at present to recover from this condition is +to restart the protocol at both the client and server. +This +happens automatically at the client when the association times out. +It will happen at the server only if the server operator cooperates. +@subsubsection Access Control Commands +@table @asis +@item @code{discard} @code{[@code{average} @kbd{avg}]} @code{[@code{minimum} @kbd{min}]} @code{[@code{monitor} @kbd{prob}]} +Set the parameters of the +@code{limited} +facility which protects the server from +client abuse. +The +@code{average} +subcommand specifies the minimum average packet +spacing, while the +@code{minimum} +subcommand specifies the minimum packet spacing. +Packets that violate these minima are discarded +and a kiss-o'-death packet returned if enabled. +The default +minimum average and minimum are 5 and 2, respectively. +The monitor subcommand specifies the probability of discard +for packets that overflow the rate-control window. +@item @code{restrict} @code{address} @code{[@code{mask} @kbd{mask}]} @code{[@kbd{flag} @kbd{...}]} +The +@kbd{address} +argument expressed in +dotted-quad form is the address of a host or network. +Alternatively, the +@kbd{address} +argument can be a valid host DNS name. +The +@kbd{mask} +argument expressed in dotted-quad form defaults to +@code{255.255.255.255}, +meaning that the +@kbd{address} +is treated as the address of an individual host. +A default entry (address +@code{0.0.0.0}, +mask +@code{0.0.0.0}) +is always included and is always the first entry in the list. +Note that text string +@code{default}, +with no mask option, may +be used to indicate the default entry. +In the current implementation, +@code{flag} +always +restricts access, i.e., an entry with no flags indicates that free +access to the server is to be given. +The flags are not orthogonal, +in that more restrictive flags will often make less restrictive +ones redundant. +The flags can generally be classed into two +categories, those which restrict time service and those which +restrict informational queries and attempts to do run-time +reconfiguration of the server. +One or more of the following flags +may be specified: +@table @asis +@item @code{ignore} +Deny packets of all kinds, including +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +queries. +@item @code{kod} +If this flag is set when an access violation occurs, a kiss-o'-death +(KoD) packet is sent. +KoD packets are rate limited to no more than one +per second. +If another KoD packet occurs within one second after the +last one, the packet is dropped. +@item @code{limited} +Deny service if the packet spacing violates the lower limits specified +in the discard command. +A history of clients is kept using the +monitoring capability of +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)}. +Thus, monitoring is always active as +long as there is a restriction entry with the +@code{limited} +flag. +@item @code{lowpriotrap} +Declare traps set by matching hosts to be low priority. +The +number of traps a server can maintain is limited (the current limit +is 3). +Traps are usually assigned on a first come, first served +basis, with later trap requestors being denied service. +This flag +modifies the assignment algorithm by allowing low priority traps to +be overridden by later requests for normal priority traps. +@item @code{nomodify} +Deny +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +queries which attempt to modify the state of the +server (i.e., run time reconfiguration). +Queries which return +information are permitted. +@item @code{noquery} +Deny +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +queries. +Time service is not affected. +@item @code{nopeer} +Deny packets which would result in mobilizing a new association. +This +includes broadcast and symmetric active packets when a configured +association does not exist. +It also includes +@code{pool} +associations, so if you want to use servers from a +@code{pool} +directive and also want to use +@code{nopeer} +by default, you'll want a +@code{restrict source ...} @code{line} @code{as} @code{well} @code{that} @code{does} +@item not +include the +@code{nopeer} +directive. +@item @code{noserve} +Deny all packets except +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +and +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +queries. +@item @code{notrap} +Decline to provide mode 6 control message trap service to matching +hosts. +The trap service is a subsystem of the ntpdq control message +protocol which is intended for use by remote event logging programs. +@item @code{notrust} +Deny service unless the packet is cryptographically authenticated. +@item @code{ntpport} +This is actually a match algorithm modifier, rather than a +restriction flag. +Its presence causes the restriction entry to be +matched only if the source port in the packet is the standard NTP +UDP port (123). +Both +@code{ntpport} +and +@code{non-ntpport} +may +be specified. +The +@code{ntpport} +is considered more specific and +is sorted later in the list. +@item @code{version} +Deny packets that do not match the current NTP version. +@end table + +Default restriction list entries with the flags ignore, interface, +ntpport, for each of the local host's interface addresses are +inserted into the table at startup to prevent the server +from attempting to synchronize to its own time. +A default entry is also always present, though if it is +otherwise unconfigured; no flags are associated +with the default entry (i.e., everything besides your own +NTP server is unrestricted). +@end table +@node Automatic NTP Configuration Options +@subsection Automatic NTP Configuration Options +@subsubsection Manycasting +Manycasting is a automatic discovery and configuration paradigm +new to NTPv4. +It is intended as a means for a multicast client +to troll the nearby network neighborhood to find cooperating +manycast servers, validate them using cryptographic means +and evaluate their time values with respect to other servers +that might be lurking in the vicinity. +The intended result is that each manycast client mobilizes +client associations with some number of the "best" +of the nearby manycast servers, yet automatically reconfigures +to sustain this number of servers should one or another fail. + +Note that the manycasting paradigm does not coincide +with the anycast paradigm described in RFC-1546, +which is designed to find a single server from a clique +of servers providing the same service. +The manycast paradigm is designed to find a plurality +of redundant servers satisfying defined optimality criteria. + +Manycasting can be used with either symmetric key +or public key cryptography. +The public key infrastructure (PKI) +offers the best protection against compromised keys +and is generally considered stronger, at least with relatively +large key sizes. +It is implemented using the Autokey protocol and +the OpenSSL cryptographic library available from +@code{http://www.openssl.org/}. +The library can also be used with other NTPv4 modes +as well and is highly recommended, especially for broadcast modes. + +A persistent manycast client association is configured +using the manycastclient command, which is similar to the +server command but with a multicast (IPv4 class +@code{D} +or IPv6 prefix +@code{FF}) +group address. +The IANA has designated IPv4 address 224.1.1.1 +and IPv6 address FF05::101 (site local) for NTP. +When more servers are needed, it broadcasts manycast +client messages to this address at the minimum feasible rate +and minimum feasible time-to-live (TTL) hops, depending +on how many servers have already been found. +There can be as many manycast client associations +as different group address, each one serving as a template +for a future ephemeral unicast client/server association. + +Manycast servers configured with the +@code{manycastserver} +command listen on the specified group address for manycast +client messages. +Note the distinction between manycast client, +which actively broadcasts messages, and manycast server, +which passively responds to them. +If a manycast server is +in scope of the current TTL and is itself synchronized +to a valid source and operating at a stratum level equal +to or lower than the manycast client, it replies to the +manycast client message with an ordinary unicast server message. + +The manycast client receiving this message mobilizes +an ephemeral client/server association according to the +matching manycast client template, but only if cryptographically +authenticated and the server stratum is less than or equal +to the client stratum. +Authentication is explicitly required +and either symmetric key or public key (Autokey) can be used. +Then, the client polls the server at its unicast address +in burst mode in order to reliably set the host clock +and validate the source. +This normally results +in a volley of eight client/server at 2-s intervals +during which both the synchronization and cryptographic +protocols run concurrently. +Following the volley, +the client runs the NTP intersection and clustering +algorithms, which act to discard all but the "best" +associations according to stratum and synchronization +distance. +The surviving associations then continue +in ordinary client/server mode. + +The manycast client polling strategy is designed to reduce +as much as possible the volume of manycast client messages +and the effects of implosion due to near-simultaneous +arrival of manycast server messages. +The strategy is determined by the +@code{manycastclient}, +@code{tos} +and +@code{ttl} +configuration commands. +The manycast poll interval is +normally eight times the system poll interval, +which starts out at the +@code{minpoll} +value specified in the +@code{manycastclient}, +command and, under normal circumstances, increments to the +@code{maxpolll} +value specified in this command. +Initially, the TTL is +set at the minimum hops specified by the ttl command. +At each retransmission the TTL is increased until reaching +the maximum hops specified by this command or a sufficient +number client associations have been found. +Further retransmissions use the same TTL. + +The quality and reliability of the suite of associations +discovered by the manycast client is determined by the NTP +mitigation algorithms and the +@code{minclock} +and +@code{minsane} +values specified in the +@code{tos} +configuration command. +At least +@code{minsane} +candidate servers must be available and the mitigation +algorithms produce at least +@code{minclock} +survivors in order to synchronize the clock. +Byzantine agreement principles require at least four +candidates in order to correctly discard a single falseticker. +For legacy purposes, +@code{minsane} +defaults to 1 and +@code{minclock} +defaults to 3. +For manycast service +@code{minsane} +should be explicitly set to 4, assuming at least that +number of servers are available. + +If at least +@code{minclock} +servers are found, the manycast poll interval is immediately +set to eight times +@code{maxpoll}. +If less than +@code{minclock} +servers are found when the TTL has reached the maximum hops, +the manycast poll interval is doubled. +For each transmission +after that, the poll interval is doubled again until +reaching the maximum of eight times +@code{maxpoll}. +Further transmissions use the same poll interval and +TTL values. +Note that while all this is going on, +each client/server association found is operating normally +it the system poll interval. + +Administratively scoped multicast boundaries are normally +specified by the network router configuration and, +in the case of IPv6, the link/site scope prefix. +By default, the increment for TTL hops is 32 starting +from 31; however, the +@code{ttl} +configuration command can be +used to modify the values to match the scope rules. + +It is often useful to narrow the range of acceptable +servers which can be found by manycast client associations. +Because manycast servers respond only when the client +stratum is equal to or greater than the server stratum, +primary (stratum 1) servers fill find only primary servers +in TTL range, which is probably the most common objective. +However, unless configured otherwise, all manycast clients +in TTL range will eventually find all primary servers +in TTL range, which is probably not the most common +objective in large networks. +The +@code{tos} +command can be used to modify this behavior. +Servers with stratum below +@code{floor} +or above +@code{ceiling} +specified in the +@code{tos} +command are strongly discouraged during the selection +process; however, these servers may be temporally +accepted if the number of servers within TTL range is +less than +@code{minclock}. + +The above actions occur for each manycast client message, +which repeats at the designated poll interval. +However, once the ephemeral client association is mobilized, +subsequent manycast server replies are discarded, +since that would result in a duplicate association. +If during a poll interval the number of client associations +falls below +@code{minclock}, +all manycast client prototype associations are reset +to the initial poll interval and TTL hops and operation +resumes from the beginning. +It is important to avoid +frequent manycast client messages, since each one requires +all manycast servers in TTL range to respond. +The result could well be an implosion, either minor or major, +depending on the number of servers in range. +The recommended value for +@code{maxpoll} +is 12 (4,096 s). + +It is possible and frequently useful to configure a host +as both manycast client and manycast server. +A number of hosts configured this way and sharing a common +group address will automatically organize themselves +in an optimum configuration based on stratum and +synchronization distance. +For example, consider an NTP +subnet of two primary servers and a hundred or more +dependent clients. +With two exceptions, all servers +and clients have identical configuration files including both +@code{multicastclient} +and +@code{multicastserver} +commands using, for instance, multicast group address +239.1.1.1. +The only exception is that each primary server +configuration file must include commands for the primary +reference source such as a GPS receiver. + +The remaining configuration files for all secondary +servers and clients have the same contents, except for the +@code{tos} +command, which is specific for each stratum level. +For stratum 1 and stratum 2 servers, that command is +not necessary. +For stratum 3 and above servers the +@code{floor} +value is set to the intended stratum number. +Thus, all stratum 3 configuration files are identical, +all stratum 4 files are identical and so forth. + +Once operations have stabilized in this scenario, +the primary servers will find the primary reference source +and each other, since they both operate at the same +stratum (1), but not with any secondary server or client, +since these operate at a higher stratum. +The secondary +servers will find the servers at the same stratum level. +If one of the primary servers loses its GPS receiver, +it will continue to operate as a client and other clients +will time out the corresponding association and +re-associate accordingly. + +Some administrators prefer to avoid running +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +continuously and run either +@code{ntpdate(8)} +or +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +@code{-q} +as a cron job. +In either case the servers must be +configured in advance and the program fails if none are +available when the cron job runs. +A really slick +application of manycast is with +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +@code{-q}. +The program wakes up, scans the local landscape looking +for the usual suspects, selects the best from among +the rascals, sets the clock and then departs. +Servers do not have to be configured in advance and +all clients throughout the network can have the same +configuration file. +@subsubsection Manycast Interactions with Autokey +Each time a manycast client sends a client mode packet +to a multicast group address, all manycast servers +in scope generate a reply including the host name +and status word. +The manycast clients then run +the Autokey protocol, which collects and verifies +all certificates involved. +Following the burst interval +all but three survivors are cast off, +but the certificates remain in the local cache. +It often happens that several complete signing trails +from the client to the primary servers are collected in this way. + +About once an hour or less often if the poll interval +exceeds this, the client regenerates the Autokey key list. +This is in general transparent in client/server mode. +However, about once per day the server private value +used to generate cookies is refreshed along with all +manycast client associations. +In this case all +cryptographic values including certificates is refreshed. +If a new certificate has been generated since +the last refresh epoch, it will automatically revoke +all prior certificates that happen to be in the +certificate cache. +At the same time, the manycast +scheme starts all over from the beginning and +the expanding ring shrinks to the minimum and increments +from there while collecting all servers in scope. +@subsubsection Manycast Options +@table @asis +@item @code{tos} @code{[@code{ceiling} @kbd{ceiling} | @code{cohort} @code{@{} @code{0} | @code{1} @code{@}} | @code{floor} @kbd{floor} | @code{minclock} @kbd{minclock} | @code{minsane} @kbd{minsane}]} +This command affects the clock selection and clustering +algorithms. +It can be used to select the quality and +quantity of peers used to synchronize the system clock +and is most useful in manycast mode. +The variables operate +as follows: +@table @asis +@item @code{ceiling} @kbd{ceiling} +Peers with strata above +@code{ceiling} +will be discarded if there are at least +@code{minclock} +peers remaining. +This value defaults to 15, but can be changed +to any number from 1 to 15. +@item @code{cohort} @code{@{0 | 1@}} +This is a binary flag which enables (0) or disables (1) +manycast server replies to manycast clients with the same +stratum level. +This is useful to reduce implosions where +large numbers of clients with the same stratum level +are present. +The default is to enable these replies. +@item @code{floor} @kbd{floor} +Peers with strata below +@code{floor} +will be discarded if there are at least +@code{minclock} +peers remaining. +This value defaults to 1, but can be changed +to any number from 1 to 15. +@item @code{minclock} @kbd{minclock} +The clustering algorithm repeatedly casts out outlyer +associations until no more than +@code{minclock} +associations remain. +This value defaults to 3, +but can be changed to any number from 1 to the number of +configured sources. +@item @code{minsane} @kbd{minsane} +This is the minimum number of candidates available +to the clock selection algorithm in order to produce +one or more truechimers for the clustering algorithm. +If fewer than this number are available, the clock is +undisciplined and allowed to run free. +The default is 1 +for legacy purposes. +However, according to principles of +Byzantine agreement, +@code{minsane} +should be at least 4 in order to detect and discard +a single falseticker. +@end table +@item @code{ttl} @kbd{hop} @kbd{...} +This command specifies a list of TTL values in increasing +order, up to 8 values can be specified. +In manycast mode these values are used in turn +in an expanding-ring search. +The default is eight +multiples of 32 starting at 31. +@end table +@node Reference Clock Support +@subsection Reference Clock Support +The NTP Version 4 daemon supports some three dozen different radio, +satellite and modem reference clocks plus a special pseudo-clock +used for backup or when no other clock source is available. +Detailed descriptions of individual device drivers and options can +be found in the +"Reference Clock Drivers" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). +Additional information can be found in the pages linked +there, including the +"Debugging Hints for Reference Clock Drivers" +and +"How To Write a Reference Clock Driver" +pages +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). +In addition, support for a PPS +signal is available as described in the +"Pulse-per-second (PPS) Signal Interfacing" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). +Many +drivers support special line discipline/streams modules which can +significantly improve the accuracy using the driver. +These are +described in the +"Line Disciplines and Streams Drivers" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). + +A reference clock will generally (though not always) be a radio +timecode receiver which is synchronized to a source of standard +time such as the services offered by the NRC in Canada and NIST and +USNO in the US. +The interface between the computer and the timecode +receiver is device dependent, but is usually a serial port. +A +device driver specific to each reference clock must be selected and +compiled in the distribution; however, most common radio, satellite +and modem clocks are included by default. +Note that an attempt to +configure a reference clock when the driver has not been compiled +or the hardware port has not been appropriately configured results +in a scalding remark to the system log file, but is otherwise non +hazardous. + +For the purposes of configuration, +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +treats +reference clocks in a manner analogous to normal NTP peers as much +as possible. +Reference clocks are identified by a syntactically +correct but invalid IP address, in order to distinguish them from +normal NTP peers. +Reference clock addresses are of the form +@code{127.127.}@kbd{t}.@kbd{u}, +where +@kbd{t} +is an integer +denoting the clock type and +@kbd{u} +indicates the unit +number in the range 0-3. +While it may seem overkill, it is in fact +sometimes useful to configure multiple reference clocks of the same +type, in which case the unit numbers must be unique. + +The +@code{server} +command is used to configure a reference +clock, where the +@kbd{address} +argument in that command +is the clock address. +The +@code{key}, +@code{version} +and +@code{ttl} +options are not used for reference clock support. +The +@code{mode} +option is added for reference clock support, as +described below. +The +@code{prefer} +option can be useful to +persuade the server to cherish a reference clock with somewhat more +enthusiasm than other reference clocks or peers. +Further +information on this option can be found in the +"Mitigation Rules and the prefer Keyword" +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}) +page. +The +@code{minpoll} +and +@code{maxpoll} +options have +meaning only for selected clock drivers. +See the individual clock +driver document pages for additional information. + +The +@code{fudge} +command is used to provide additional +information for individual clock drivers and normally follows +immediately after the +@code{server} +command. +The +@kbd{address} +argument specifies the clock address. +The +@code{refid} +and +@code{stratum} +options can be used to +override the defaults for the device. +There are two optional +device-dependent time offsets and four flags that can be included +in the +@code{fudge} +command as well. + +The stratum number of a reference clock is by default zero. +Since the +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +daemon adds one to the stratum of each +peer, a primary server ordinarily displays an external stratum of +one. +In order to provide engineered backups, it is often useful to +specify the reference clock stratum as greater than zero. +The +@code{stratum} +option is used for this purpose. +Also, in cases +involving both a reference clock and a pulse-per-second (PPS) +discipline signal, it is useful to specify the reference clock +identifier as other than the default, depending on the driver. +The +@code{refid} +option is used for this purpose. +Except where noted, +these options apply to all clock drivers. +@subsubsection Reference Clock Commands +@table @asis +@item @code{server} @code{127.127.}@kbd{t}.@kbd{u} @code{[@code{prefer}]} @code{[@code{mode} @kbd{int}]} @code{[@code{minpoll} @kbd{int}]} @code{[@code{maxpoll} @kbd{int}]} +This command can be used to configure reference clocks in +special ways. +The options are interpreted as follows: +@table @asis +@item @code{prefer} +Marks the reference clock as preferred. +All other things being +equal, this host will be chosen for synchronization among a set of +correctly operating hosts. +See the +"Mitigation Rules and the prefer Keyword" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}) +for further information. +@item @code{mode} @kbd{int} +Specifies a mode number which is interpreted in a +device-specific fashion. +For instance, it selects a dialing +protocol in the ACTS driver and a device subtype in the +parse +drivers. +@item @code{minpoll} @kbd{int} +@item @code{maxpoll} @kbd{int} +These options specify the minimum and maximum polling interval +for reference clock messages, as a power of 2 in seconds +For +most directly connected reference clocks, both +@code{minpoll} +and +@code{maxpoll} +default to 6 (64 s). +For modem reference clocks, +@code{minpoll} +defaults to 10 (17.1 m) and +@code{maxpoll} +defaults to 14 (4.5 h). +The allowable range is 4 (16 s) to 17 (36.4 h) inclusive. +@end table +@item @code{fudge} @code{127.127.}@kbd{t}.@kbd{u} @code{[@code{time1} @kbd{sec}]} @code{[@code{time2} @kbd{sec}]} @code{[@code{stratum} @kbd{int}]} @code{[@code{refid} @kbd{string}]} @code{[@code{mode} @kbd{int}]} @code{[@code{flag1} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1}]} @code{[@code{flag2} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1}]} @code{[@code{flag3} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1}]} @code{[@code{flag4} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1}]} +This command can be used to configure reference clocks in +special ways. +It must immediately follow the +@code{server} +command which configures the driver. +Note that the same capability +is possible at run time using the +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +program. +The options are interpreted as +follows: +@table @asis +@item @code{time1} @kbd{sec} +Specifies a constant to be added to the time offset produced by +the driver, a fixed-point decimal number in seconds. +This is used +as a calibration constant to adjust the nominal time offset of a +particular clock to agree with an external standard, such as a +precision PPS signal. +It also provides a way to correct a +systematic error or bias due to serial port or operating system +latencies, different cable lengths or receiver internal delay. +The +specified offset is in addition to the propagation delay provided +by other means, such as internal DIPswitches. +Where a calibration +for an individual system and driver is available, an approximate +correction is noted in the driver documentation pages. +Note: in order to facilitate calibration when more than one +radio clock or PPS signal is supported, a special calibration +feature is available. +It takes the form of an argument to the +@code{enable} +command described in +@ref{Miscellaneous Options} +page and operates as described in the +"Reference Clock Drivers" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). +@item @code{time2} @kbd{secs} +Specifies a fixed-point decimal number in seconds, which is +interpreted in a driver-dependent way. +See the descriptions of +specific drivers in the +"Reference Clock Drivers" +page +(available as part of the HTML documentation +provided in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}). +@item @code{stratum} @kbd{int} +Specifies the stratum number assigned to the driver, an integer +between 0 and 15. +This number overrides the default stratum number +ordinarily assigned by the driver itself, usually zero. +@item @code{refid} @kbd{string} +Specifies an ASCII string of from one to four characters which +defines the reference identifier used by the driver. +This string +overrides the default identifier ordinarily assigned by the driver +itself. +@item @code{mode} @kbd{int} +Specifies a mode number which is interpreted in a +device-specific fashion. +For instance, it selects a dialing +protocol in the ACTS driver and a device subtype in the +parse +drivers. +@item @code{flag1} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1} +@item @code{flag2} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1} +@item @code{flag3} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1} +@item @code{flag4} @code{0} @code{|} @code{1} +These four flags are used for customizing the clock driver. +The +interpretation of these values, and whether they are used at all, +is a function of the particular clock driver. +However, by +convention +@code{flag4} +is used to enable recording monitoring +data to the +@code{clockstats} +file configured with the +@code{filegen} +command. +Further information on the +@code{filegen} +command can be found in +@ref{Monitoring Options}. +@end table +@end table +@node Miscellaneous Options +@subsection Miscellaneous Options +@table @asis +@item @code{broadcastdelay} @kbd{seconds} +The broadcast and multicast modes require a special calibration +to determine the network delay between the local and remote +servers. +Ordinarily, this is done automatically by the initial +protocol exchanges between the client and server. +In some cases, +the calibration procedure may fail due to network or server access +controls, for example. +This command specifies the default delay to +be used under these circumstances. +Typically (for Ethernet), a +number between 0.003 and 0.007 seconds is appropriate. +The default +when this command is not used is 0.004 seconds. +@item @code{calldelay} @kbd{delay} +This option controls the delay in seconds between the first and second +packets sent in burst or iburst mode to allow additional time for a modem +or ISDN call to complete. +@item @code{driftfile} @kbd{driftfile} +This command specifies the complete path and name of the file used to +record the frequency of the local clock oscillator. +This is the same +operation as the +@code{-f} +command line option. +If the file exists, it is read at +startup in order to set the initial frequency and then updated once per +hour with the current frequency computed by the daemon. +If the file name is +specified, but the file itself does not exist, the starts with an initial +frequency of zero and creates the file when writing it for the first time. +If this command is not given, the daemon will always start with an initial +frequency of zero. + +The file format consists of a single line containing a single +floating point number, which records the frequency offset measured +in parts-per-million (PPM). +The file is updated by first writing +the current drift value into a temporary file and then renaming +this file to replace the old version. +This implies that +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +must have write permission for the directory the +drift file is located in, and that file system links, symbolic or +otherwise, should be avoided. +@item @code{dscp} @kbd{value} +This option specifies the Differentiated Services Control Point (DSCP) value, +a 6-bit code. The default value is 46, signifying Expedited Forwarding. +@item @code{enable} @code{[@code{auth} | @code{bclient} | @code{calibrate} | @code{kernel} | @code{mode7} | @code{monitor} | @code{ntp} | @code{stats}]} +@item @code{disable} @code{[@code{auth} | @code{bclient} | @code{calibrate} | @code{kernel} | @code{mode7} | @code{monitor} | @code{ntp} | @code{stats}]} +Provides a way to enable or disable various server options. +Flags not mentioned are unaffected. +Note that all of these flags +can be controlled remotely using the +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +utility program. +@table @asis +@item @code{auth} +Enables the server to synchronize with unconfigured peers only if the +peer has been correctly authenticated using either public key or +private key cryptography. +The default for this flag is +@code{enable}. +@item @code{bclient} +Enables the server to listen for a message from a broadcast or +multicast server, as in the +@code{multicastclient} +command with default +address. +The default for this flag is +@code{disable}. +@item @code{calibrate} +Enables the calibrate feature for reference clocks. +The default for +this flag is +@code{disable}. +@item @code{kernel} +Enables the kernel time discipline, if available. +The default for this +flag is +@code{enable} +if support is available, otherwise +@code{disable}. +@item @code{mode7} +Enables processing of NTP mode 7 implementation-specific requests +which are used by the deprecated +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +program. +The default for this flag is disable. +This flag is excluded from runtime configuration using +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)}. +The +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} +program provides the same capabilities as +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +using standard mode 6 requests. +@item @code{monitor} +Enables the monitoring facility. +See the +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)} +program +and the +@code{monlist} +command or further information. +The +default for this flag is +@code{enable}. +@item @code{ntp} +Enables time and frequency discipline. +In effect, this switch opens and +closes the feedback loop, which is useful for testing. +The default for +this flag is +@code{enable}. +@item @code{stats} +Enables the statistics facility. +See the +@ref{Monitoring Options} +section for further information. +The default for this flag is +@code{disable}. +@end table +@item @code{includefile} @kbd{includefile} +This command allows additional configuration commands +to be included from a separate file. +Include files may +be nested to a depth of five; upon reaching the end of any +include file, command processing resumes in the previous +configuration file. +This option is useful for sites that run +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +on multiple hosts, with (mostly) common options (e.g., a +restriction list). +@item @code{leapsmearinterval} @kbd{seconds} +This EXPERIMENTAL option is only available if +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +was built with the +@code{--enable-leap-smear} +option to the +@code{configure} +script. +It specifies the interval over which a leap second correction will be applied. +Recommended values for this option are between +7200 (2 hours) and 86400 (24 hours). +.Sy DO NOT USE THIS OPTION ON PUBLIC-ACCESS SERVERS! +See http://bugs.ntp.org/2855 for more information. +@item @code{logconfig} @kbd{configkeyword} +This command controls the amount and type of output written to +the system +@code{syslog(3)} +facility or the alternate +@code{logfile} +log file. +By default, all output is turned on. +All +@kbd{configkeyword} +keywords can be prefixed with +@quoteleft{}=@quoteright{}, +@quoteleft{}+@quoteright{} +and +@quoteleft{}-@quoteright{}, +where +@quoteleft{}=@quoteright{} +sets the +@code{syslog(3)} +priority mask, +@quoteleft{}+@quoteright{} +adds and +@quoteleft{}-@quoteright{} +removes +messages. +@code{syslog(3)} +messages can be controlled in four +classes +(@code{clock}, @code{peer}, @code{sys} and @code{sync}). +Within these classes four types of messages can be +controlled: informational messages +(@code{info}), +event messages +(@code{events}), +statistics messages +(@code{statistics}) +and +status messages +(@code{status}). + +Configuration keywords are formed by concatenating the message class with +the event class. +The +@code{all} +prefix can be used instead of a message class. +A +message class may also be followed by the +@code{all} +keyword to enable/disable all +messages of the respective message class.Thus, a minimal log configuration +could look like this: +@verbatim +logconfig =syncstatus +sysevents +@end verbatim + +This would just list the synchronizations state of +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)} +and the major system events. +For a simple reference server, the +following minimum message configuration could be useful: +@verbatim +logconfig =syncall +clockall +@end verbatim + +This configuration will list all clock information and +synchronization information. +All other events and messages about +peers, system events and so on is suppressed. +@item @code{logfile} @kbd{logfile} +This command specifies the location of an alternate log file to +be used instead of the default system +@code{syslog(3)} +facility. +This is the same operation as the -l command line option. +@item @code{setvar} @kbd{variable} @code{[@code{default}]} +This command adds an additional system variable. +These +variables can be used to distribute additional information such as +the access policy. +If the variable of the form +@code{name}@code{=}@kbd{value} +is followed by the +@code{default} +keyword, the +variable will be listed as part of the default system variables +(@code{rv} command)). +These additional variables serve +informational purposes only. +They are not related to the protocol +other that they can be listed. +The known protocol variables will +always override any variables defined via the +@code{setvar} +mechanism. +There are three special variables that contain the names +of all variable of the same group. +The +@code{sys_var_list} +holds +the names of all system variables. +The +@code{peer_var_list} +holds +the names of all peer variables and the +@code{clock_var_list} +holds the names of the reference clock variables. +@item @code{tinker} @code{[@code{allan} @kbd{allan} | @code{dispersion} @kbd{dispersion} | @code{freq} @kbd{freq} | @code{huffpuff} @kbd{huffpuff} | @code{panic} @kbd{panic} | @code{step} @kbd{step} | @code{stepback} @kbd{stepback} | @code{stepfwd} @kbd{stepfwd} | @code{stepout} @kbd{stepout}]} +This command can be used to alter several system variables in +very exceptional circumstances. +It should occur in the +configuration file before any other configuration options. +The +default values of these variables have been carefully optimized for +a wide range of network speeds and reliability expectations. +In +general, they interact in intricate ways that are hard to predict +and some combinations can result in some very nasty behavior. +Very +rarely is it necessary to change the default values; but, some +folks cannot resist twisting the knobs anyway and this command is +for them. +Emphasis added: twisters are on their own and can expect +no help from the support group. + +The variables operate as follows: +@table @asis +@item @code{allan} @kbd{allan} +The argument becomes the new value for the minimum Allan +intercept, which is a parameter of the PLL/FLL clock discipline +algorithm. +The value in log2 seconds defaults to 7 (1024 s), which is also the lower +limit. +@item @code{dispersion} @kbd{dispersion} +The argument becomes the new value for the dispersion increase rate, +normally .000015 s/s. +@item @code{freq} @kbd{freq} +The argument becomes the initial value of the frequency offset in +parts-per-million. +This overrides the value in the frequency file, if +present, and avoids the initial training state if it is not. +@item @code{huffpuff} @kbd{huffpuff} +The argument becomes the new value for the experimental +huff-n'-puff filter span, which determines the most recent interval +the algorithm will search for a minimum delay. +The lower limit is +900 s (15 m), but a more reasonable value is 7200 (2 hours). +There +is no default, since the filter is not enabled unless this command +is given. +@item @code{panic} @kbd{panic} +The argument is the panic threshold, normally 1000 s. +If set to zero, +the panic sanity check is disabled and a clock offset of any value will +be accepted. +@item @code{step} @kbd{step} +The argument is the step threshold, which by default is 0.128 s. +It can +be set to any positive number in seconds. +If set to zero, step +adjustments will never occur. +Note: The kernel time discipline is +disabled if the step threshold is set to zero or greater than the +default. +@item @code{stepback} @kbd{stepback} +The argument is the step threshold for the backward direction, +which by default is 0.128 s. +It can +be set to any positive number in seconds. +If both the forward and backward step thresholds are set to zero, step +adjustments will never occur. +Note: The kernel time discipline is +disabled if +each direction of step threshold are either +set to zero or greater than .5 second. +@item @code{stepfwd} @kbd{stepfwd} +As for stepback, but for the forward direction. +@item @code{stepout} @kbd{stepout} +The argument is the stepout timeout, which by default is 900 s. +It can +be set to any positive number in seconds. +If set to zero, the stepout +pulses will not be suppressed. +@end table +@item @code{rlimit} @code{[@code{memlock} @kbd{Nmegabytes} | @code{stacksize} @kbd{N4kPages} @code{filenum} @kbd{Nfiledescriptors}]} +@table @asis +@item @code{memlock} @kbd{Nmegabytes} +Specify the number of megabytes of memory that can be allocated. +Probably only available under Linux, this option is useful +when dropping root (the +@code{-i} +option). +The default is 32 megabytes. Setting this to zero will prevent any attemp to lock memory. +@item @code{stacksize} @kbd{N4kPages} +Specifies the maximum size of the process stack on systems with the +@code{mlockall()} +function. +Defaults to 50 4k pages (200 4k pages in OpenBSD). +@item @code{filenum} @kbd{Nfiledescriptors} +Specifies the maximum number of file descriptors ntpd may have open at once. Defaults to the system default. +@end table +@item @code{trap} @kbd{host_address} @code{[@code{port} @kbd{port_number}]} @code{[@code{interface} @kbd{interface_address}]} +This command configures a trap receiver at the given host +address and port number for sending messages with the specified +local interface address. +If the port number is unspecified, a value +of 18447 is used. +If the interface address is not specified, the +message is sent with a source address of the local interface the +message is sent through. +Note that on a multihomed host the +interface used may vary from time to time with routing changes. + +The trap receiver will generally log event messages and other +information from the server in a log file. +While such monitor +programs may also request their own trap dynamically, configuring a +trap receiver will ensure that no messages are lost when the server +is started. +@item @code{hop} @kbd{...} +This command specifies a list of TTL values in increasing order, up to 8 +values can be specified. +In manycast mode these values are used in turn in +an expanding-ring search. +The default is eight multiples of 32 starting at +31. +@end table + +This section was generated by @strong{AutoGen}, +using the @code{agtexi-cmd} template and the option descriptions for the @code{ntp.conf} program. +This software is released under the NTP license, <http://ntp.org/license>. + +@menu +* ntp.conf Files:: Files +* ntp.conf See Also:: See Also +* ntp.conf Bugs:: Bugs +* ntp.conf Notes:: Notes +@end menu + +@node ntp.conf Files +@subsection ntp.conf Files +@table @asis +@item @file{/etc/ntp.conf} +the default name of the configuration file +@item @file{ntp.keys} +private MD5 keys +@item @file{ntpkey} +RSA private key +@item @file{ntpkey_}@kbd{host} +RSA public key +@item @file{ntp_dh} +Diffie-Hellman agreement parameters +@end table +@node ntp.conf See Also +@subsection ntp.conf See Also +@code{ntpd(1ntpdmdoc)}, +@code{ntpdc(1ntpdcmdoc)}, +@code{ntpq(1ntpqmdoc)} + +In addition to the manual pages provided, +comprehensive documentation is available on the world wide web +at +@code{http://www.ntp.org/}. +A snapshot of this documentation is available in HTML format in +@file{/usr/share/doc/ntp}. +@* + +@* +David L. Mills, @emph{Network Time Protocol (Version 4)}, RFC5905 +@node ntp.conf Bugs +@subsection ntp.conf Bugs +The syntax checking is not picky; some combinations of +ridiculous and even hilarious options and modes may not be +detected. + +The +@file{ntpkey_}@kbd{host} +files are really digital +certificates. +These should be obtained via secure directory +services when they become universally available. +@node ntp.conf Notes +@subsection ntp.conf Notes +This document was derived from FreeBSD. |