Amos Shapira wrote:
2010/1/21 SkoZombie <skozom...@kruel.org>:
You've probably done this already, but manually set the time correctly.

Correct, stop the server ("service ntpd stop") then run "ntpdate
server-name" (taking server-name from /etc/ntp.conf), then "service
ntpd start".

You can test status with "ntptrace" and the "peer" command to "ntpq".

--Amos
Probably should've said this in the original post but,

yes, I had stoppped and set the time correctly, 2ce now, and restarted, to no avail.

Also an ntpq -pn shows I am finding servers, but they seem to be out just as much. As best I can tell, it's the /var/lib/ntp/drift file which tells ntp how far out it is.

remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
======================================================
+202.174.101.10 216.218.254.202 2 u 11 64 377 42.044 10.199 4.210 +203.161.129.2 202.83.64.3 3 u 27 64 377 41.393 16.127 5.334 *121.0.0.41 204.152.184.72 2 u 34 64 377 41.631 5.080 6.665 127.127.1.0 .LOCL. 10 l - 64 377 0.000 0.000 0.001


------------------------------------------------------------------------
Kind Regards

Kyle



--
SLUG - Sydney Linux User's Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/
Subscription info and FAQs: http://slug.org.au/faq/mailinglists.html

Reply via email to