1<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> 2<html> 3<!-- Created by GNU Texinfo 6.6, http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/ --> 4<head> 5<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8"> 6<title>ntpq: Network Time Protocol Query User’s Manual</title> 7 8<meta name="description" content="ntpq: Network Time Protocol Query User’s Manual"> 9<meta name="keywords" content="ntpq: Network Time Protocol Query User’s Manual"> 10<meta name="resource-type" content="document"> 11<meta name="distribution" content="global"> 12<meta name="Generator" content="makeinfo"> 13<link href="#Top" rel="start" title="Top"> 14<link href="dir.html#Top" rel="up" title="(dir)"> 15<style type="text/css"> 16<!-- 17a.summary-letter {text-decoration: none} 18blockquote.indentedblock {margin-right: 0em} 19div.display {margin-left: 3.2em} 20div.example {margin-left: 3.2em} 21div.lisp {margin-left: 3.2em} 22kbd {font-style: oblique} 23pre.display {font-family: inherit} 24pre.format {font-family: inherit} 25pre.menu-comment {font-family: serif} 26pre.menu-preformatted {font-family: serif} 27span.nolinebreak {white-space: nowrap} 28span.roman {font-family: initial; font-weight: normal} 29span.sansserif {font-family: sans-serif; font-weight: normal} 30ul.no-bullet {list-style: none} 31--> 32</style> 33 34 35</head> 36 37<body lang="en"> 38<h1 class="settitle" align="center">ntpq: Network Time Protocol Query User’s Manual</h1> 39 40 41 42 43 44<span id="SEC_Overview"></span> 45<h2 class="shortcontents-heading">Short Table of Contents</h2> 46 47<div class="shortcontents"> 48<ul class="no-bullet"> 49<li><a id="stoc-Description" href="#toc-Description">1 Description</a></li> 50</ul> 51</div> 52 53 54<span id="Top"></span><div class="header"> 55<p> 56Next: <a href="#ntpq-Description" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq Description</a>, Previous: <a href="dir.html#Top" accesskey="p" rel="prev">(dir)</a>, Up: <a href="dir.html#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">(dir)</a> </p> 57</div> 58<span id="ntpq_003a-Network-Time-Protocol-Query-User-Manual"></span><h1 class="top">ntpq: Network Time Protocol Query User Manual</h1> 59 60<p>The <code>ntpq</code> utility program is used to 61monitor the operational status 62and determine the performance of 63<code>ntpd</code>, the NTP daemon. 64</p> 65<p>This document applies to version 4.2.8p16 of <code>ntpq</code>. 66</p> 67<table class="menu" border="0" cellspacing="0"> 68<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-Description" accesskey="1">ntpq Description</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 69</td></tr> 70<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="2">ntpq Invocation</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">Invoking ntpq 71</td></tr> 72<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Usage" accesskey="3">Usage</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 73</td></tr> 74<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Internal-Commands" accesskey="4">Internal Commands</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 75</td></tr> 76<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Control-Message-Commands" accesskey="5">Control Message Commands</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 77</td></tr> 78<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes" accesskey="6">Status Words and Kiss Codes</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 79</td></tr> 80<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#System-Variables" accesskey="7">System Variables</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 81</td></tr> 82<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Peer-Variables" accesskey="8">Peer Variables</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 83</td></tr> 84<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Clock-Variables" accesskey="9">Clock Variables</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 85</td></tr> 86</table> 87 88<hr> 89<span id="ntpq-Description"></span><div class="header"> 90<p> 91Next: <a href="#Usage" accesskey="n" rel="next">Usage</a>, Previous: <a href="#Top" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Top</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 92</div> 93<span id="Description"></span><h2 class="chapter">1 Description</h2> 94 95<p>The <code>ntpq</code> utility program is used to monitor NTP daemon <code>ntpd</code> operations and determine performance. 96It uses the standard NTP mode 6 control message formats defined in 97Appendix B of the NTPv3 specification RFC1305. 98The same formats are used in NTPv4, although some of the variable names have changed and new ones added. 99The description on this page is for the NTPv4 variables. 100</p> 101<p>The program can be run either in interactive mode or controlled using command line arguments. Requests to read and write arbitrary variables can be assembled, with raw and pretty-printed output options being available. The <code>ntpq</code> can also obtain and print a list of peers in a common format by sending multiple queries to the server. 102</p> 103<p>If one or more request options is included on the command line when <code>ntpq</code> is executed, each of the requests will be sent to the NTP servers running on each of the hosts given as command line arguments, or on localhost by default. If no request options are given, <code>ntpq</code> will attempt to read commands from the standard input and execute these on the NTP server running on the first host given on the command line, again defaulting to localhost when no other host is specified. <code>ntpq</code> will prompt for commands if the standard input is a terminal device. 104</p> 105<p><code>ntpq</code> uses NTP mode 6 packets to communicate with the NTP server, and hence can be used to query any compatible server on the network which permits it. Note that since NTP is a UDP protocol this communication will be somewhat unreliable, especially over large distances in terms of network topology. <code>ntpq</code> makes one attempt to retransmit requests, and will time requests out if the remote host is not heard from within a suitable timeout time. 106</p> 107<p>Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a <code>-4</code> qualifier preceding the host name forces DNS resolution to the IPv4 namespace, while a <code>-6</code> qualifier forces DNS resolution to the IPv6 namespace. 108</p> 109<p>For examples and usage, see the <a href="debug.html">NTP Debugging Techniques</a> page. 110</p> 111<table class="menu" border="0" cellspacing="0"> 112<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="1">Invoking ntpq</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 113</td></tr> 114<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Usage" accesskey="2">Usage</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 115</td></tr> 116<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Internal-Commands" accesskey="3">Internal Commands</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 117</td></tr> 118<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Control-Message-Commands" accesskey="4">Control Message Commands</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 119</td></tr> 120<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes" accesskey="5">Status Words and Kiss Codes</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 121</td></tr> 122<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#System-Variables" accesskey="6">System Variables</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 123</td></tr> 124<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Peer-Variables" accesskey="7">Peer Variables</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 125</td></tr> 126<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#Clock-Variables" accesskey="8">Clock Variables</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 127</td></tr> 128</table> 129 130<hr> 131<span id="ntpq-Invocation"></span><div class="header"> 132<p> 133Next: <a href="#Usage" accesskey="n" rel="next">Usage</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-Description" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq Description</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Description" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Description</a> </p> 134</div> 135<span id="Invoking-ntpq"></span><h3 class="section">1.1 Invoking ntpq</h3> 136<span id="index-ntpq"></span> 137<span id="index-standard-NTP-query-program"></span> 138 139 140<p>The 141<code>ntpq</code> 142utility program is used to query NTP servers to monitor NTP operations 143and performance, requesting 144information about current state and/or changes in that state. 145The program may be run either in interactive mode or controlled using 146command line arguments. 147Requests to read and write arbitrary 148variables can be assembled, with raw and pretty-printed output 149options being available. 150The 151<code>ntpq</code> 152utility can also obtain and print a 153list of peers in a common format by sending multiple queries to the 154server. 155</p> 156<p>If one or more request options is included on the command line 157when 158<code>ntpq</code> 159is executed, each of the requests will be sent 160to the NTP servers running on each of the hosts given as command 161line arguments, or on localhost by default. 162If no request options 163are given, 164<code>ntpq</code> 165will attempt to read commands from the 166standard input and execute these on the NTP server running on the 167first host given on the command line, again defaulting to localhost 168when no other host is specified. 169The 170<code>ntpq</code> 171utility will prompt for 172commands if the standard input is a terminal device. 173</p> 174<p><code>ntpq</code> 175uses NTP mode 6 packets to communicate with the 176NTP server, and hence can be used to query any compatible server on 177the network which permits it. 178Note that since NTP is a UDP protocol 179this communication will be somewhat unreliable, especially over 180large distances in terms of network topology. 181The 182<code>ntpq</code> 183utility makes 184one attempt to retransmit requests, and will time requests out if 185the remote host is not heard from within a suitable timeout 186time. 187</p> 188<p>Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a 189<code>-4</code> 190qualifier preceding the host name forces resolution to the IPv4 191namespace, while a 192<code>-6</code> 193qualifier forces resolution to the IPv6 namespace. 194For examples and usage, see the 195“NTP Debugging Techniques” 196page. 197</p> 198<p>Specifying a 199command line option other than 200<code>-i</code> 201or 202<code>-n</code> 203will 204cause the specified query (queries) to be sent to the indicated 205host(s) immediately. 206Otherwise, 207<code>ntpq</code> 208will attempt to read 209interactive format commands from the standard input. 210</p> 211<table class="menu" border="0" cellspacing="0"> 212<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-usage" accesskey="1">ntpq help/usage (<samp>--help</samp>)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 213</td></tr> 214<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-ipv4" accesskey="2">ipv4 option (-4)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 215</td></tr> 216<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-ipv6" accesskey="3">ipv6 option (-6)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 217</td></tr> 218<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-command" accesskey="4">command option (-c)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 219</td></tr> 220<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-interactive" accesskey="5">interactive option (-i)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 221</td></tr> 222<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-numeric" accesskey="6">numeric option (-n)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 223</td></tr> 224<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-old_002drv" accesskey="7">old-rv option</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 225</td></tr> 226<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-peers" accesskey="8">peers option (-p)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 227</td></tr> 228<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-refid" accesskey="9">refid option (-r)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 229</td></tr> 230<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-unconnected">unconnected option (-u)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 231</td></tr> 232<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-wide">wide option (-w)</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 233</td></tr> 234<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-config">presetting/configuring ntpq</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 235</td></tr> 236<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-exit-status">ntpq exit status</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top"> 237</td></tr> 238</table> 239 240<span id="Internal-Commands-1"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.1 Internal Commands</h4> 241 242<p>Interactive format commands consist of a keyword followed by zero 243to four arguments. 244Only enough characters of the full keyword to 245uniquely identify the command need be typed. 246</p> 247<p>A 248number of interactive format commands are executed entirely within 249the 250<code>ntpq</code> 251utility itself and do not result in NTP 252requests being sent to a server. 253These are described following. 254</p><dl compact="compact"> 255<dt><code>?</code> <code>[<kbd>command</kbd>]</code></dt> 256<dt><code>help</code> <code>[<kbd>command</kbd>]</code></dt> 257<dd><p>A 258‘?’ 259by itself will print a list of all the commands 260known to 261<code>ntpq</code> 262A 263‘?’ 264followed by a command name will print function and usage 265information about the command. 266</p></dd> 267<dt><code>addvars</code> <kbd>name</kbd><code>[=<kbd>value</kbd>]</code><code>[,...]</code></dt> 268<dt><code>rmvars</code> <kbd>name</kbd><code>[,...]</code></dt> 269<dt><code>clearvars</code></dt> 270<dt><code>showvars</code></dt> 271<dd><p>The arguments to this command consist of a list of 272items of the form 273<kbd>name</kbd><code>[=<kbd>value</kbd>]</code>, 274where the 275.No = Ns Ar value 276is ignored, and can be omitted, 277in requests to the server to read variables. 278The 279<code>ntpq</code> 280utility maintains an internal list in which data to be included in 281messages can be assembled, and displayed or set using the 282<code>readlist</code> 283and 284<code>writelist</code> 285commands described below. 286The 287<code>addvars</code> 288command allows variables and their optional values to be added to 289the list. 290If more than one variable is to be added, the list should 291be comma-separated and not contain white space. 292The 293<code>rmvars</code> 294command can be used to remove individual variables from the list, 295while the 296<code>clearvars</code> 297command removes all variables from the 298list. 299The 300<code>showvars</code> 301command displays the current list of optional variables. 302</p></dd> 303<dt><code>authenticate</code> <code>[<code>yes</code>|<code>no</code>]</code></dt> 304<dd><p>Normally 305<code>ntpq</code> 306does not authenticate requests unless 307they are write requests. 308The command 309<code>authenticate</code> <code>yes</code> 310causes 311<code>ntpq</code> 312to send authentication with all requests it 313makes. 314Authenticated requests causes some servers to handle 315requests slightly differently. 316The command 317<code>authenticate</code> 318causes 319<code>ntpq</code> 320to display whether or not 321it is currently authenticating requests. 322</p></dd> 323<dt><code>cooked</code></dt> 324<dd><p>Causes output from query commands to be "cooked", so that 325variables which are recognized by 326<code>ntpq</code> 327will have their 328values reformatted for human consumption. 329Variables which 330<code>ntpq</code> 331could not decode completely are 332marked with a trailing 333‘?’. 334</p></dd> 335<dt><code>debug</code> <code>[<code>more</code>|<code>less</code>|<code>off</code>]</code></dt> 336<dd><p>With no argument, displays the current debug level. 337Otherwise, the debugging level is changed as indicated. 338</p></dd> 339<dt><code>delay</code> <code>[<kbd>milliseconds</kbd>]</code></dt> 340<dd><p>Specify a time interval to be added to timestamps included in 341requests which require authentication. 342This is used to enable 343(unreliable) server reconfiguration over long delay network paths 344or between machines whose clocks are unsynchronized. 345Actually the 346server does not now require timestamps in authenticated requests, 347so this command may be obsolete. 348Without any arguments, displays the current delay. 349</p></dd> 350<dt><code>drefid</code> <code>[<code>hash</code>|<code>ipv4</code>]</code></dt> 351<dd><p>Display refids as IPv4 or hash. 352Without any arguments, displays whether refids are shown as IPv4 353addresses or hashes. 354</p></dd> 355<dt><code>exit</code></dt> 356<dd><p>Exit 357<code>ntpq</code> 358</p></dd> 359<dt><code>host</code> <code>[<kbd>name</kbd>]</code></dt> 360<dd><p>Set the host to which future queries will be sent. 361The 362<kbd>name</kbd> 363may be either a host name or a numeric address. 364Without any arguments, displays the current host. 365</p></dd> 366<dt><code>hostnames</code> <code>[<code>yes</code>|<code>no</code>]</code></dt> 367<dd><p>If 368<code>yes</code> 369is specified, host names are printed in 370information displays. 371If 372<code>no</code> 373is specified, numeric 374addresses are printed instead. 375The default is 376<code>yes</code>, 377unless 378modified using the command line 379<code>-n</code> 380switch. 381Without any arguments, displays whether host names or numeric addresses 382are shown. 383</p></dd> 384<dt><code>keyid</code> <code>[<kbd>keyid</kbd>]</code></dt> 385<dd><p>This command allows the specification of a key number to be 386used to authenticate configuration requests. 387This must correspond 388to the 389<code>controlkey</code> 390key number the server has been configured to use for this 391purpose. 392Without any arguments, displays the current 393<kbd>keyid</kbd>. 394</p></dd> 395<dt><code>keytype</code> <code>[<kbd>digest</kbd>]</code></dt> 396<dd><p>Specify the digest algorithm to use for authenticating requests, with default 397<code>MD5</code>. 398If 399<code>ntpq</code> 400was built with OpenSSL support, and OpenSSL is installed, 401<kbd>digest</kbd> 402can be any message digest algorithm supported by OpenSSL. 403If no argument is given, the current 404<code>keytype</code> <kbd>digest</kbd> 405algorithm used is displayed. 406</p></dd> 407<dt><code>ntpversion</code> <code>[<code>1</code>|<code>2</code>|<code>3</code>|<code>4</code>]</code></dt> 408<dd><p>Sets the NTP version number which 409<code>ntpq</code> 410claims in 411packets. 412Defaults to 3, and note that mode 6 control messages (and 413modes, for that matter) didn’t exist in NTP version 1. 414There appear 415to be no servers left which demand version 1. 416With no argument, displays the current NTP version that will be used 417when communicating with servers. 418</p></dd> 419<dt><code>passwd</code></dt> 420<dd><p>This command prompts you to type in a password (which will not 421be echoed) which will be used to authenticate configuration 422requests. 423The password must correspond to the key configured for 424use by the NTP server for this purpose if such requests are to be 425successful. 426</p></dd> 427<dt><code>poll</code> <code>[<kbd>n</kbd>]</code> <code>[<code>verbose</code>]</code></dt> 428<dd><p>Poll an NTP server in client mode 429<kbd>n</kbd> 430times. 431Poll not implemented yet. 432</p></dd> 433<dt><code>quit</code></dt> 434<dd><p>Exit 435<code>ntpq</code> 436</p></dd> 437<dt><code>raw</code></dt> 438<dd><p>Causes all output from query commands is printed as received 439from the remote server. 440The only formating/interpretation done on 441the data is to transform nonascii data into a printable (but barely 442understandable) form. 443</p></dd> 444<dt><code>timeout</code> <code>[<kbd>milliseconds</kbd>]</code></dt> 445<dd><p>Specify a timeout period for responses to server queries. 446The 447default is about 5000 milliseconds. 448Without any arguments, displays the current timeout period. 449Note that since 450<code>ntpq</code> 451retries each query once after a timeout, the total waiting time for 452a timeout will be twice the timeout value set. 453</p></dd> 454<dt><code>version</code></dt> 455<dd><p>Display the version of the 456<code>ntpq</code> 457program. 458</p></dd> 459</dl> 460 461<span id="Control-Message-Commands-1"></span><h4 class="subsubsection">1.1.1.1 Control Message Commands</h4> 462<p>Association ids are used to identify system, peer and clock variables. 463System variables are assigned an association id of zero and system name 464space, while each association is assigned a nonzero association id and 465peer namespace. 466Most control commands send a single message to the server and expect a 467single response message. 468The exceptions are the 469<code>peers</code> 470command, which sends a series of messages, 471and the 472<code>mreadlist</code> 473and 474<code>mreadvar</code> 475commands, which iterate over a range of associations. 476</p><dl compact="compact"> 477<dt><code>apeers</code></dt> 478<dd><p>Display a list of peers in the form: 479</p><div class="example"> 480<pre class="example">[tally]remote refid assid st t when pool reach delay offset jitter 481</pre></div> 482<p>where the output is just like the 483<code>peers</code> 484command except that the 485<code>refid</code> 486is displayed in hex format and the association number is also displayed. 487</p></dd> 488<dt><code>associations</code></dt> 489<dd><p>Display a list of mobilized associations in the form: 490</p><div class="example"> 491<pre class="example">ind assid status conf reach auth condition last_event cnt 492</pre></div> 493<dl compact="compact"> 494<dt>Sy Variable Ta Sy Description</dt> 495<dt><code>ind</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>index</code> <code>on</code> <code>this</code> <code>list</code></dt> 496<dt><code>assid</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>association</code> <code>id</code></dt> 497<dt><code>status</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>peer</code> <code>status</code> <code>word</code></dt> 498<dt><code>conf</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>yes</code>: <code>No</code> <code>persistent,</code> <code>no</code>: <code>No</code> <code>ephemeral</code></dt> 499<dt><code>reach</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>yes</code>: <code>No</code> <code>reachable,</code> <code>no</code>: <code>No</code> <code>unreachable</code></dt> 500<dt><code>auth</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>ok</code>, <code>yes</code>, <code>bad</code> <code>No</code> <code>and</code> <code>none</code></dt> 501<dt><code>condition</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>selection</code> <code>status</code> <code>(see</code> <code>the</code> <code>select</code> <code>No</code> <code>field</code> <code>of</code> <code>the</code> <code>peer</code> <code>status</code> <code>word)</code></dt> 502<dt><code>last_event</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>event</code> <code>report</code> <code>(see</code> <code>the</code> <code>event</code> <code>No</code> <code>field</code> <code>of</code> <code>the</code> <code>peer</code> <code>status</code> <code>word)</code></dt> 503<dt><code>cnt</code> <code>Ta</code> <code>event</code> <code>count</code> <code>(see</code> <code>the</code> <code>count</code> <code>No</code> <code>field</code> <code>of</code> <code>the</code> <code>peer</code> <code>status</code> <code>word)</code></dt> 504</dl> 505</dd> 506<dt><code>authinfo</code></dt> 507<dd><p>Display the authentication statistics counters: 508time since reset, stored keys, free keys, key lookups, keys not found, 509uncached keys, expired keys, encryptions, decryptions. 510</p></dd> 511<dt><code>clocklist</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd>]</code></dt> 512<dt><code>cl</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd>]</code></dt> 513<dd><p>Display all clock variables in the variable list for those associations 514supporting a reference clock. 515</p></dd> 516<dt><code>clockvar</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd>]</code> <code>[<kbd>name</kbd><code>[=<kbd>value</kbd>]</code>]</code><code>[,...]</code></dt> 517<dt><code>cv</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd>]</code> <code>[<kbd>name</kbd><code>[=<kbd>value</kbd>]</code>]</code><code>[,...]</code></dt> 518<dd><p>Display a list of clock variables for those associations supporting a 519reference clock. 520</p></dd> 521<dt><code>:config</code> <kbd>configuration command line</kbd></dt> 522<dd><p>Send the remainder of the command line, including whitespace, to the 523server as a run-time configuration command in the same format as a line 524in the configuration file. 525This command is experimental until further notice and clarification. 526Authentication is of course required. 527</p></dd> 528<dt><code>config-from-file</code> <kbd>filename</kbd></dt> 529<dd><p>Send each line of 530<kbd>filename</kbd> 531to the server as run-time configuration commands in the same format as 532lines in the configuration file. 533This command is experimental until further notice and clarification. 534Authentication is required. 535</p></dd> 536<dt><code>ifstats</code></dt> 537<dd><p>Display status and statistics counters for each local network interface address: 538interface number, interface name and address or broadcast, drop, flag, 539ttl, mc, received, sent, send failed, peers, uptime. 540Authentication is required. 541</p></dd> 542<dt><code>iostats</code></dt> 543<dd><p>Display network and reference clock I/O statistics: 544time since reset, receive buffers, free receive buffers, used receive buffers, 545low water refills, dropped packets, ignored packets, received packets, 546packets sent, packet send failures, input wakeups, useful input wakeups. 547</p></dd> 548<dt><code>kerninfo</code></dt> 549<dd><p>Display kernel loop and PPS statistics: 550associd, status, pll offset, pll frequency, maximum error, 551estimated error, kernel status, pll time constant, precision, 552frequency tolerance, pps frequency, pps stability, pps jitter, 553calibration interval, calibration cycles, jitter exceeded, 554stability exceeded, calibration errors. 555As with other ntpq output, times are in milliseconds; very small values 556may be shown as exponentials. 557The precision value displayed is in milliseconds as well, unlike the 558precision system variable. 559</p></dd> 560<dt><code>lassociations</code></dt> 561<dd><p>Perform the same function as the associations command, except display 562mobilized and unmobilized associations, including all clients. 563</p></dd> 564<dt><code>lopeers</code> <code>[<code>-4</code>|<code>-6</code>]</code></dt> 565<dd><p>Display a list of all peers and clients showing 566<code>dstadr</code> 567(associated with the given IP version). 568</p></dd> 569<dt><code>lpassociations</code></dt> 570<dd><p>Display the last obtained list of associations, including all clients. 571</p></dd> 572<dt><code>lpeers</code> <code>[<code>-4</code>|<code>-6</code>]</code></dt> 573<dd><p>Display a list of all peers and clients (associated with the given IP version). 574</p></dd> 575<dt><code>monstats</code></dt> 576<dd><p>Display monitor facility status, statistics, and limits: 577enabled, addresses, peak addresses, maximum addresses, 578reclaim above count, reclaim older than, kilobytes, maximum kilobytes. 579</p></dd> 580<dt><code>mreadlist</code> <kbd>associdlo</kbd> <kbd>associdhi</kbd></dt> 581<dt><code>mrl</code> <kbd>associdlo</kbd> <kbd>associdhi</kbd></dt> 582<dd><p>Perform the same function as the 583<code>readlist</code> 584command for a range of association ids. 585</p></dd> 586<dt><code>mreadvar</code> <kbd>associdlo</kbd> <kbd>associdhi</kbd> <code>[<kbd>name</kbd>]</code><code>[,...]</code></dt> 587<dd><p>This range may be determined from the list displayed by any 588command showing associations. 589</p></dd> 590<dt><code>mrv</code> <kbd>associdlo</kbd> <kbd>associdhi</kbd> <code>[<kbd>name</kbd>]</code><code>[,...]</code></dt> 591<dd><p>Perform the same function as the 592<code>readvar</code> 593command for a range of association ids. 594This range may be determined from the list displayed by any 595command showing associations. 596</p></dd> 597<dt><code>mrulist</code> <code>[<code>limited</code> | <code>kod</code> | <code>mincount</code>=<kbd>count</kbd> | <code>laddr</code>=<kbd>localaddr</kbd> | <code>sort</code>=<code>[-]</code><kbd>sortorder</kbd> | <code>resany</code>=<kbd>hexmask</kbd> | <code>resall</code>=<kbd>hexmask</kbd>]</code></dt> 598<dd><p>Display traffic counts of the most recently seen source addresses 599collected and maintained by the monitor facility. 600With the exception of 601<code>sort</code>=<code>[-]</code><kbd>sortorder</kbd>, 602the options filter the list returned by 603<code>ntpd(8)</code>. 604The 605<code>limited</code> 606and 607<code>kod</code> 608options return only entries representing client addresses from which the 609last packet received triggered either discarding or a KoD response. 610The 611<code>mincount</code>=<kbd>count</kbd> 612option filters entries representing less than 613<kbd>count</kbd> 614packets. 615The 616<code>laddr</code>=<kbd>localaddr</kbd> 617option filters entries for packets received on any local address other than 618<kbd>localaddr</kbd>. 619<code>resany</code>=<kbd>hexmask</kbd> 620and 621<code>resall</code>=<kbd>hexmask</kbd> 622filter entries containing none or less than all, respectively, of the bits in 623<kbd>hexmask</kbd>, 624which must begin with 625<code>0x</code>. 626The 627<kbd>sortorder</kbd> 628defaults to 629<code>lstint</code> 630and may be 631<code>addr</code>, 632<code>avgint</code>, 633<code>count</code>, 634<code>lstint</code>, 635or any of those preceded by 636‘-’ 637to reverse the sort order. 638The output columns are: 639</p><dl compact="compact"> 640<dt>Column</dt> 641<dd><p>Description 642</p></dd> 643<dt><code>lstint</code></dt> 644<dd><p>Interval in seconds between the receipt of the most recent packet from 645this address and the completion of the retrieval of the MRU list by 646<code>ntpq</code> 647</p></dd> 648<dt><code>avgint</code></dt> 649<dd><p>Average interval in s between packets from this address. 650</p></dd> 651<dt><code>rstr</code></dt> 652<dd><p>Restriction flags associated with this address. 653Most are copied unchanged from the matching 654<code>restrict</code> 655command, however 0x400 (kod) and 0x20 (limited) flags are cleared unless 656the last packet from this address triggered a rate control response. 657</p></dd> 658<dt><code>r</code></dt> 659<dd><p>Rate control indicator, either 660a period, 661<code>L</code> 662or 663<code>K</code> 664for no rate control response, 665rate limiting by discarding, or rate limiting with a KoD response, respectively. 666</p></dd> 667<dt><code>m</code></dt> 668<dd><p>Packet mode. 669</p></dd> 670<dt><code>v</code></dt> 671<dd><p>Packet version number. 672</p></dd> 673<dt><code>count</code></dt> 674<dd><p>Packets received from this address. 675</p></dd> 676<dt><code>rport</code></dt> 677<dd><p>Source port of last packet from this address. 678</p></dd> 679<dt><code>remote</code> <code>address</code></dt> 680<dd><p>host or DNS name, numeric address, or address followed by 681claimed DNS name which could not be verified in parentheses. 682</p></dd> 683</dl> 684</dd> 685<dt><code>opeers</code> <code>[<code>-4</code> | <code>-6</code>]</code></dt> 686<dd><p>Obtain and print the old-style list of all peers and clients showing 687<code>dstadr</code> 688(associated with the given IP version), 689rather than the 690<code>refid</code>. 691</p></dd> 692<dt><code>passociations</code></dt> 693<dd><p>Perform the same function as the 694<code>associations</code> 695command, 696except that it uses previously stored data rather than making a new query. 697</p></dd> 698<dt><code>peers</code></dt> 699<dd><p>Display a list of peers in the form: 700</p><div class="example"> 701<pre class="example">[tally]remote refid st t when pool reach delay offset jitter 702</pre></div> 703<dl compact="compact"> 704<dt>Variable</dt> 705<dd><p>Description 706</p></dd> 707<dt><code>[tally]</code></dt> 708<dd><p>single-character code indicating current value of the 709<code>select</code> 710field of the 711.Lk decode.html#peer "peer status word" 712</p></dd> 713<dt><code>remote</code></dt> 714<dd><p>host name (or IP number) of peer. 715The value displayed will be truncated to 15 characters unless the 716<code>ntpq</code> 717<code>-w</code> 718option is given, in which case the full value will be displayed 719on the first line, and if too long, 720the remaining data will be displayed on the next line. 721</p></dd> 722<dt><code>refid</code></dt> 723<dd><p>source IP address or 724.Lk decode.html#kiss "’kiss code" 725</p></dd> 726<dt><code>st</code></dt> 727<dd><p>stratum: 0 for local reference clocks, 1 for servers with local 728reference clocks, ..., 16 for unsynchronized server clocks 729</p></dd> 730<dt><code>t</code></dt> 731<dd><p><code>u</code>: 732unicast or manycast client, 733<code>b</code>: 734broadcast or multicast client, 735<code>p</code>: 736pool source, 737<code>l</code>: 738local (reference clock), 739<code>s</code>: 740symmetric (peer), 741<code>A</code>: 742manycast server, 743<code>B</code>: 744broadcast server, 745<code>M</code>: 746multicast server 747</p></dd> 748<dt><code>when</code></dt> 749<dd><p>time in seconds, minutes, hours, or days since the last packet 750was received, or 751‘-’ 752if a packet has never been received 753</p></dd> 754<dt><code>poll</code></dt> 755<dd><p>poll interval (s) 756</p></dd> 757<dt><code>reach</code></dt> 758<dd><p>reach shift register (octal) 759</p></dd> 760<dt><code>delay</code></dt> 761<dd><p>roundtrip delay 762</p></dd> 763<dt><code>offset</code></dt> 764<dd><p>offset of server relative to this host 765</p></dd> 766<dt><code>jitter</code></dt> 767<dd><p>offset RMS error estimate. 768</p></dd> 769</dl> 770</dd> 771<dt><code>pstats</code> <kbd>associd</kbd></dt> 772<dd><p>Display the statistics for the peer with the given 773<kbd>associd</kbd>: 774associd, status, remote host, local address, time last received, 775time until next send, reachability change, packets sent, 776packets received, bad authentication, bogus origin, duplicate, 777bad dispersion, bad reference time, candidate order. 778</p></dd> 779<dt><code>readlist</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd>]</code></dt> 780<dt><code>rl</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd>]</code></dt> 781<dd><p>Display all system or peer variables. 782If the 783<kbd>associd</kbd> 784is omitted, it is assumed to be zero. 785</p></dd> 786<dt><code>readvar</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd> <kbd>name</kbd><code>[=<kbd>value</kbd>]</code> <code>[, ...]</code>]</code></dt> 787<dt><code>rv</code> <code>[<kbd>associd</kbd> <kbd>name</kbd><code>[=<kbd>value</kbd>]</code> <code>[, ...]</code>]</code></dt> 788<dd><p>Display the specified system or peer variables. 789If 790<kbd>associd</kbd> 791is zero, the variables are from the 792<a href="#System-Variables">System Variables</a> 793name space, otherwise they are from the 794<a href="#Peer-Variables">Peer Variables</a> 795name space. 796The 797<kbd>associd</kbd> 798is required, as the same name can occur in both spaces. 799If no 800<kbd>name</kbd> 801is included, all operative variables in the name space are displayed. 802In this case only, if the 803<kbd>associd</kbd> 804is omitted, it is assumed to be zero. 805Multiple names are specified with comma separators and without whitespace. 806Note that time values are represented in milliseconds 807and frequency values in parts-per-million (PPM). 808Some NTP timestamps are represented in the format 809<kbd>YYYY</kbd><kbd>MM</kbd> <kbd>DD</kbd> <kbd>TTTT</kbd>, 810where 811<kbd>YYYY</kbd> 812is the year, 813<kbd>MM</kbd> 814the month of year, 815<kbd>DD</kbd> 816the day of month and 817<kbd>TTTT</kbd> 818the time of day. 819</p></dd> 820<dt><code>reslist</code></dt> 821<dd><p>Display the access control (restrict) list for 822<code>ntpq</code> 823Authentication is required. 824</p></dd> 825<dt><code>saveconfig</code> <kbd>filename</kbd></dt> 826<dd><p>Save the current configuration, 827including any runtime modifications made by 828<code>:config</code> 829or 830<code>config-from-file</code>, 831to the NTP server host file 832<kbd>filename</kbd>. 833This command will be rejected by the server unless 834.Lk miscopt.html#saveconfigdir "saveconfigdir" 835appears in the 836<code>ntpd(8)</code> 837configuration file. 838<kbd>filename</kbd> 839can use 840<code>date(1)</code> 841format specifiers to substitute the current date and time, for 842example, 843</p><div class="example"> 844<pre class="example"><code>saveconfig</code> <samp>ntp-%Y%m%d-%H%M%S.conf</samp>. 845</pre></div> 846<p>The filename used is stored in system variable 847<code>savedconfig</code>. 848Authentication is required. 849</p></dd> 850<dt><code>sysinfo</code></dt> 851<dd><p>Display system operational summary: 852associd, status, system peer, system peer mode, leap indicator, 853stratum, log2 precision, root delay, root dispersion, 854reference id, reference time, system jitter, clock jitter, 855clock wander, broadcast delay, symm. auth. delay. 856</p></dd> 857<dt><code>sysstats</code></dt> 858<dd><p>Display system uptime and packet counts maintained in the 859protocol module: 860uptime, sysstats reset, packets received, current version, 861older version, bad length or format, authentication failed, 862declined, restricted, rate limited, KoD responses, 863processed for time. 864</p></dd> 865<dt><code>timerstats</code></dt> 866<dd><p>Display interval timer counters: 867time since reset, timer overruns, calls to transmit. 868</p></dd> 869<dt><code>writelist</code> <kbd>associd</kbd></dt> 870<dd><p>Set all system or peer variables included in the variable list. 871</p></dd> 872<dt><code>writevar</code> <kbd>associd</kbd> <kbd>name</kbd>=<kbd>value</kbd> <code>[, ...]</code></dt> 873<dd><p>Set the specified variables in the variable list. 874If the 875<kbd>associd</kbd> 876is zero, the variables are from the 877<a href="#System-Variables">System Variables</a> 878name space, otherwise they are from the 879<a href="#Peer-Variables">Peer Variables</a> 880name space. 881The 882<kbd>associd</kbd> 883is required, as the same name can occur in both spaces. 884Authentication is required. 885</p></dd> 886</dl> 887 888<span id="Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes-1"></span><h4 class="subsubsection">1.1.1.2 Status Words and Kiss Codes</h4> 889<p>The current state of the operating program is shown 890in a set of status words 891maintained by the system. 892Status information is also available on a per-association basis. 893These words are displayed by the 894<code>readlist</code> 895and 896<code>associations</code> 897commands both in hexadecimal and in decoded short tip strings. 898The codes, tips and short explanations are documented on the 899.Lk decode.html "Event Messages and Status Words" 900page. 901The page also includes a list of system and peer messages, 902the code for the latest of which is included in the status word. 903</p> 904<p>Information resulting from protocol machine state transitions 905is displayed using an informal set of ASCII strings called 906.Lk decode.html#kiss "kiss codes" . 907The original purpose was for kiss-o’-death (KoD) packets 908sent by the server to advise the client of an unusual condition. 909They are now displayed, when appropriate, 910in the reference identifier field in various billboards. 911</p> 912<span id="System-Variables-1"></span><h4 class="subsubsection">1.1.1.3 System Variables</h4> 913<p>The following system variables appear in the 914<code>readlist</code> 915billboard. 916Not all variables are displayed in some configurations. 917</p> 918<dl compact="compact"> 919<dt>Variable</dt> 920<dd><p>Description 921</p></dd> 922<dt><code>status</code></dt> 923<dd><p>.Lk decode.html#sys "system status word" 924</p></dd> 925<dt><code>version</code></dt> 926<dd><p>NTP software version and build time 927</p></dd> 928<dt><code>processor</code></dt> 929<dd><p>hardware platform and version 930</p></dd> 931<dt><code>system</code></dt> 932<dd><p>operating system and version 933</p></dd> 934<dt><code>leap</code></dt> 935<dd><p>leap warning indicator (0-3) 936</p></dd> 937<dt><code>stratum</code></dt> 938<dd><p>stratum (1-15) 939</p></dd> 940<dt><code>precision</code></dt> 941<dd><p>precision (log2 s) 942</p></dd> 943<dt><code>rootdelay</code></dt> 944<dd><p>total roundtrip delay to the primary reference clock 945</p></dd> 946<dt><code>rootdisp</code></dt> 947<dd><p>total dispersion to the primary reference clock 948</p></dd> 949<dt><code>refid</code></dt> 950<dd><p>reference id or 951.Lk decode.html#kiss "kiss code" 952</p></dd> 953<dt><code>reftime</code></dt> 954<dd><p>reference time 955</p></dd> 956<dt><code>clock</code></dt> 957<dd><p>date and time of day 958</p></dd> 959<dt><code>peer</code></dt> 960<dd><p>system peer association id 961</p></dd> 962<dt><code>tc</code></dt> 963<dd><p>time constant and poll exponent (log2 s) (3-17) 964</p></dd> 965<dt><code>mintc</code></dt> 966<dd><p>minimum time constant (log2 s) (3-10) 967</p></dd> 968<dt><code>offset</code></dt> 969<dd><p>combined offset of server relative to this host 970</p></dd> 971<dt><code>frequency</code></dt> 972<dd><p>frequency drift (PPM) relative to hardware clock 973</p></dd> 974<dt><code>sys_jitter</code></dt> 975<dd><p>combined system jitter 976</p></dd> 977<dt><code>clk_wander</code></dt> 978<dd><p>clock frequency wander (PPM) 979</p></dd> 980<dt><code>clk_jitter</code></dt> 981<dd><p>clock jitter 982</p></dd> 983<dt><code>tai</code></dt> 984<dd><p>TAI-UTC offset (s) 985</p></dd> 986<dt><code>leapsec</code></dt> 987<dd><p>NTP seconds when the next leap second is/was inserted 988</p></dd> 989<dt><code>expire</code></dt> 990<dd><p>NTP seconds when the NIST leapseconds file expires 991</p></dd> 992</dl> 993<p>The jitter and wander statistics are exponentially-weighted RMS averages. 994The system jitter is defined in the NTPv4 specification; 995the clock jitter statistic is computed by the clock discipline module. 996</p> 997<p>When the NTPv4 daemon is compiled with the OpenSSL software library, 998additional system variables are displayed, 999including some or all of the following, 1000depending on the particular Autokey dance: 1001</p><dl compact="compact"> 1002<dt>Variable</dt> 1003<dd><p>Description 1004</p></dd> 1005<dt><code>host</code></dt> 1006<dd><p>Autokey host name for this host 1007</p></dd> 1008<dt><code>ident</code></dt> 1009<dd><p>Autokey group name for this host 1010</p></dd> 1011<dt><code>flags</code></dt> 1012<dd><p>host flags (see Autokey specification) 1013</p></dd> 1014<dt><code>digest</code></dt> 1015<dd><p>OpenSSL message digest algorithm 1016</p></dd> 1017<dt><code>signature</code></dt> 1018<dd><p>OpenSSL digest/signature scheme 1019</p></dd> 1020<dt><code>update</code></dt> 1021<dd><p>NTP seconds at last signature update 1022</p></dd> 1023<dt><code>cert</code></dt> 1024<dd><p>certificate subject, issuer and certificate flags 1025</p></dd> 1026<dt><code>until</code></dt> 1027<dd><p>NTP seconds when the certificate expires 1028</p></dd> 1029</dl> 1030<span id="Peer-Variables-1"></span><h4 class="subsubsection">1.1.1.4 Peer Variables</h4> 1031<p>The following peer variables appear in the 1032<code>readlist</code> 1033billboard for each association. 1034Not all variables are displayed in some configurations. 1035</p> 1036<dl compact="compact"> 1037<dt>Variable</dt> 1038<dd><p>Description 1039</p></dd> 1040<dt><code>associd</code></dt> 1041<dd><p>association id 1042</p></dd> 1043<dt><code>status</code></dt> 1044<dd><p>.Lk decode.html#peer "peer status word" 1045</p></dd> 1046<dt><code>srcadr</code></dt> 1047<dd><p>source (remote) IP address 1048</p></dd> 1049<dt><code>srcport</code></dt> 1050<dd><p>source (remote) port 1051</p></dd> 1052<dt><code>dstadr</code></dt> 1053<dd><p>destination (local) IP address 1054</p></dd> 1055<dt><code>dstport</code></dt> 1056<dd><p>destination (local) port 1057</p></dd> 1058<dt><code>leap</code></dt> 1059<dd><p>leap indicator (0-3) 1060</p></dd> 1061<dt><code>stratum</code></dt> 1062<dd><p>stratum (0-15) 1063</p></dd> 1064<dt><code>precision</code></dt> 1065<dd><p>precision (log2 s) 1066</p></dd> 1067<dt><code>rootdelay</code></dt> 1068<dd><p>total roundtrip delay to the primary reference clock 1069</p></dd> 1070<dt><code>rootdisp</code></dt> 1071<dd><p>total root dispersion to the primary reference clock 1072</p></dd> 1073<dt><code>refid</code></dt> 1074<dd><p>reference id or 1075.Lk decode.html#kiss "kiss code" 1076</p></dd> 1077<dt><code>reftime</code></dt> 1078<dd><p>reference time 1079</p></dd> 1080<dt><code>rec</code></dt> 1081<dd><p>last packet received time 1082</p></dd> 1083<dt><code>reach</code></dt> 1084<dd><p>reach register (octal) 1085</p></dd> 1086<dt><code>unreach</code></dt> 1087<dd><p>unreach counter 1088</p></dd> 1089<dt><code>hmode</code></dt> 1090<dd><p>host mode (1-6) 1091</p></dd> 1092<dt><code>pmode</code></dt> 1093<dd><p>peer mode (1-5) 1094</p></dd> 1095<dt><code>hpoll</code></dt> 1096<dd><p>host poll exponent (log2 s) (3-17) 1097</p></dd> 1098<dt><code>ppoll</code></dt> 1099<dd><p>peer poll exponent (log2 s) (3-17) 1100</p></dd> 1101<dt><code>headway</code></dt> 1102<dd><p>headway (see 1103.Lk rate.html "Rate Management and the Kiss-o’-Death Packet" ) 1104</p></dd> 1105<dt><code>flash</code></dt> 1106<dd><p>.Lk decode.html#flash "flash status word" 1107</p></dd> 1108<dt><code>keyid</code></dt> 1109<dd><p>symmetric key id 1110</p></dd> 1111<dt><code>offset</code></dt> 1112<dd><p>filter offset 1113</p></dd> 1114<dt><code>delay</code></dt> 1115<dd><p>filter delay 1116</p></dd> 1117<dt><code>dispersion</code></dt> 1118<dd><p>filter dispersion 1119</p></dd> 1120<dt><code>jitter</code></dt> 1121<dd><p>filter jitter 1122</p></dd> 1123<dt><code>bias</code></dt> 1124<dd><p>unicast/broadcast bias 1125</p></dd> 1126<dt><code>xleave</code></dt> 1127<dd><p>interleave delay (see 1128.Lk xleave.html "NTP Interleaved Modes" ) 1129</p></dd> 1130</dl> 1131<p>The 1132<code>bias</code> 1133variable is calculated when the first broadcast packet is received 1134after the calibration volley. 1135It represents the offset of the broadcast subgraph relative to the 1136unicast subgraph. 1137The 1138<code>xleave</code> 1139variable appears only for the interleaved symmetric and interleaved modes. 1140It represents the internal queuing, buffering and transmission delays 1141for the preceding packet. 1142</p> 1143<p>When the NTPv4 daemon is compiled with the OpenSSL software library, 1144additional peer variables are displayed, including the following: 1145</p><dl compact="compact"> 1146<dt>Variable</dt> 1147<dd><p>Description 1148</p></dd> 1149<dt><code>flags</code></dt> 1150<dd><p>peer flags (see Autokey specification) 1151</p></dd> 1152<dt><code>host</code></dt> 1153<dd><p>Autokey server name 1154</p></dd> 1155<dt><code>flags</code></dt> 1156<dd><p>peer flags (see Autokey specification) 1157</p></dd> 1158<dt><code>signature</code></dt> 1159<dd><p>OpenSSL digest/signature scheme 1160</p></dd> 1161<dt><code>initsequence</code></dt> 1162<dd><p>initial key id 1163</p></dd> 1164<dt><code>initkey</code></dt> 1165<dd><p>initial key index 1166</p></dd> 1167<dt><code>timestamp</code></dt> 1168<dd><p>Autokey signature timestamp 1169</p></dd> 1170<dt><code>ident</code></dt> 1171<dd><p>Autokey group name for this association 1172</p></dd> 1173</dl> 1174 1175<span id="Clock-Variables-1"></span><h4 class="subsubsection">1.1.1.5 Clock Variables</h4> 1176<p>The following clock variables appear in the 1177<code>clocklist</code> 1178billboard for each association with a reference clock. 1179Not all variables are displayed in some configurations. 1180</p><dl compact="compact"> 1181<dt>Variable</dt> 1182<dd><p>Description 1183</p></dd> 1184<dt><code>associd</code></dt> 1185<dd><p>association id 1186</p></dd> 1187<dt><code>status</code></dt> 1188<dd><p>.Lk decode.html#clock "clock status word" 1189</p></dd> 1190<dt><code>device</code></dt> 1191<dd><p>device description 1192</p></dd> 1193<dt><code>timecode</code></dt> 1194<dd><p>ASCII time code string (specific to device) 1195</p></dd> 1196<dt><code>poll</code></dt> 1197<dd><p>poll messages sent 1198</p></dd> 1199<dt><code>noreply</code></dt> 1200<dd><p>no reply 1201</p></dd> 1202<dt><code>badformat</code></dt> 1203<dd><p>bad format 1204</p></dd> 1205<dt><code>baddata</code></dt> 1206<dd><p>bad date or time 1207</p></dd> 1208<dt><code>fudgetime1</code></dt> 1209<dd><p>fudge time 1 1210</p></dd> 1211<dt><code>fudgetime2</code></dt> 1212<dd><p>fudge time 2 1213</p></dd> 1214<dt><code>stratum</code></dt> 1215<dd><p>driver stratum 1216</p></dd> 1217<dt><code>refid</code></dt> 1218<dd><p>driver reference id 1219</p></dd> 1220<dt><code>flags</code></dt> 1221<dd><p>driver flags 1222</p></dd> 1223</dl> 1224 1225<p>This section was generated by <strong>AutoGen</strong>, 1226using the <code>agtexi-cmd</code> template and the option descriptions for the <code>ntpq</code> program. 1227This software is released under the NTP license, <http://ntp.org/license>. 1228</p> 1229<table class="menu" border="0" cellspacing="0"> 1230<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-usage" accesskey="1">ntpq usage</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">ntpq help/usage (<samp>--help</samp>) 1231</td></tr> 1232<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-ipv4" accesskey="2">ntpq ipv4</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">ipv4 option (-4) 1233</td></tr> 1234<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-ipv6" accesskey="3">ntpq ipv6</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">ipv6 option (-6) 1235</td></tr> 1236<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-command" accesskey="4">ntpq command</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">command option (-c) 1237</td></tr> 1238<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-interactive" accesskey="5">ntpq interactive</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">interactive option (-i) 1239</td></tr> 1240<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-numeric" accesskey="6">ntpq numeric</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">numeric option (-n) 1241</td></tr> 1242<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-old_002drv" accesskey="7">ntpq old-rv</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">old-rv option 1243</td></tr> 1244<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-peers" accesskey="8">ntpq peers</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">peers option (-p) 1245</td></tr> 1246<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-refid" accesskey="9">ntpq refid</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">refid option (-r) 1247</td></tr> 1248<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-unconnected">ntpq unconnected</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">unconnected option (-u) 1249</td></tr> 1250<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-wide">ntpq wide</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">wide option (-w) 1251</td></tr> 1252<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-config">ntpq config</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">presetting/configuring ntpq 1253</td></tr> 1254<tr><td align="left" valign="top">• <a href="#ntpq-exit-status">ntpq exit status</a></td><td> </td><td align="left" valign="top">exit status 1255</td></tr> 1256</table> 1257 1258<hr> 1259<span id="ntpq-usage"></span><div class="header"> 1260<p> 1261Next: <a href="#ntpq-ipv4" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq ipv4</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1262</div> 1263<span id="ntpq-help_002fusage-_0028_002d_002dhelp_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.2 ntpq help/usage (<samp>--help</samp>)</h4> 1264<span id="index-ntpq-help"></span> 1265 1266<p>This is the automatically generated usage text for ntpq. 1267</p> 1268<p>The text printed is the same whether selected with the <code>help</code> option 1269(<samp>--help</samp>) or the <code>more-help</code> option (<samp>--more-help</samp>). <code>more-help</code> will print 1270the usage text by passing it through a pager program. 1271<code>more-help</code> is disabled on platforms without a working 1272<code>fork(2)</code> function. The <code>PAGER</code> environment variable is 1273used to select the program, defaulting to <samp>more</samp>. Both will exit 1274with a status code of 0. 1275</p> 1276<div class="example"> 1277<pre class="example">ntpq - standard NTP query program - Ver. 4.2.8p16 1278Usage: ntpq [ -<flag> [<val>] | --<name>[{=| }<val>] ]... [ host ...] 1279 Flg Arg Option-Name Description 1280 -4 no ipv4 Force IPv4 name resolution 1281 - prohibits the option 'ipv6' 1282 -6 no ipv6 Force IPv6 name resolution 1283 - prohibits the option 'ipv4' 1284 -c Str command run a command and exit 1285 - may appear multiple times 1286 -d no debug-level Increase debug verbosity level 1287 - may appear multiple times 1288 -D Num set-debug-level Set the debug verbosity level 1289 - may appear multiple times 1290 -i no interactive Force ntpq to operate in interactive mode 1291 - prohibits these options: 1292 command 1293 peers 1294 -n no numeric numeric host addresses 1295 no old-rv Always output status line with readvar 1296 -p no peers Print a list of the peers 1297 - prohibits the option 'interactive' 1298 -r KWd refid Set default display type for S2+ refids 1299 -u no unconnected Use unconnected UDP to communicate with ntpd (default on Windows) 1300 -w no wide Display the full 'remote' value 1301 opt version output version information and exit 1302 -? no help display extended usage information and exit 1303 -! no more-help extended usage information passed thru pager 1304 -> opt save-opts save the option state to a config file 1305 -< Str load-opts load options from a config file 1306 - disabled as '--no-load-opts' 1307 - may appear multiple times 1308 1309Options are specified by doubled hyphens and their name or by a single 1310hyphen and the flag character. 1311 1312The following option preset mechanisms are supported: 1313 - reading file $HOME/.ntprc 1314 - reading file ./.ntprc 1315 - examining environment variables named NTPQ_* 1316 1317The valid "refid" option keywords are: 1318 hash ipv4 1319 or an integer from 0 through 1 1320 1321Please send bug reports to: <https://bugs.ntp.org, bugs@ntp.org> 1322</pre></div> 1323 1324<hr> 1325<span id="ntpq-ipv4"></span><div class="header"> 1326<p> 1327Next: <a href="#ntpq-ipv6" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq ipv6</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-usage" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq usage</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1328</div> 1329<span id="ipv4-option-_0028_002d4_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.3 ipv4 option (-4)</h4> 1330<span id="index-ntpq_002dipv4"></span> 1331 1332<p>This is the “force ipv4 name resolution” option. 1333</p> 1334<p>This option has some usage constraints. It: 1335</p><ul> 1336<li> must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 1337ipv6. 1338</li></ul> 1339 1340<p>Force resolution of following host names on the command line 1341to the IPv4 namespace. 1342</p><hr> 1343<span id="ntpq-ipv6"></span><div class="header"> 1344<p> 1345Next: <a href="#ntpq-command" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq command</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-ipv4" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq ipv4</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1346</div> 1347<span id="ipv6-option-_0028_002d6_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.4 ipv6 option (-6)</h4> 1348<span id="index-ntpq_002dipv6"></span> 1349 1350<p>This is the “force ipv6 name resolution” option. 1351</p> 1352<p>This option has some usage constraints. It: 1353</p><ul> 1354<li> must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 1355ipv4. 1356</li></ul> 1357 1358<p>Force resolution of following host names on the command line 1359to the IPv6 namespace. 1360</p><hr> 1361<span id="ntpq-command"></span><div class="header"> 1362<p> 1363Next: <a href="#ntpq-interactive" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq interactive</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-ipv6" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq ipv6</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1364</div> 1365<span id="command-option-_0028_002dc_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.5 command option (-c)</h4> 1366<span id="index-ntpq_002dcommand"></span> 1367 1368<p>This is the “run a command and exit” option. 1369This option takes a string argument <samp>cmd</samp>. 1370</p> 1371<p>This option has some usage constraints. It: 1372</p><ul> 1373<li> may appear an unlimited number of times. 1374</li></ul> 1375 1376<p>The following argument is interpreted as an interactive format command 1377and is added to the list of commands to be executed on the specified 1378host(s). 1379</p><hr> 1380<span id="ntpq-interactive"></span><div class="header"> 1381<p> 1382Next: <a href="#ntpq-numeric" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq numeric</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-command" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq command</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1383</div> 1384<span id="interactive-option-_0028_002di_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.6 interactive option (-i)</h4> 1385<span id="index-ntpq_002dinteractive"></span> 1386 1387<p>This is the “force ntpq to operate in interactive mode” option. 1388</p> 1389<p>This option has some usage constraints. It: 1390</p><ul> 1391<li> must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 1392command, peers. 1393</li></ul> 1394 1395<p>Force <code>ntpq</code> to operate in interactive mode. 1396Prompts will be written to the standard output and 1397commands read from the standard input. 1398</p><hr> 1399<span id="ntpq-numeric"></span><div class="header"> 1400<p> 1401Next: <a href="#ntpq-old_002drv" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq old-rv</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-interactive" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq interactive</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1402</div> 1403<span id="numeric-option-_0028_002dn_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.7 numeric option (-n)</h4> 1404<span id="index-ntpq_002dnumeric"></span> 1405 1406<p>This is the “numeric host addresses” option. 1407Output all host addresses in dotted-quad numeric format rather than 1408converting to the canonical host names. 1409</p><hr> 1410<span id="ntpq-old_002drv"></span><div class="header"> 1411<p> 1412Next: <a href="#ntpq-peers" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq peers</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-numeric" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq numeric</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1413</div> 1414<span id="old_002drv-option"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.8 old-rv option</h4> 1415<span id="index-ntpq_002dold_002drv"></span> 1416 1417<p>This is the “always output status line with readvar” option. 1418By default, <code>ntpq</code> now suppresses the <code>associd=...</code> 1419line that precedes the output of <code>readvar</code> 1420(alias <code>rv</code>) when a single variable is requested, such as 1421<code>ntpq -c "rv 0 offset"</code>. 1422This option causes <code>ntpq</code> to include both lines of output 1423for a single-variable <code>readvar</code>. 1424Using an environment variable to 1425preset this option in a script will enable both older and 1426newer <code>ntpq</code> to behave identically in this regard. 1427</p><hr> 1428<span id="ntpq-peers"></span><div class="header"> 1429<p> 1430Next: <a href="#ntpq-refid" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq refid</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-old_002drv" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq old-rv</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1431</div> 1432<span id="peers-option-_0028_002dp_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.9 peers option (-p)</h4> 1433<span id="index-ntpq_002dpeers"></span> 1434 1435<p>This is the “print a list of the peers” option. 1436</p> 1437<p>This option has some usage constraints. It: 1438</p><ul> 1439<li> must not appear in combination with any of the following options: 1440interactive. 1441</li></ul> 1442 1443<p>Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as a summary 1444of their state. This is equivalent to the ’peers’ interactive command. 1445</p><hr> 1446<span id="ntpq-refid"></span><div class="header"> 1447<p> 1448Next: <a href="#ntpq-unconnected" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq unconnected</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-peers" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq peers</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1449</div> 1450<span id="refid-option-_0028_002dr_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.10 refid option (-r)</h4> 1451<span id="index-ntpq_002drefid"></span> 1452 1453<p>This is the “set default display type for s2+ refids” option. 1454This option takes a keyword argument. 1455</p> 1456<p>This option has some usage constraints. It: 1457</p><ul> 1458<li> This option takes a keyword as its argument. 1459The argument sets an enumeration value that can be tested by comparing the option value macro (OPT_VALUE_REFID). 1460The available keywords are: 1461<div class="example"> 1462<pre class="example"> hash ipv4 1463</pre></div> 1464 1465<p>or their numeric equivalent. 1466</p></li></ul> 1467 1468<p>Set the default display format for S2+ refids. 1469</p><hr> 1470<span id="ntpq-unconnected"></span><div class="header"> 1471<p> 1472Next: <a href="#ntpq-wide" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq wide</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-refid" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq refid</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1473</div> 1474<span id="unconnected-option-_0028_002du_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.11 unconnected option (-u)</h4> 1475<span id="index-ntpq_002dunconnected"></span> 1476 1477<p>This is the “use unconnected udp to communicate with ntpd (default on windows)” option. 1478Open an unconnected UDP association to ntpd (the default 1479on Windows). 1480</p><hr> 1481<span id="ntpq-wide"></span><div class="header"> 1482<p> 1483Next: <a href="#ntpq-config" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq config</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-unconnected" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq unconnected</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1484</div> 1485<span id="wide-option-_0028_002dw_0029"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.12 wide option (-w)</h4> 1486<span id="index-ntpq_002dwide"></span> 1487 1488<p>This is the “display the full ’remote’ value” option. 1489Display the full value of the ’remote’ value. If this requires 1490more than 15 characters, display the full value, emit a newline, 1491and continue the data display properly indented on the next line. 1492</p> 1493 1494<hr> 1495<span id="ntpq-config"></span><div class="header"> 1496<p> 1497Next: <a href="#ntpq-exit-status" accesskey="n" rel="next">ntpq exit status</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-wide" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq wide</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1498</div> 1499<span id="presetting_002fconfiguring-ntpq"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.13 presetting/configuring ntpq</h4> 1500 1501<p>Any option that is not marked as <i>not presettable</i> may be preset by 1502loading values from configuration ("rc" or "ini") files, and values from environment variables named <code>NTPQ</code> and <code>NTPQ_<OPTION_NAME></code>. <code><OPTION_NAME></code> must be one of 1503the options listed above in upper case and segmented with underscores. 1504The <code>NTPQ</code> variable will be tokenized and parsed like 1505the command line. The remaining variables are tested for existence and their 1506values are treated like option arguments. 1507</p> 1508 1509<p><code>libopts</code> will search in 2 places for configuration files: 1510</p><ul> 1511<li> $HOME 1512</li><li> $PWD 1513</li></ul> 1514<p>The environment variables <code>HOME</code>, and <code>PWD</code> 1515are expanded and replaced when <samp>ntpq</samp> runs. 1516For any of these that are plain files, they are simply processed. 1517For any that are directories, then a file named <samp>.ntprc</samp> is searched for 1518within that directory and processed. 1519</p> 1520<p>Configuration files may be in a wide variety of formats. 1521The basic format is an option name followed by a value (argument) on the 1522same line. Values may be separated from the option name with a colon, 1523equal sign or simply white space. Values may be continued across multiple 1524lines by escaping the newline with a backslash. 1525</p> 1526<p>Multiple programs may also share the same initialization file. 1527Common options are collected at the top, followed by program specific 1528segments. The segments are separated by lines like: 1529</p><div class="example"> 1530<pre class="example">[NTPQ] 1531</pre></div> 1532<p>or by 1533</p><div class="example"> 1534<pre class="example"><?program ntpq> 1535</pre></div> 1536<p>Do not mix these styles within one configuration file. 1537</p> 1538<p>Compound values and carefully constructed string values may also be 1539specified using XML syntax: 1540</p><div class="example"> 1541<pre class="example"><option-name> 1542 <sub-opt>...&lt;...&gt;...</sub-opt> 1543</option-name> 1544</pre></div> 1545<p>yielding an <code>option-name.sub-opt</code> string value of 1546</p><div class="example"> 1547<pre class="example">"...<...>..." 1548</pre></div> 1549<p><code>AutoOpts</code> does not track suboptions. You simply note that it is a 1550hierarchicly valued option. <code>AutoOpts</code> does provide a means for searching 1551the associated name/value pair list (see: optionFindValue). 1552</p> 1553<p>The command line options relating to configuration and/or usage help are: 1554</p> 1555<span id="version-_0028_002d_0029"></span><h4 class="subsubheading">version (-)</h4> 1556 1557<p>Print the program version to standard out, optionally with licensing 1558information, then exit 0. The optional argument specifies how much licensing 1559detail to provide. The default is to print just the version. The licensing information may be selected with an option argument. 1560Only the first letter of the argument is examined: 1561</p> 1562<dl compact="compact"> 1563<dt>‘<samp>version</samp>’</dt> 1564<dd><p>Only print the version. This is the default. 1565</p></dd> 1566<dt>‘<samp>copyright</samp>’</dt> 1567<dd><p>Name the copyright usage licensing terms. 1568</p></dd> 1569<dt>‘<samp>verbose</samp>’</dt> 1570<dd><p>Print the full copyright usage licensing terms. 1571</p></dd> 1572</dl> 1573 1574<hr> 1575<span id="ntpq-exit-status"></span><div class="header"> 1576<p> 1577Previous: <a href="#ntpq-config" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq config</a>, Up: <a href="#ntpq-Invocation" accesskey="u" rel="up">ntpq Invocation</a> </p> 1578</div> 1579<span id="ntpq-exit-status-1"></span><h4 class="subsection">1.1.14 ntpq exit status</h4> 1580 1581<p>One of the following exit values will be returned: 1582</p><dl compact="compact"> 1583<dt>‘<samp>0 (EXIT_SUCCESS)</samp>’</dt> 1584<dd><p>Successful program execution. 1585</p></dd> 1586<dt>‘<samp>1 (EXIT_FAILURE)</samp>’</dt> 1587<dd><p>The operation failed or the command syntax was not valid. 1588</p></dd> 1589<dt>‘<samp>66 (EX_NOINPUT)</samp>’</dt> 1590<dd><p>A specified configuration file could not be loaded. 1591</p></dd> 1592<dt>‘<samp>70 (EX_SOFTWARE)</samp>’</dt> 1593<dd><p>libopts had an internal operational error. Please report 1594it to autogen-users@lists.sourceforge.net. Thank you. 1595</p></dd> 1596</dl> 1597 1598<hr> 1599<span id="Usage"></span><div class="header"> 1600<p> 1601Next: <a href="#Internal-Commands" accesskey="n" rel="next">Internal Commands</a>, Previous: <a href="#ntpq-Description" accesskey="p" rel="prev">ntpq Description</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 1602</div> 1603<span id="Usage-1"></span><h3 class="section">1.2 Usage</h3> 1604 1605<table> 1606<thead><tr><th width="23%">What</th><th width="23%">Default</th><th width="5%">Flag</th><th width="15%">Option</th></tr></thead> 1607<tr><td width="23%">configuration file</td><td width="23%"><code>/etc/ntp.conf</code></td><td width="5%"><code>-c</code></td><td width="15%"><code>conffile</code></td></tr> 1608<tr><td width="23%">frequency file</td><td width="23%">none</td><td width="5%"><code>-f</code></td><td width="15%"><code>driftfile</code></td></tr> 1609<tr><td width="23%">leapseconds file</td><td width="23%">none</td><td width="5%"></td><td width="15%"><code>leapfile</code></td></tr> 1610<tr><td width="23%">process ID file</td><td width="23%">none</td><td width="5%"><code>-p</code></td><td width="15%"><code>pidfile</code></td></tr> 1611<tr><td width="23%">log file</td><td width="23%">system log</td><td width="5%"><code>-l</code></td><td width="15%"><code>logfile</code></td></tr> 1612<tr><td width="23%">include file</td><td width="23%">none</td><td width="5%">none</td><td width="15%"><code>includefile</code></td></tr> 1613<tr><td width="23%">statistics path</td><td width="23%"><code>/var/NTP</code></td><td width="5%"><code>-s</code></td><td width="15%"><code>statsdir</code></td></tr> 1614<tr><td width="23%">keys path</td><td width="23%"><code>/usr/local/etc</code></td><td width="5%"><code>-k</code></td><td width="15%"><code>keysdir</code></td></tr> 1615</table> 1616 1617<hr> 1618<span id="Internal-Commands"></span><div class="header"> 1619<p> 1620Next: <a href="#Control-Message-Commands" accesskey="n" rel="next">Control Message Commands</a>, Previous: <a href="#Usage" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Usage</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 1621</div> 1622<span id="Internal-Commands-2"></span><h3 class="section">1.3 Internal Commands</h3> 1623 1624<p>Interactive format commands consist of a keyword followed by zero to four arguments. Only enough characters of the full keyword to uniquely identify the command need be typed. The output of a command is normally sent to the standard output, but optionally the output of individual commands may be sent to a file by appending a <code>></code>, followed by a file name, to the command line. A number of interactive format commands are executed entirely within the <code>ntpq</code> program itself and do not result in NTP mode-6 requests being sent to a server. These are described following. 1625</p> 1626<dl compact="compact"> 1627<dt><code><span id="help"></span><code>? [</code><kbd>command_keyword</kbd><code>]</code></code></dt> 1628<dt><code><code>help [</code><kbd>command_keyword</kbd><code>]</code></code></dt> 1629<dd><p>A <code>?</code> by itself will print a list of all the command keywords known to <code>ntpq</code>. A <code>?</code> followed by a command keyword will print function and usage information about the command. 1630</p> 1631</dd> 1632<dt><code><span id="addvars"></span>><code>addvars <kbd>name</kbd> [ = <kbd>value</kbd>] [...]</code></code></dt> 1633<dt><code><code>rmvars <kbd>name</kbd> [...]</code></code></dt> 1634<dt><code><code>clearvars</code></dt></code></dt> 1635<dd><p>The arguments to these commands consist of a list of items of the form 1636<code><kbd>name</kbd> = <kbd>value</kbd></code>, where the <code>= <kbd>value</kbd></code> is ignored, 1637and can be omitted in read requests. 1638<code>ntpq</code> maintains an internal list in which data to be included 1639in control messages can be assembled, and sent using the <code>readlist</code> 1640and <code>writelist</code> commands described below. 1641The <code>addvars</code> command allows variables and optional values 1642to be added to the list. 1643If more than one variable is to be added 1644the list should be comma-separated and not contain white space. 1645The <code>rmvars</code> command can be used to remove individual variables 1646from the list, 1647while the <code>clearlist</code> command removes all variables from the list. 1648</p> 1649</dd> 1650<dt><code><span id="cooked"></span><code>cooked</code></code></dt> 1651<dd><p>Display server messages in prettyprint format. 1652</p> 1653</dd> 1654<dt><code><span id="debug"></span><code>debug more | less | off</code></code></dt> 1655<dd><p>Turns internal query program debugging on and off. 1656</p> 1657</dd> 1658<dt><code><span id="delay"></span><code>delay <kbd>milliseconds</kbd></code></code></dt> 1659<dd><p>Specify a time interval to be added to timestamps included in requests which require authentication. This is used to enable (unreliable) server reconfiguration over long delay network paths or between machines whose clocks are unsynchronized. Actually the server does not now require timestamps in authenticated requests, so this command may be obsolete. 1660</p> 1661</dd> 1662<dt><code><span id="host"></span><code>host <kbd>name</kbd></code></code></dt> 1663<dd><p>Set the host to which future queries will be sent. 1664The name may be either a DNS name or a numeric address. 1665</p> 1666</dd> 1667<dt><code><span id="hostnames"></span><code>hostnames [yes | no]</code></code></dt> 1668<dd><p>If <code>yes</code> is specified, host names are printed in information displays. 1669If <code>no</code> is specified, numeric addresses are printed instead. 1670The default is <code>yes</code>, 1671unless modified using the command line <code>-n</code> switch. 1672</p> 1673</dd> 1674<dt><code><span id="keyid"></span><code>keyid <kbd>keyid</kbd></code></code></dt> 1675<dd><p>This command specifies the key number to be used 1676to authenticate configuration requests. 1677This must correspond to a key ID configured in <code>ntp.conf</code> for this purpose. 1678</p> 1679</dd> 1680<dt><code><span id="keytype"></span><code>keytype</code></code></dt> 1681<dd><p>Specify the digest algorithm to use for authenticated requests, 1682with default <code>MD5</code>. 1683If the OpenSSL library is installed, 1684digest can be be any message digest algorithm supported by the library. 1685The current selections are: <code>AES128CMAC</code>, <code>MD2</code>, <code>MD4</code>, <code>MD5</code>, <code>MDC2</code>, <code>RIPEMD160</code>, <code>SHA</code> and <code>SHA1</code>. 1686</p> 1687</dd> 1688<dt><code><span id="ntpversion"></span><code>ntpversion 1 | 2 | 3 | 4</code></code></dt> 1689<dd><p>Sets the NTP version number which <code>ntpq</code> claims in packets. 1690Defaults to 2. 1691Note that mode-6 control messages (and modes, for that matter) 1692didn’t exist in NTP version 1. 1693</p> 1694</dd> 1695<dt><code><span id="passwd"></span><code>passwd</code></code></dt> 1696<dd><p>This command prompts for a password to authenticate requests. 1697The password must correspond to the key ID configured in <code>ntp.conf</code> for this purpose. 1698</p> 1699</dd> 1700<dt><code><span id="quit"></span><code>quit</code></code></dt> 1701<dd><p>Exit <code>ntpq</code>. 1702</p> 1703</dd> 1704<dt><code><span id="raw"></span><code>raw</code></code></dt> 1705<dd><p>Display server messages as received and without reformatting. 1706</p> 1707</dd> 1708<dt><code><span id="timeout"></span><code>timeout <kbd>milliseconds</kbd></code></code></dt> 1709<dd><p>Specify a timeout period for responses to server queries. 1710The default is about 5000 milliseconds. 1711Note that since <code>ntpq</code> retries each query once after a timeout 1712the total waiting time for a timeout will be twice the timeout value set. 1713</p> 1714</dd> 1715</dl> 1716 1717<hr> 1718<span id="Control-Message-Commands"></span><div class="header"> 1719<p> 1720Next: <a href="#Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes" accesskey="n" rel="next">Status Words and Kiss Codes</a>, Previous: <a href="#Internal-Commands" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Internal Commands</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 1721</div> 1722<span id="Control-Message-Commands-2"></span><h3 class="section">1.4 Control Message Commands</h3> 1723 1724<p>Association IDs are used to identify system, peer and clock variables. 1725System variables are assigned an association ID of zero and system name space, 1726while each association is assigned a nonzero association ID and peer namespace. 1727Most control commands send a single mode-6 message to the server 1728and expect a single response message. 1729The exceptions are the <code>peers</code> command, 1730which sends a series of messages, 1731and the <code>mreadlist</code> and <code>mreadvar</code> commands, 1732which iterate over a range of associations. 1733</p> 1734<span id="as"></span><dl compact="compact"> 1735<dt><code><code>associations</code></code></dt> 1736<dd><p>Display a list of mobilized associations in the form: 1737<br> 1738<code>ind assid status conf reach auth condition last_event cnt</code> 1739</p> 1740<table> 1741<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="40%">Description</th></tr></thead> 1742<tr><td width="10%"><code>ind</code></td><td width="40%">index on this list</td></tr> 1743<tr><td width="10%"><code>assid</code></td><td width="40%">association ID</td></tr> 1744<tr><td width="10%"><code>status</code></td><td width="40%"><a href="decode.html#peer">peer status word</a></td></tr> 1745<tr><td width="10%"><code>conf</code></td><td width="40%"><code>yes</code>: persistent, <code>no</code>: ephemeral</td></tr> 1746<tr><td width="10%"><code>reach</code></td><td width="40%"><code>yes</code>: reachable, <code>no</code>: unreachable</td></tr> 1747<tr><td width="10%"><code>auth</code></td><td width="40%"><code>ok</code>, <code>yes</code>, <code>bad</code> and <code>none</code></td></tr> 1748<tr><td width="10%"><code>condition</code></td><td width="40%">selection status (see the <code>select</code> field of the <a href="decode.html#peer">peer status word</a>)</td></tr> 1749<tr><td width="10%"><code>last_event</code></td><td width="40%">event report (see the <code>event</code> field of the <a href="decode.html#peer">peer status word</a>)</td></tr> 1750<tr><td width="10%"><code>cnt</code> 1751event count (see the <code>count</code> field of the <a href="decode.html#peer">peer status word</a>)</td></tr> 1752</table> 1753 1754</dd> 1755<dt><code><span id="cv"></span>clockvar <kbd>assocID</kbd> [<kbd>name</kbd> [ = <kbd>value</kbd> [...]] [...]]</code></dt> 1756<dt><code>cv <kbd>assocID</kbd> [<kbd>name</kbd> [ = <kbd>value</kbd> [...] ][...]]</code></dt> 1757<dd><p>Display a list of ‘clock variables’ for those associations supporting a reference clock. 1758</p> 1759</dd> 1760<dt><code><span id="g_t_003aconfig"></span>:config [...]</code></dt> 1761<dd><p>Send the remainder of the command line, including whitespace, to the server 1762as a run-time configuration command in the same format 1763as the configuration file. 1764This command is experimental until further notice and clarification. 1765Authentication is of course required. 1766</p> 1767</dd> 1768<dt><code><span id="config_002dfrom_002dfile"></span>config-from-file <kbd>filename</kbd></code></dt> 1769<dd><p>Send the each line of <kbd>filename</kbd> to the server as 1770run-time configuration commands in the same format as the configuration file. 1771This command is experimental until further notice and clarification. 1772Authentication is required. 1773</p> 1774</dd> 1775<dt><code><span id="ifstats"></span>ifstats</code></dt> 1776<dd><p>Display statistics for each local network address. 1777Authentication is required. 1778</p> 1779</dd> 1780<dt><code><span id="iostats"></span>iostats</code></dt> 1781<dd><p>Display network and reference clock I/O statistics. 1782</p> 1783</dd> 1784<dt><code><span id="kerninfo"></span>kerninfo</code></dt> 1785<dd><p>Display kernel loop and PPS statistics. 1786As with other ntpq output, times are in milliseconds. 1787The precision value displayed is in milliseconds as well, 1788unlike the precision system variable. 1789</p> 1790</dd> 1791<dt><code><span id="lassoc"></span>lassociations</code></dt> 1792<dd><p>Perform the same function as the associations command, 1793except display mobilized and unmobilized associations. 1794</p> 1795</dd> 1796<dt><code><span id="monstats"></span>monstats</code></dt> 1797<dd><p>Display monitor facility statistics. 1798</p> 1799</dd> 1800<dt><code><span id="mrulist"></span>mrulist [limited | kod | mincount=<kbd>count</kbd> | laddr=<kbd>localaddr</kbd> | sort=<kbd>sortorder</kbd> | resany=<kbd>hexmask</kbd> | resall=<kbd>hexmask</kbd>]</code></dt> 1801<dd><p>Obtain and print traffic counts collected and maintained by 1802the monitor facility. 1803With the exception of <code>sort=<kbd>sortorder</kbd></code>, 1804the options filter the list returned by <code>ntpd</code>. 1805The <code>limited</code> and <code>kod</code> options return only entries 1806representing client addresses from which the last packet received 1807triggered either discarding or a KoD response. 1808The <code>mincount=<kbd>count</kbd></code> option filters entries representing 1809less than <code><kbd>count</kbd></code> packets. 1810The <code>laddr=<kbd>localaddr</kbd></code> option filters entries for packets 1811received on any local address other than <code><kbd>localaddr</kbd></code>. 1812<code>resany=<kbd>hexmask</kbd></code> and <code>resall=<kbd>hexmask</kbd></code> 1813filter entries containing none or less than all, respectively, 1814of the bits in <code><kbd>hexmask</kbd></code>, which must begin with <code>0x</code>. 1815<br> 1816The <code><kbd>sortorder</kbd></code> defaults to <code>lstint</code> and may be any of 1817<code>addr</code>, <code>count</code>, <code>avgint</code>, <code>lstint</code>, or 1818any of those preceded by a minus sign (hyphen) to reverse the sort order. 1819The output columns are: 1820</p> 1821<table> 1822<thead><tr><th width="10%">Column</th><th width="40%">Description</th></tr></thead> 1823<tr><td width="10%"><code>lstint</code></td><td width="40%">Interval in s between the receipt of the most recent packet from this 1824address and the completion of the retrieval of the MRU list by <code>ntpq</code></td></tr> 1825<tr><td width="10%"><code>avgint</code></td><td width="40%">Average interval in s between packets from this address.</td></tr> 1826<tr><td width="10%"><code>rstr</code></td><td width="40%">Restriction flags associated with this address. 1827Most are copied unchanged from the matching <code>restrict</code> command, 1828however 0x400 (kod) and 0x20 (limited) flags are cleared unless 1829the last packet from this address triggered a rate control response.</td></tr> 1830<tr><td width="10%"><code>r</code></td><td width="40%">Rate control indicator, either a period, <code>L</code> or <code>K</code> for 1831no rate control response, rate limiting by discarding, or 1832rate limiting with a KoD response, respectively.</td></tr> 1833<tr><td width="10%"><code>m</code></td><td width="40%">Packet mode.</td></tr> 1834<tr><td width="10%"><code>v</code></td><td width="40%">Packet version number.</td></tr> 1835<tr><td width="10%"><code>count</code></td><td width="40%">Packets received from this address.</td></tr> 1836<tr><td width="10%"><code>rport</code></td><td width="40%">Source port of last packet from this address.</td></tr> 1837<tr><td width="10%"><code>remote address</code></td><td width="40%">DNS name, numeric address, or address followed by claimed DNS name which 1838could not be verified in parentheses.</td></tr> 1839</table> 1840 1841</dd> 1842<dt><code><span id="mreadvar"></span><code>mreadvar <kbd>assocID</kbd> <kbd>assocID</kbd> [ <kbd>variable_name</kbd> [ = <kbd>value</kbd>[ ... ]</code></code></dt> 1843<dt><code><span id="mrv"></span><code>mrv <kbd>assocID</kbd> <kbd>assocID</kbd> [ <kbd>variable_name</kbd> [ = <kbd>value</kbd>[ ... ]</code></code></dt> 1844<dd><p>Perform the same function as the <code>readvar</code> command, 1845except for a range of association IDs. 1846This range is determined from the association list cached by 1847the most recent <code>associations</code> command. 1848</p> 1849</dd> 1850<dt><code><span id="passoc"></span><code>passociations</code></code></dt> 1851<dd><p>Perform the same function as the <code>associations command</code>, except that 1852it uses previously stored data rather than making a new query. 1853</p> 1854</dd> 1855<dt><code><span id="pe"></span><code>peers</code></code></dt> 1856<dd><p>Display a list of peers in the form: 1857<br> 1858<code>[tally]remote refid st t when pool reach delay offset jitter</code> 1859</p> 1860<table> 1861<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="20%">Description</th></tr></thead> 1862<tr><td width="10%"><code>[tally]</code></td><td width="20%">single-character code indicating current value of the <code>select</code> field 1863of the <a href="decode.html#peer">peer status word</a>.</td></tr> 1864<tr><td width="10%"><code>remote</code></td><td width="20%">host name (or IP number) of peer</td></tr> 1865<tr><td width="10%"><code>refid</code></td><td width="20%">association ID or <a href="decode.html#kiss">kiss code</a>.</td></tr> 1866<tr><td width="10%"><code>st</code></td><td width="20%">stratum</td></tr> 1867<tr><td width="10%"><code>t</code></td><td width="20%"><code>u</code>: unicast or manycast client, 1868<code>b</code>: broadcast or multicast client, 1869<code>l</code>: local (reference clock), 1870<code>s</code>: symmetric (peer), 1871<code>A</code>: manycast server, 1872<code>B</code>: broadcast server, 1873<code>M</code>: multicast server.</td></tr> 1874<tr><td width="10%"><code>when</code></td><td width="20%">sec/min/hr since last received packet</td></tr> 1875<tr><td width="10%"><code>poll</code></td><td width="20%">poll interval (log(2) s)</td></tr> 1876<tr><td width="10%"><code>reach</code></td><td width="20%">reach shift register (octal)</td></tr> 1877<tr><td width="10%"><code>delay</code></td><td width="20%">roundtrip delay</td></tr> 1878<tr><td width="10%"><code>offset</code></td><td width="20%">offset of server relative to this host</td></tr> 1879<tr><td width="10%"><code>jitter</code></td><td width="20%">jitter</td></tr> 1880</table> 1881 1882</dd> 1883<dt><code><span id="rv"></span>readvar <kbd>assocID</kbd> <kbd>name</kbd> [ = <kbd>value</kbd> ] [,...]</code></dt> 1884<dt><code>rv <kbd>assocID</kbd> [ <kbd>name</kbd> ] [,...]</code></dt> 1885<dd><p>Display the specified variables. 1886If <code><kbd>assocID</kbd></code> is zero, 1887the variables are from the ‘system variables’ name space, 1888otherwise they are from the ‘peer variables’ name space. 1889The <kbd>assocID</kbd> is required, as the same name can occur in both spaces. 1890If no <kbd>name</kbd> is included, 1891all operative variables in the name space are displayed. 1892In this case only, if the <code><kbd>assocID</kbd></code> is omitted, it is assumed zero. 1893Multiple names are specified with comma separators and without whitespace. 1894Note that time values are represented in milliseconds and 1895frequency values in parts-per-million (PPM). 1896Some NTP timestamps are represented in the format YYYYMMDDTTTT, 1897where YYYY is the year, MM the month of year, DD the day of month and 1898TTTT the time of day. 1899</p> 1900</dd> 1901<dt><code><span id="saveconfig"></span><code>saveconfig <kbd>filename</kbd></code></code></dt> 1902<dd><p>Write the current configuration, including any runtime modifications 1903given with <code>:config</code> or <code>config-from-file</code>, 1904to the ntpd host’s file <kbd>filename</kbd>. 1905This command will be rejected by the server unless 1906<a href="miscopt.html#saveconfigdir">saveconfigdir</a> 1907appears in the <code>ntpd</code> configuration file. 1908<kbd>filename</kbd> can use <code>strftime()</code> format specifiers 1909to substitute the current date and time, for example, 1910<code>saveconfig ntp-%Y%m%d-%H%M%S.conf</code>. 1911The filename used is stored in system variable <code>savedconfig</code>. 1912Authentication is required. 1913</p> 1914</dd> 1915<dt><code><span id="writevar"></span>writevar <kbd>assocID</kbd> <kbd>name</kbd> = <kbd>value</kbd> [,...]</code></dt> 1916<dd><p>Write the specified variables. 1917If the <code><kbd>assocID</kbd></code> is zero, the variables are from the 1918‘system variables’ name space, otherwise they are from the 1919‘peer variables’ name space. 1920The <code><kbd>assocID</kbd></code> is required, 1921as the same name can occur in both spaces. 1922</p> 1923</dd> 1924<dt><code><span id="sysinfo"></span><code>sysinfo</code></code></dt> 1925<dd><p>Display operational summary. 1926</p> 1927</dd> 1928<dt><code><span id="sysstats"></span><code>sysstats</code></code></dt> 1929<dd><p>Print statistics counters maintained in the protocol module. 1930</p> 1931</dd> 1932</dl> 1933 1934<hr> 1935<span id="Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes"></span><div class="header"> 1936<p> 1937Next: <a href="#System-Variables" accesskey="n" rel="next">System Variables</a>, Previous: <a href="#Control-Message-Commands" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Control Message Commands</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 1938</div> 1939<span id="Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes-2"></span><h3 class="section">1.5 Status Words and Kiss Codes</h3> 1940 1941<p>The current state of the operating program is shown 1942in a set of status words maintained by the system 1943and each association separately. 1944These words are displayed in the <code>rv</code> and <code>as</code> commands 1945both in hexadecimal and decoded short tip strings. 1946The codes, tips and short explanations are on the 1947<a href="decode.html">Event Messages and Status Words</a> page. 1948The page also includes a list of system and peer messages, 1949the code for the latest of which is included in the status word. 1950</p> 1951<p>Information resulting from protocol machine state transitions 1952is displayed using an informal set of ASCII strings called 1953<a href="decode.html#kiss">kiss codes</a>. 1954The original purpose was for kiss-o’-death (KoD) packets sent 1955by the server to advise the client of an unusual condition. 1956They are now displayed, when appropriate, 1957in the reference identifier field in various billboards. 1958</p> 1959<hr> 1960<span id="System-Variables"></span><div class="header"> 1961<p> 1962Next: <a href="#Peer-Variables" accesskey="n" rel="next">Peer Variables</a>, Previous: <a href="#Status-Words-and-Kiss-Codes" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Status Words and Kiss Codes</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 1963</div> 1964<span id="System-Variables-2"></span><h3 class="section">1.6 System Variables</h3> 1965 1966<p>The following system variables appear in the <code>rv</code> billboard. 1967Not all variables are displayed in some configurations. 1968</p> 1969<table> 1970<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="20%">Description</th></tr></thead> 1971<tr><td width="10%"><code>status</code></td><td width="20%"><a href="decode.html#sys">system status word</a></td></tr> 1972<tr><td width="10%"><code>version</code></td><td width="20%">NTP software version and build time</td></tr> 1973<tr><td width="10%"><code>processor</code></td><td width="20%">hardware platform and version</td></tr> 1974<tr><td width="10%"><code>system</code></td><td width="20%">operating system and version</td></tr> 1975<tr><td width="10%"><code>leap</code></td><td width="20%">leap warning indicator (0-3)</td></tr> 1976<tr><td width="10%"><code>stratum</code></td><td width="20%">stratum (1-15)</td></tr> 1977<tr><td width="10%"><code>precision</code></td><td width="20%">precision (log(2) s)</td></tr> 1978<tr><td width="10%"><code>rootdelay</code></td><td width="20%">total roundtrip delay to the primary reference clock</td></tr> 1979<tr><td width="10%"><code>rootdisp</code></td><td width="20%">total dispersion to the primary reference clock</td></tr> 1980<tr><td width="10%"><code>peer</code></td><td width="20%">system peer association ID</td></tr> 1981<tr><td width="10%"><code>tc</code> 1982time constant and poll exponent (log(2) s) (3-17)</td></tr> 1983<tr><td width="10%"><code>mintc</code> 1984minimum time constant (log(2) s) (3-10)</td></tr> 1985<tr><td width="10%"><code>clock</code></td><td width="20%">date and time of day</td></tr> 1986<tr><td width="10%"><code>refid</code> 1987reference ID or <a href="decode.html#kiss">kiss code</a></td></tr> 1988<tr><td width="10%"><code>reftime</code></td><td width="20%">reference time</td></tr> 1989<tr><td width="10%"><code>offset</code></td><td width="20%">combined offset of server relative to this host</td></tr> 1990<tr><td width="10%"><code>sys_jitter</code></td><td width="20%">combined system jitter</td></tr> 1991<tr><td width="10%"><code>frequency</code></td><td width="20%">frequency offset (PPM) relative to hardware clock</td></tr> 1992<tr><td width="10%"><code>clk_wander</code></td><td width="20%">clock frequency wander (PPM)</td></tr> 1993<tr><td width="10%"><code>clk_jitter</code></td><td width="20%">clock jitter</td></tr> 1994<tr><td width="10%"><code>tai</code></td><td width="20%">TAI-UTC offset (s)</td></tr> 1995<tr><td width="10%"><code>leapsec</code></td><td width="20%">NTP seconds when the next leap second is/was inserted</td></tr> 1996<tr><td width="10%"><code>expire</code></td><td width="20%">NTP seconds when the NIST leapseconds file expires</td></tr> 1997</table> 1998 1999<p>The jitter and wander statistics are exponentially-weighted RMS averages. 2000The system jitter is defined in the NTPv4 specification; 2001the clock jitter statistic is computed by the clock discipline module. 2002</p> 2003<p>When the NTPv4 daemon is compiled with the OpenSSL software library, 2004additional system variables are displayed, including some or all of the 2005following, depending on the particular Autokey dance: 2006</p> 2007<table> 2008<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="20%">Description</th></tr></thead> 2009<tr><td width="10%"><code>host</code></td><td width="20%">Autokey host name for this host</td></tr> 2010<tr><td width="10%"><code>ident</code></td><td width="20%">Autokey group name for this host</td></tr> 2011<tr><td width="10%"><code>flags</code></td><td width="20%">host flags (see Autokey specification)</td></tr> 2012<tr><td width="10%"><code>digest</code></td><td width="20%">OpenSSL message digest algorithm</td></tr> 2013<tr><td width="10%"><code>signature</code></td><td width="20%">OpenSSL digest/signature scheme</td></tr> 2014<tr><td width="10%"><code>update</code></td><td width="20%">NTP seconds at last signature update</td></tr> 2015<tr><td width="10%"><code>cert</code></td><td width="20%">certificate subject, issuer and certificate flags</td></tr> 2016<tr><td width="10%"><code>until</code></td><td width="20%">NTP seconds when the certificate expires</td></tr> 2017</table> 2018 2019<hr> 2020<span id="Peer-Variables"></span><div class="header"> 2021<p> 2022Next: <a href="#Clock-Variables" accesskey="n" rel="next">Clock Variables</a>, Previous: <a href="#System-Variables" accesskey="p" rel="prev">System Variables</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 2023</div> 2024<span id="Peer-Variables-2"></span><h3 class="section">1.7 Peer Variables</h3> 2025 2026<p>The following peer variables appear in the <code>rv</code> billboard 2027for each association. 2028Not all variables are displayed in some configurations. 2029</p> 2030<table> 2031<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="20%">Description</th></tr></thead> 2032<tr><td width="10%"><code>associd</code></td><td width="20%">association ID</td></tr> 2033<tr><td width="10%"><code>status</code></td><td width="20%"><a href="decode.html#peer">peer status word</a></td></tr> 2034<tr><td width="10%"><code>srcadr</code></td><td width="20%">source (remote) IP address and port</td></tr> 2035<tr><td width="10%"><code>dstadr</code></td><td width="20%">destination (local) IP address and port</td></tr> 2036<tr><td width="10%"><code>leap</code></td><td width="20%">leap indicator (0-3)</td></tr> 2037<tr><td width="10%"><code>stratum</code></td><td width="20%">stratum (0-15)</td></tr> 2038<tr><td width="10%"><code>precision</code></td><td width="20%">precision (log(2) s)</td></tr> 2039<tr><td width="10%"><code>rootdelay</code></td><td width="20%">total roundtrip delay to the primary reference clock</td></tr> 2040<tr><td width="10%"><code>rootdisp</code></td><td width="20%">total root dispersion to the primary reference clock</td></tr> 2041<tr><td width="10%"><code>refid</code></td><td width="20%">reference ID or <a href="decode.html#kiss">kiss code</a></td></tr> 2042<tr><td width="10%"><code>reftime</code></td><td width="20%">reference time</td></tr> 2043<tr><td width="10%"><code>reach</code></td><td width="20%">reach register (octal)</td></tr> 2044<tr><td width="10%"><code>unreach</code></td><td width="20%">unreach counter</td></tr> 2045<tr><td width="10%"><code>hmode</code></td><td width="20%">host mode (1-6)</td></tr> 2046<tr><td width="10%"><code>pmode</code></td><td width="20%">peer mode (1-5)</td></tr> 2047<tr><td width="10%"><code>hpoll</code></td><td width="20%">host poll exponent (log(2) s) (3-17)</td></tr> 2048<tr><td width="10%"><code>ppoll</code></td><td width="20%">peer poll exponent (log(2) s) (3-17)</td></tr> 2049<tr><td width="10%"><code>headway</code></td><td width="20%">headway (see <a href="rate.html">Rate Management and the Kiss-o’-Death Packet</a>)</td></tr> 2050<tr><td width="10%"><code>flash</code></td><td width="20%"><a href="decode.html#flash">flash status word</a></td></tr> 2051<tr><td width="10%"><code>offset</code></td><td width="20%">filter offset</td></tr> 2052<tr><td width="10%"><code>delay</code></td><td width="20%">filter delay</td></tr> 2053<tr><td width="10%"><code>dispersion</code></td><td width="20%">filter dispersion</td></tr> 2054<tr><td width="10%"><code>jitter</code></td><td width="20%">filter jitter</td></tr> 2055<tr><td width="10%"><code>ident</code></td><td width="20%">Autokey group name for this association</td></tr> 2056<tr><td width="10%"><code>bias</code></td><td width="20%">unicast/broadcast bias</td></tr> 2057<tr><td width="10%"><code>xleave</code></td><td width="20%">interleave delay (see <a href="xleave.html">NTP Interleaved Modes</a>)</td></tr> 2058</table> 2059 2060<p>The bias variable is calculated when the first broadcast packet is received 2061after the calibration volley. It represents the offset of the broadcast 2062subgraph relative to the unicast subgraph. The xleave variable appears 2063only the interleaved symmetric and interleaved modes. It represents 2064the internal queuing, buffering and transmission delays for the preceding 2065packet. 2066</p> 2067<p>When the NTPv4 daemon is compiled with the OpenSSL software library, 2068additional peer variables are displayed, including the following: 2069</p> 2070<table> 2071<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="20%">Description</th></tr></thead> 2072<tr><td width="10%"><code>flags</code></td><td width="20%">peer flags (see Autokey specification)</td></tr> 2073<tr><td width="10%"><code>host</code></td><td width="20%">Autokey server name</td></tr> 2074<tr><td width="10%"><code>flags</code></td><td width="20%">peer flags (see Autokey specification)</td></tr> 2075<tr><td width="10%"><code>signature</code></td><td width="20%">OpenSSL digest/signature scheme</td></tr> 2076<tr><td width="10%"><code>initsequence</code></td><td width="20%">initial key ID</td></tr> 2077<tr><td width="10%"><code>initkey</code></td><td width="20%">initial key index</td></tr> 2078<tr><td width="10%"><code>timestamp</code></td><td width="20%">Autokey signature timestamp</td></tr> 2079</table> 2080 2081<hr> 2082<span id="Clock-Variables"></span><div class="header"> 2083<p> 2084Previous: <a href="#Peer-Variables" accesskey="p" rel="prev">Peer Variables</a>, Up: <a href="#Top" accesskey="u" rel="up">Top</a> </p> 2085</div> 2086<span id="Clock-Variables-2"></span><h3 class="section">1.8 Clock Variables</h3> 2087 2088<p>The following clock variables appear in the <code>cv</code> billboard for each association with a reference clock. Not all variables are displayed in some configurations. 2089</p> 2090<table> 2091<thead><tr><th width="10%">Variable</th><th width="20%">Description</th></tr></thead> 2092<tr><td width="10%"><code>associd</code></td><td width="20%">association ID</td></tr> 2093<tr><td width="10%"><code>status</code></td><td width="20%"><a href="decode.html#clock">clock status word</a></td></tr> 2094<tr><td width="10%"><code>device</code></td><td width="20%">device description</td></tr> 2095<tr><td width="10%"><code>timecode</code></td><td width="20%">ASCII time code string (specific to device)</td></tr> 2096<tr><td width="10%"><code>poll</code></td><td width="20%">poll messages sent</td></tr> 2097<tr><td width="10%"><code>noreply</code></td><td width="20%">no reply</td></tr> 2098<tr><td width="10%"><code>badformat</code></td><td width="20%">bad format</td></tr> 2099<tr><td width="10%"><code>baddata</code></td><td width="20%">bad date or time</td></tr> 2100<tr><td width="10%"><code>fudgetime1</code></td><td width="20%">fudge time 1</td></tr> 2101<tr><td width="10%"><code>fudgetime2</code></td><td width="20%">fudge time 2</td></tr> 2102<tr><td width="10%"><code>stratum</code></td><td width="20%">driver stratum</td></tr> 2103<tr><td width="10%"><code>refid</code></td><td width="20%">driver reference ID</td></tr> 2104<tr><td width="10%"><code>flags</code></td><td width="20%">driver flags</td></tr> 2105</table> 2106<hr> 2107 2108 2109 2110</body> 2111</html> 2112