note that ntpdate is actually depreciated. and at some point you'll have to run ntpd to set the time (with the -q flag) then run it again. joelja On Thu, 20 May 2004, Randy Bush wrote:
sorry to take you away from discussing spam with an actual tech note, but twice this morning i have hit incidents where much needed ntp clients were blown. so, as i was gonna have to write it up, i figured i would bore you all with it.
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ntp config hint 2004.05.20
ntpd will not work if your clock is off my a few minutes. it just sits there forever with its finger in its ear. so,
at boot, before you start ntpd, use ntpdate to whack your system's time from a friendly low-numbered strat chimer.
do not background ntpdate with -b, because, if it is slow to complete, ntpd can't get the port when you try to start it next in the boot sequence.
if ntpdate takes a minute and thus adds to your boot time, then something is wrong anyway; fix it.
in case your dns resolver is slow, servers are in trouble, etc. have an entry for your ntpdate chimer in /etc/hosts. yes, i too hate /etc/hosts; but i have been bitten without this hack; named is even more fragile than ntpd.
once ntpdate has run, then and only then, start your ntpd. and read all the usual advice on configuration, selection and solicitation of chimers with which to peer, ...
and then, if having accurate time on this host is critical, cron a script which runs `ntpq -c peers` and pipes it to a hack which looks to be sure that one of the chimers has a splat in front of it. run this script hourly, and scream bloody hell via email if it finds problems.
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now back to your regular spam discussion. /*
yes, spam is an important issue. but, if your local organization, this mailing list, ... gets swamped with discussions of spam, then the spammers have won.
you have to compartmentalize it, in your organization and in the general net culture. that's why there are separate mailing lists for spam, ddos, and other net crap with which we have to deal.
that's why we have more than one mailing list in the world, to compartmentalize so we can focus.
*/
randy
-- -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Joel Jaeggli Unix Consulting joelja@darkwing.uoregon.edu GPG Key Fingerprint: 5C6E 0104 BAF0 40B0 5BD3 C38B F000 35AB B67F 56B2