On Wednesday 26 May 2004 09:28 am, Gary Stainburn wrote: > On Wednesday 26 May 2004 1:57 pm, Hamilton, Andrew wrote: > > Normally, you would need to modify your ntp.conf file to point to the > > right server or to make it a server or a peer(which is both a client and > > a server). I think by default it uses the machines undisciplined local > > clock which is really a last resort. I generally put a few(maybe 3 or 4) > > servers in my ntp.conf and then let ntp figure out which one to use. It > > typically will pick the one with the best response time. ntpd can be > > both a client and a server and do both at the same time. It can also > > broadcast and multicast for those machines on the same subnet, which is > > cool because you get less traffic. Once you put a few servers in there > > then restart you can do "/usr/sbin/ntpq -p" and get which one it prefers. > > > > Drew > > Thanks for this Drew, > > Do you have an example ntp.conf that I could have a look at. Also, could > you explain about the authenticatin and the /etc/ntp/keys file. Do I need > to know about this if all I want to do is have one box sync to a remote box > and then have local boxes sync to that. All I did when I set that up here was using: redhat-config-time GUI. The first box, I put the name of NTP server outside. Then I did the same for the other boxen in the LAN, only this time I use the name of the first box in the NTP server field. RDB -- Reuben D. Budiardja Department of Physics and Astronomy The University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN --------------------------------------------------------- "To be a nemesis, you have to actively try to destroy something, don't you? Really, I'm not out to destroy Microsoft. That will just be a completely unintentional side effect." - Linus Torvalds - -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list