ntptrace - trace a chain of NTP servers back to the primary source

Last update: May 4, 2022 17:05 UTC (dbea9b7d4)

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from Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll

The rabbit knows the way back.


Table of Contents


Synopsis

ntptrace [ -vdn ] [ -r retries ] [ -t timeout ] [ server ]


Description

ntptrace determines where a given Network Time Protocol (NTP) server gets its time from, and follows the chain of NTP servers back to their master time source. If given no arguments, it starts with localhost. Here is an example of the output from ntptrace:

% ntptrace
localhost: stratum 4, offset 0.0019529, synch distance 0.144135
server2ozo.com: stratum 2, offset 0.0124263, synch distance 0.115784
usndh.edu: stratum 1, offset 0.0019298, synch distance 0.011993, refid 'WWVB'

On each line, the fields are (left to right): the host name, the host stratum, the time offset between that host and the local host (as measured by ntptrace; this is why it is not always zero for localhost), the host synchronization distance, and (only for stratum-1 servers) the reference clock ID. All times are given in seconds. Note that the stratum is the server hop count to the primary source, while the synchronization distance is the estimated error relative to the primary source. These terms are precisely defined in RFC-1305.


Options

-d

Turns on some debugging output.

-n

Turns off the printing of host names; instead, host IP addresses are given. This may be useful if a nameserver is down.

-r retries

Sets the number of retransmission attempts for each host (default = 5).

-t timeout

Sets the retransmission timeout (in seconds) (default = 2).

-v

Prints verbose information about the NTP servers.


Bugs

This program makes no attempt to improve accuracy by doing multiple samples.