Bob Goodwin wrote: > Ed Greshko wrote: >> Bob Goodwin wrote: >> >>> taharka wrote: >>> >>>> How do, >>>> >>>> On Mon, 2006-05-22 at 07:32 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote: >>>> >>>> >>>>> Tim wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> On Mon, 2006-05-22 at 04:17 -0400, Bob Goodwin wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> server >>>>>>> clock2.redhat.com >>>>>>> server >>>>>>> ntp-1.cns.vt.edu >>>>>>> server >>>>>>> ntp-2.cns.vt.edu >>>>>>> server >>>>>>> ntp-3.cns.vt.edu >>>>>>> server ntp-4.cns.vt.edu >>>>>>> >>>>>> Cut and paste error? They should all look more like: >>>>>> >>>>>> server >>>>>> clock2.redhat.com >>>>>> server >>>>>> ntp-1.cns.vt.edu >>>>>> server >>>>>> ntp-2.cns.vt.edu >>>>>> server >>>>>> ntp-3.cns.vt.edu >>>>>> server ntp-4.cns.vt.edu >>>>>> >>>>> Yes, that is exactly what it looks like before Mozilla Compose >>>>> mutilated them >>>>> in producing "plain text." >>>>> >>>>>> Those domains all resolve, here. But I don't think you're doing >>>>>> yourself any favours by referring to a bunch of NTP servers at the >>>>>> same >>>>>> location. You want a collection of different servers, else you might >>>>>> believe a set of servers to be true, that believe themselves to >>>>>> all be >>>>>> true, when they're not (they might all be referencing themselves). >>>>>> >>>>> Originally I had three different sources within a few hundred miles in >>>>> hope of minimizing delays, some went away over time and the two left >>>>> always >>>>> worked well enough for my purposes. Your suggestion is obviously >>>>> valid. But I still can't see what's happening, since ntpq doesn't >>>>> work even when I >>>>> reduce the list to just the Redhat server. >>>>> >>>>>> I picked a collection that come from different locations: >>>>>> >>>>>> server 0.pool.ntp.org iburst >>>>>> server 1.pool.ntp.org iburst >>>>>> server 2.pool.ntp.org iburst >>>>>> >>>>>> Plus a couple of more local ones, to me (au.pool.ntp.org and my >>>>>> ISP's) >>>>>> >>>>> I can do something similar but first need to fix my problem. >>>>> >>>> Any hints/errors in /var/log/ntp? >>>> >>> I haven't found any such log, locate *log*ntp* produces nothing I >>> recognize as useful? >>> >>> I did find: /usr/bin/ntpstat >>> synchronised to NTP server (198.82.1.203) at stratum 3 >>> time correct to within 79 ms >>> polling server every 512 s >>> >>> Which seems to indicate ntp is working at least but I don't have the >>> convenient data display I am accustomed to. >>> >> >> Why not try using ntpq in interactive mode. Use -i to get to that >> state. Then raise the debug level with "debug more" and try "peers". >> >> Ed >> > This is what I got ; > > ntpq -i > Name or service not known > ntpq> debug more > debug level set to 1 > ntpq> peers > ***No host open, use `host' command > ntpq> host 198.82.1.203 > current host set to 198.82.1.203 > ntpq> peers > 198.82.1.203: timed out, nothing received > ***Request timed out > ntpq> debug more > debug level set to 2 > ntpq> peers > 198.82.1.203: timed out, nothing received > ***Request timed out > ntpq> > > I'm not sure I'm using this right but it seems not matter what I try > ntpq does nothing > and it always worked in the past. At first I thought it might be due to > the round trip transit time > between here and the satellite which probably add a quarter of a > second? But it seems to me that > I've seen some long delays in the ntpq data at times although that's not > typical, normally more like > .160 [s/ms?]. I assume ntpd is running.... Anyway, instead of setting host to 198.82.1.203 set it to 127.0.0.1 and try again. -- There is nothing wrong with abstinence, in moderation. -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list