Over time, a computer's clock is prone to drift. The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is one way to ensure your clock stays accurate.
Many Internet services rely on, or greatly benefit from, computers' clocks being accurate. For example, a web server may receive requests to send a file if it has been modified since a certain time. In a local area network environment, it is essential that computers sharing files from the same file server have synchronized clocks so that file timestamps stay consistent. Services such as cron(8) also rely on an accurate system clock to run commands at the specified times.
FreeBSD ships with the ntpd(8) NTP server which can be used to query other NTP servers to set the clock on your machine or provide time services to others.
In order to synchronize your clock, you will need to find one or more NTP servers to use. Your network administrator or ISP may have set up an NTP server for this purpose—check their documentation to see if this is the case. There is an online list of publicly accessible NTP servers which you can use to find an NTP server near to you. Make sure you are aware of the policy for any servers you choose, and ask for permission if required.
Choosing several unconnected NTP servers is a good idea in case one of the servers you are using becomes unreachable or its clock is unreliable. ntpd(8) uses the responses it receives from other servers intelligently—it will favor unreliable servers less than reliable ones.
If you only wish to synchronize your clock when the machine boots up, you can use ntpdate(8). This may be appropriate for some desktop machines which are frequently rebooted and only require infrequent synchronization, but most machines should run ntpd(8).
Using ntpdate(8) at boot time is also a good idea for machines that run ntpd(8). The ntpd(8) program changes the clock gradually, whereas ntpdate(8) sets the clock, no matter how great the difference between a machine's current clock setting and the correct time.
To enable ntpdate(8) at boot
time, add ntpdate_enable="YES" to /etc/rc.conf. You will also need to specify all servers you
wish to synchronize with and any flags to be passed to ntpdate(8) in
ntpdate_flags
.
NTP is configured by the /etc/ntp.conf file in the format described in ntp.conf(5). Here is a simple example:
server ntplocal.example.com prefer server timeserver.example.org server ntp2a.example.net driftfile /var/db/ntp.drift
The server option specifies which servers are to be used, with one server listed on each line. If a server is specified with the prefer argument, as with ntplocal.example.com, that server is preferred over other servers. A response from a preferred server will be discarded if it differs significantly from other servers' responses, otherwise it will be used without any consideration to other responses. The prefer argument is normally used for NTP servers that are known to be highly accurate, such as those with special time monitoring hardware.
The driftfile option specifies which file is used to store the system clock's frequency offset. The ntpd(8) program uses this to automatically compensate for the clock's natural drift, allowing it to maintain a reasonably correct setting even if it is cut off from all external time sources for a period of time.
The driftfile option specifies which file is used to store information about previous responses from the NTP servers you are using. This file contains internal information for NTP. It should not be modified by any other process.
By default, your NTP server will be accessible to all hosts on the Internet. The restrict option in /etc/ntp.conf allows you to control which machines can access your server.
If you want to deny all machines from accessing your NTP server, add the following line to /etc/ntp.conf:
restrict default ignore
Note: This will also prevent access from your server to any servers listed in your local configuration. If you need to synchronise your NTP server with an external NTP server you should allow the specific server. See the ntp.conf(5) manual for more information.
If you only want to allow machines within your own network to synchronize their clocks with your server, but ensure they are not allowed to configure the server or used as peers to synchronize against, add
restrict 192.168.1.0 mask 255.255.255.0 nomodify notrap
instead, where 192.168.1.0 is an IP address on your network and 255.255.255.0 is your network's netmask.
/etc/ntp.conf can contain multiple restrict options. For more details, see the Access Control Support subsection of ntp.conf(5).
To ensure the NTP server is started at boot time, add the line ntpd_enable="YES" to /etc/rc.conf. If
you wish to pass additional flags to ntpd(8), edit the
ntpd_flags
parameter in /etc/rc.conf.
To start the server without rebooting your machine, run ntpd being sure to specify any additional parameters from ntpd_flags
in /etc/rc.conf. For
example:
# ntpd -p /var/run/ntpd.pid
The ntpd(8) program does not need a permanent connection to the Internet to function properly. However, if you have a temporary connection that is configured to dial out on demand, it is a good idea to prevent NTP traffic from triggering a dial out or keeping the connection alive. If you are using user PPP, you can use filter directives in /etc/ppp/ppp.conf. For example:
set filter dial 0 deny udp src eq 123 # Prevent NTP traffic from initiating dial out set filter dial 1 permit 0 0 set filter alive 0 deny udp src eq 123 # Prevent incoming NTP traffic from keeping the connection open set filter alive 1 deny udp dst eq 123 # Prevent outgoing NTP traffic from keeping the connection open set filter alive 2 permit 0/0 0/0
For more details see the PACKET FILTERING section in ppp(8) and the examples in /usr/share/examples/ppp/.
Note: Some Internet access providers block low-numbered ports, preventing NTP from functioning since replies never reach your machine.
Documentation for the NTP server can be found in /usr/share/doc/ntp/ in HTML format.