1.Dd November 21 2016 2.Dt NTPDC 1ntpdcmdoc User Commands 3.Os 4.\" EDIT THIS FILE WITH CAUTION (ntpdc-opts.mdoc) 5.\" 6.\" It has been AutoGen-ed November 21, 2016 at 08:02:35 AM by AutoGen 5.18.5 7.\" From the definitions ntpdc-opts.def 8.\" and the template file agmdoc-cmd.tpl 9.Sh NAME 10.Nm ntpdc 11.Nd vendor-specific NTPD control program 12.Sh SYNOPSIS 13.Nm 14.\" Mixture of short (flag) options and long options 15.Op Fl flags 16.Op Fl flag Op Ar value 17.Op Fl \-option\-name Ns Oo Oo Ns "=| " Oc Ns Ar value Oc 18[ host ...] 19.Pp 20.Sh DESCRIPTION 21.Nm 22is deprecated. 23Please use 24.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc instead \- it can do everything 25.Nm 26used to do, and it does so using a much more sane interface. 27.Pp 28.Nm 29is a utility program used to query 30.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc 31about its 32current state and to request changes in that state. 33It uses NTP mode 7 control message formats described in the source code. 34The program may 35be run either in interactive mode or controlled using command line 36arguments. 37Extensive state and statistics information is available 38through the 39.Nm 40interface. 41In addition, nearly all the 42configuration options which can be specified at startup using 43ntpd's configuration file may also be specified at run time using 44.Nm . 45.Sh "OPTIONS" 46.Bl -tag 47.It Fl 4 , Fl \-ipv4 48Force IPv4 DNS name resolution. 49This option must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 50ipv6. 51.sp 52Force DNS resolution of following host names on the command line 53to the IPv4 namespace. 54.It Fl 6 , Fl \-ipv6 55Force IPv6 DNS name resolution. 56This option must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 57ipv4. 58.sp 59Force DNS resolution of following host names on the command line 60to the IPv6 namespace. 61.It Fl c Ar cmd , Fl \-command Ns = Ns Ar cmd 62run a command and exit. 63This option may appear an unlimited number of times. 64.sp 65The following argument is interpreted as an interactive format command 66and is added to the list of commands to be executed on the specified 67host(s). 68.It Fl d , Fl \-debug\-level 69Increase debug verbosity level. 70This option may appear an unlimited number of times. 71.sp 72.It Fl D Ar number , Fl \-set\-debug\-level Ns = Ns Ar number 73Set the debug verbosity level. 74This option may appear an unlimited number of times. 75This option takes an integer number as its argument. 76.sp 77.It Fl i , Fl \-interactive 78Force ntpq to operate in interactive mode. 79This option must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 80command, listpeers, peers, showpeers. 81.sp 82Force ntpq to operate in interactive mode. Prompts will be written 83to the standard output and commands read from the standard input. 84.It Fl l , Fl \-listpeers 85Print a list of the peers. 86This option must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 87command. 88.sp 89Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary of 90their state. This is equivalent to the 'listpeers' interactive command. 91.It Fl n , Fl \-numeric 92numeric host addresses. 93.sp 94Output all host addresses in dotted\-quad numeric format rather than 95converting to the canonical host names. 96.It Fl p , Fl \-peers 97Print a list of the peers. 98This option must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 99command. 100.sp 101Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary 102of their state. This is equivalent to the 'peers' interactive command. 103.It Fl s , Fl \-showpeers 104Show a list of the peers. 105This option must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 106command. 107.sp 108Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary 109of their state. This is equivalent to the 'dmpeers' interactive command. 110.It Fl \&? , Fl \-help 111Display usage information and exit. 112.It Fl \&! , Fl \-more\-help 113Pass the extended usage information through a pager. 114.It Fl > Oo Ar cfgfile Oc , Fl \-save\-opts Oo Ns = Ns Ar cfgfile Oc 115Save the option state to \fIcfgfile\fP. The default is the \fIlast\fP 116configuration file listed in the \fBOPTION PRESETS\fP section, below. 117The command will exit after updating the config file. 118.It Fl < Ar cfgfile , Fl \-load\-opts Ns = Ns Ar cfgfile , Fl \-no\-load\-opts 119Load options from \fIcfgfile\fP. 120The \fIno\-load\-opts\fP form will disable the loading 121of earlier config/rc/ini files. \fI\-\-no\-load\-opts\fP is handled early, 122out of order. 123.It Fl \-version Op Brq Ar v|c|n 124Output version of program and exit. The default mode is `v', a simple 125version. The `c' mode will print copyright information and `n' will 126print the full copyright notice. 127.El 128.Sh "OPTION PRESETS" 129Any option that is not marked as \fInot presettable\fP may be preset 130by loading values from configuration ("RC" or ".INI") file(s) and values from 131environment variables named: 132.nf 133 \fBNTPDC_<option\-name>\fP or \fBNTPDC\fP 134.fi 135.ad 136The environmental presets take precedence (are processed later than) 137the configuration files. 138The \fIhomerc\fP files are "\fI$HOME\fP", and "\fI.\fP". 139If any of these are directories, then the file \fI.ntprc\fP 140is searched for within those directories. 141.Sh USAGE 142If one or more request options are included on the command line 143when 144.Nm 145is executed, each of the requests will be sent 146to the NTP servers running on each of the hosts given as command 147line arguments, or on localhost by default. 148If no request options 149are given, 150.Nm 151will attempt to read commands from the 152standard input and execute these on the NTP server running on the 153first host given on the command line, again defaulting to localhost 154when no other host is specified. 155The 156.Nm 157utility will prompt for 158commands if the standard input is a terminal device. 159.Pp 160The 161.Nm 162utility uses NTP mode 7 packets to communicate with the 163NTP server, and hence can be used to query any compatible server on 164the network which permits it. 165Note that since NTP is a UDP protocol 166this communication will be somewhat unreliable, especially over 167large distances in terms of network topology. 168The 169.Nm 170utility makes 171no attempt to retransmit requests, and will time requests out if 172the remote host is not heard from within a suitable timeout 173time. 174.Pp 175The operation of 176.Nm 177are specific to the particular 178implementation of the 179.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc 180daemon and can be expected to 181work only with this and maybe some previous versions of the daemon. 182Requests from a remote 183.Nm 184utility which affect the 185state of the local server must be authenticated, which requires 186both the remote program and local server share a common key and key 187identifier. 188.Pp 189Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a 190.Fl 4 191qualifier preceding the host name forces DNS resolution to the IPv4 namespace, 192while a 193.Fl 6 194qualifier forces DNS resolution to the IPv6 namespace. 195Specifying a command line option other than 196.Fl i 197or 198.Fl n 199will cause the specified query (queries) to be sent to 200the indicated host(s) immediately. 201Otherwise, 202.Nm 203will 204attempt to read interactive format commands from the standard 205input. 206.Ss "Interactive Commands" 207Interactive format commands consist of a keyword followed by zero 208to four arguments. 209Only enough characters of the full keyword to 210uniquely identify the command need be typed. 211The output of a 212command is normally sent to the standard output, but optionally the 213output of individual commands may be sent to a file by appending a 214.Ql \&> , 215followed by a file name, to the command line. 216.Pp 217A number of interactive format commands are executed entirely 218within the 219.Nm 220utility itself and do not result in NTP 221mode 7 requests being sent to a server. 222These are described 223following. 224.Bl -tag -width indent 225.It Ic \&? Ar command_keyword 226.It Ic help Ar command_keyword 227A 228.Sq Ic \&? 229will print a list of all the command 230keywords known to this incarnation of 231.Nm . 232A 233.Sq Ic \&? 234followed by a command keyword will print function and usage 235information about the command. 236This command is probably a better 237source of information about 238.Xr ntpq 1ntpqmdoc 239than this manual 240page. 241.It Ic delay Ar milliseconds 242Specify a time interval to be added to timestamps included in 243requests which require authentication. 244This is used to enable 245(unreliable) server reconfiguration over long delay network paths 246or between machines whose clocks are unsynchronized. 247Actually the 248server does not now require timestamps in authenticated requests, 249so this command may be obsolete. 250.It Ic host Ar hostname 251Set the host to which future queries will be sent. 252Hostname may 253be either a host name or a numeric address. 254.It Ic hostnames Op Cm yes | Cm no 255If 256.Cm yes 257is specified, host names are printed in 258information displays. 259If 260.Cm no 261is specified, numeric 262addresses are printed instead. 263The default is 264.Cm yes , 265unless 266modified using the command line 267.Fl n 268switch. 269.It Ic keyid Ar keyid 270This command allows the specification of a key number to be 271used to authenticate configuration requests. 272This must correspond 273to a key number the server has been configured to use for this 274purpose. 275.It Ic quit 276Exit 277.Nm . 278.It Ic passwd 279This command prompts you to type in a password (which will not 280be echoed) which will be used to authenticate configuration 281requests. 282The password must correspond to the key configured for 283use by the NTP server for this purpose if such requests are to be 284successful. 285.It Ic timeout Ar milliseconds 286Specify a timeout period for responses to server queries. 287The 288default is about 8000 milliseconds. 289Note that since 290.Nm 291retries each query once after a timeout, the total waiting time for 292a timeout will be twice the timeout value set. 293.El 294.Ss "Control Message Commands" 295Query commands result in NTP mode 7 packets containing requests for 296information being sent to the server. 297These are read\-only commands 298in that they make no modification of the server configuration 299state. 300.Bl -tag -width indent 301.It Ic listpeers 302Obtains and prints a brief list of the peers for which the 303server is maintaining state. 304These should include all configured 305peer associations as well as those peers whose stratum is such that 306they are considered by the server to be possible future 307synchronization candidates. 308.It Ic peers 309Obtains a list of peers for which the server is maintaining 310state, along with a summary of that state. 311Summary information 312includes the address of the remote peer, the local interface 313address (0.0.0.0 if a local address has yet to be determined), the 314stratum of the remote peer (a stratum of 16 indicates the remote 315peer is unsynchronized), the polling interval, in seconds, the 316reachability register, in octal, and the current estimated delay, 317offset and dispersion of the peer, all in seconds. 318.Pp 319The character in the left margin indicates the mode this peer 320entry is operating in. 321A 322.Ql \&+ 323denotes symmetric active, a 324.Ql \&\- 325indicates symmetric passive, a 326.Ql \&= 327means the 328remote server is being polled in client mode, a 329.Ql \&^ 330indicates that the server is broadcasting to this address, a 331.Ql \&~ 332denotes that the remote peer is sending broadcasts and a 333.Ql \&~ 334denotes that the remote peer is sending broadcasts and a 335.Ql \&* 336marks the peer the server is currently synchronizing 337to. 338.Pp 339The contents of the host field may be one of four forms. 340It may 341be a host name, an IP address, a reference clock implementation 342name with its parameter or 343.Fn REFCLK "implementation_number" "parameter" . 344On 345.Ic hostnames 346.Cm no 347only IP\-addresses 348will be displayed. 349.It Ic dmpeers 350A slightly different peer summary list. 351Identical to the output 352of the 353.Ic peers 354command, except for the character in the 355leftmost column. 356Characters only appear beside peers which were 357included in the final stage of the clock selection algorithm. 358A 359.Ql \&. 360indicates that this peer was cast off in the falseticker 361detection, while a 362.Ql \&+ 363indicates that the peer made it 364through. 365A 366.Ql \&* 367denotes the peer the server is currently 368synchronizing with. 369.It Ic showpeer Ar peer_address Oo Ar ... Oc 370Shows a detailed display of the current peer variables for one 371or more peers. 372Most of these values are described in the NTP 373Version 2 specification. 374.It Ic pstats Ar peer_address Oo Ar ... Oc 375Show per\-peer statistic counters associated with the specified 376peer(s). 377.It Ic clockstat Ar clock_peer_address Oo Ar ... Oc 378Obtain and print information concerning a peer clock. 379The 380values obtained provide information on the setting of fudge factors 381and other clock performance information. 382.It Ic kerninfo 383Obtain and print kernel phase\-lock loop operating parameters. 384This information is available only if the kernel has been specially 385modified for a precision timekeeping function. 386.It Ic loopinfo Op Cm oneline | Cm multiline 387Print the values of selected loop filter variables. 388The loop 389filter is the part of NTP which deals with adjusting the local 390system clock. 391The 392.Sq offset 393is the last offset given to the 394loop filter by the packet processing code. 395The 396.Sq frequency 397is the frequency error of the local clock in parts\-per\-million 398(ppm). 399The 400.Sq time_const 401controls the stiffness of the 402phase\-lock loop and thus the speed at which it can adapt to 403oscillator drift. 404The 405.Sq watchdog timer 406value is the number 407of seconds which have elapsed since the last sample offset was 408given to the loop filter. 409The 410.Cm oneline 411and 412.Cm multiline 413options specify the format in which this 414information is to be printed, with 415.Cm multiline 416as the 417default. 418.It Ic sysinfo 419Print a variety of system state variables, i.e., state related 420to the local server. 421All except the last four lines are described 422in the NTP Version 3 specification, RFC\-1305. 423.Pp 424The 425.Sq system flags 426show various system flags, some of 427which can be set and cleared by the 428.Ic enable 429and 430.Ic disable 431configuration commands, respectively. 432These are 433the 434.Cm auth , 435.Cm bclient , 436.Cm monitor , 437.Cm pll , 438.Cm pps 439and 440.Cm stats 441flags. 442See the 443.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc 444documentation for the meaning of these flags. 445There 446are two additional flags which are read only, the 447.Cm kernel_pll 448and 449.Cm kernel_pps . 450These flags indicate 451the synchronization status when the precision time kernel 452modifications are in use. 453The 454.Sq kernel_pll 455indicates that 456the local clock is being disciplined by the kernel, while the 457.Sq kernel_pps 458indicates the kernel discipline is provided by the PPS 459signal. 460.Pp 461The 462.Sq stability 463is the residual frequency error remaining 464after the system frequency correction is applied and is intended for 465maintenance and debugging. 466In most architectures, this value will 467initially decrease from as high as 500 ppm to a nominal value in 468the range .01 to 0.1 ppm. 469If it remains high for some time after 470starting the daemon, something may be wrong with the local clock, 471or the value of the kernel variable 472.Va kern.clockrate.tick 473may be 474incorrect. 475.Pp 476The 477.Sq broadcastdelay 478shows the default broadcast delay, 479as set by the 480.Ic broadcastdelay 481configuration command. 482.Pp 483The 484.Sq authdelay 485shows the default authentication delay, 486as set by the 487.Ic authdelay 488configuration command. 489.It Ic sysstats 490Print statistics counters maintained in the protocol 491module. 492.It Ic memstats 493Print statistics counters related to memory allocation 494code. 495.It Ic iostats 496Print statistics counters maintained in the input\-output 497module. 498.It Ic timerstats 499Print statistics counters maintained in the timer/event queue 500support code. 501.It Ic reslist 502Obtain and print the server's restriction list. 503This list is 504(usually) printed in sorted order and may help to understand how 505the restrictions are applied. 506.It Ic monlist Op Ar version 507Obtain and print traffic counts collected and maintained by the 508monitor facility. 509The version number should not normally need to be 510specified. 511.It Ic clkbug Ar clock_peer_address Oo Ar ... Oc 512Obtain debugging information for a reference clock driver. 513This 514information is provided only by some clock drivers and is mostly 515undecodable without a copy of the driver source in hand. 516.El 517.Ss "Runtime Configuration Requests" 518All requests which cause state changes in the server are 519authenticated by the server using a configured NTP key (the 520facility can also be disabled by the server by not configuring a 521key). 522The key number and the corresponding key must also be made 523known to 524.Nm . 525This can be done using the 526.Ic keyid 527and 528.Ic passwd 529commands, the latter of which will prompt at the terminal for a 530password to use as the encryption key. 531You will also be prompted 532automatically for both the key number and password the first time a 533command which would result in an authenticated request to the 534server is given. 535Authentication not only provides verification that 536the requester has permission to make such changes, but also gives 537an extra degree of protection again transmission errors. 538.Pp 539Authenticated requests always include a timestamp in the packet 540data, which is included in the computation of the authentication 541code. 542This timestamp is compared by the server to its receive time 543stamp. 544If they differ by more than a small amount the request is 545rejected. 546This is done for two reasons. 547First, it makes simple 548replay attacks on the server, by someone who might be able to 549overhear traffic on your LAN, much more difficult. 550Second, it makes 551it more difficult to request configuration changes to your server 552from topologically remote hosts. 553While the reconfiguration facility 554will work well with a server on the local host, and may work 555adequately between time\-synchronized hosts on the same LAN, it will 556work very poorly for more distant hosts. 557As such, if reasonable 558passwords are chosen, care is taken in the distribution and 559protection of keys and appropriate source address restrictions are 560applied, the run time reconfiguration facility should provide an 561adequate level of security. 562.Pp 563The following commands all make authenticated requests. 564.Bl -tag -width indent 565.It Xo Ic addpeer Ar peer_address 566.Op Ar keyid 567.Op Ar version 568.Op Cm prefer 569.Xc 570Add a configured peer association at the given address and 571operating in symmetric active mode. 572Note that an existing 573association with the same peer may be deleted when this command is 574executed, or may simply be converted to conform to the new 575configuration, as appropriate. 576If the optional 577.Ar keyid 578is a 579nonzero integer, all outgoing packets to the remote server will 580have an authentication field attached encrypted with this key. 581If 582the value is 0 (or not given) no authentication will be done. 583The 584.Ar version 585can be 1, 2 or 3 and defaults to 3. 586The 587.Cm prefer 588keyword indicates a preferred peer (and thus will 589be used primarily for clock synchronisation if possible). 590The 591preferred peer also determines the validity of the PPS signal \- if 592the preferred peer is suitable for synchronisation so is the PPS 593signal. 594.It Xo Ic addserver Ar peer_address 595.Op Ar keyid 596.Op Ar version 597.Op Cm prefer 598.Xc 599Identical to the addpeer command, except that the operating 600mode is client. 601.It Xo Ic broadcast Ar peer_address 602.Op Ar keyid 603.Op Ar version 604.Op Cm prefer 605.Xc 606Identical to the addpeer command, except that the operating 607mode is broadcast. 608In this case a valid key identifier and key are 609required. 610The 611.Ar peer_address 612parameter can be the broadcast 613address of the local network or a multicast group address assigned 614to NTP. 615If a multicast address, a multicast\-capable kernel is 616required. 617.It Ic unconfig Ar peer_address Oo Ar ... Oc 618This command causes the configured bit to be removed from the 619specified peer(s). 620In many cases this will cause the peer 621association to be deleted. 622When appropriate, however, the 623association may persist in an unconfigured mode if the remote peer 624is willing to continue on in this fashion. 625.It Xo Ic fudge Ar peer_address 626.Op Cm time1 627.Op Cm time2 628.Op Ar stratum 629.Op Ar refid 630.Xc 631This command provides a way to set certain data for a reference 632clock. 633See the source listing for further information. 634.It Xo Ic enable 635.Oo 636.Cm auth | Cm bclient | 637.Cm calibrate | Cm kernel | 638.Cm monitor | Cm ntp | 639.Cm pps | Cm stats 640.Oc 641.Xc 642.It Xo Ic disable 643.Oo 644.Cm auth | Cm bclient | 645.Cm calibrate | Cm kernel | 646.Cm monitor | Cm ntp | 647.Cm pps | Cm stats 648.Oc 649.Xc 650These commands operate in the same way as the 651.Ic enable 652and 653.Ic disable 654configuration file commands of 655.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc . 656.Bl -tag -width indent 657.It Cm auth 658Enables the server to synchronize with unconfigured peers only 659if the peer has been correctly authenticated using either public key 660or private key cryptography. 661The default for this flag is enable. 662.It Cm bclient 663Enables the server to listen for a message from a broadcast or 664multicast server, as in the multicastclient command with 665default address. 666The default for this flag is disable. 667.It Cm calibrate 668Enables the calibrate feature for reference clocks. 669The default for this flag is disable. 670.It Cm kernel 671Enables the kernel time discipline, if available. 672The default for this flag is enable if support is available, otherwise disable. 673.It Cm monitor 674Enables the monitoring facility. 675See the documentation here about the 676.Cm monlist 677command or further information. 678The default for this flag is enable. 679.It Cm ntp 680Enables time and frequency discipline. 681In effect, this switch opens and closes the feedback loop, 682which is useful for testing. 683The default for this flag is enable. 684.It Cm pps 685Enables the pulse\-per\-second (PPS) signal when frequency 686and time is disciplined by the precision time kernel modifications. 687See the 688.Qq A Kernel Model for Precision Timekeeping 689(available as part of the HTML documentation 690provided in 691.Pa /usr/share/doc/ntp ) 692page for further information. 693The default for this flag is disable. 694.It Cm stats 695Enables the statistics facility. 696See the 697.Sx Monitoring Options 698section of 699.Xr ntp.conf 5 700for further information. 701The default for this flag is disable. 702.El 703.It Xo Ic restrict Ar address Ar mask 704.Ar flag Oo Ar ... Oc 705.Xc 706This command operates in the same way as the 707.Ic restrict 708configuration file commands of 709.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc . 710.It Xo Ic unrestrict Ar address Ar mask 711.Ar flag Oo Ar ... Oc 712.Xc 713Unrestrict the matching entry from the restrict list. 714.It Xo Ic delrestrict Ar address Ar mask 715.Op Cm ntpport 716.Xc 717Delete the matching entry from the restrict list. 718.It Ic readkeys 719Causes the current set of authentication keys to be purged and 720a new set to be obtained by rereading the keys file (which must 721have been specified in the 722.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc 723configuration file). 724This 725allows encryption keys to be changed without restarting the 726server. 727.It Ic trustedkey Ar keyid Oo Ar ... Oc 728.It Ic untrustedkey Ar keyid Oo Ar ... Oc 729These commands operate in the same way as the 730.Ic trustedkey 731and 732.Ic untrustedkey 733configuration file 734commands of 735.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc . 736.It Ic authinfo 737Returns information concerning the authentication module, 738including known keys and counts of encryptions and decryptions 739which have been done. 740.It Ic traps 741Display the traps set in the server. 742See the source listing for 743further information. 744.It Xo Ic addtrap Ar address 745.Op Ar port 746.Op Ar interface 747.Xc 748Set a trap for asynchronous messages. 749See the source listing 750for further information. 751.It Xo Ic clrtrap Ar address 752.Op Ar port 753.Op Ar interface 754.Xc 755Clear a trap for asynchronous messages. 756See the source listing 757for further information. 758.It Ic reset 759Clear the statistics counters in various modules of the server. 760See the source listing for further information. 761.El 762.Sh "ENVIRONMENT" 763See \fBOPTION PRESETS\fP for configuration environment variables. 764.Sh "FILES" 765See \fBOPTION PRESETS\fP for configuration files. 766.Sh "EXIT STATUS" 767One of the following exit values will be returned: 768.Bl -tag 769.It 0 " (EXIT_SUCCESS)" 770Successful program execution. 771.It 1 " (EXIT_FAILURE)" 772The operation failed or the command syntax was not valid. 773.It 66 " (EX_NOINPUT)" 774A specified configuration file could not be loaded. 775.It 70 " (EX_SOFTWARE)" 776libopts had an internal operational error. Please report 777it to autogen\-users@lists.sourceforge.net. Thank you. 778.El 779.Sh "SEE ALSO" 780.Xr ntp.conf 5 , 781.Xr ntpd 1ntpdmdoc 782.Rs 783.%A David L. Mills 784.%T Network Time Protocol (Version 3) 785.%O RFC1305 786.Re 787.Sh AUTHORS 788The formatting directives in this document came from FreeBSD. 789.Sh "COPYRIGHT" 790Copyright (C) 1992\-2016 The University of Delaware and Network Time Foundation all rights reserved. 791This program is released under the terms of the NTP license, <http://ntp.org/license>. 792.Sh BUGS 793The 794.Nm 795utility is a crude hack. 796Much of the information it shows is 797deadly boring and could only be loved by its implementer. 798The 799program was designed so that new (and temporary) features were easy 800to hack in, at great expense to the program's ease of use. 801Despite 802this, the program is occasionally useful. 803.Pp 804Please report bugs to http://bugs.ntp.org . 805.Pp 806Please send bug reports to: http://bugs.ntp.org, bugs@ntp.org 807.Sh "NOTES" 808This manual page was \fIAutoGen\fP\-erated from the \fBntpdc\fP 809option definitions. 810