NAME¶
htpdate - Time synchronization (daemon)
SYNOPSIS¶
htpdate [-046abdhlqstxD] [-i pid file] [-m minpoll] [-M maxpoll] [-p
precision] [-P <proxyserver>[:port]] [-u user[:group]]
<host[:port]> ...
DESCRIPTION¶
The HTTP Time Protocol (HTP) is used to synchronize a computer's time with web
servers as reference time source. Htp will synchronize your computer's time to
Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) via HTTP headers from web servers. The htpdate
package includes a program for retrieving the date and time from remote
machines via a network. Htpdate works through proxy servers. Accuracy of
htpdate will be usually within 0.5 seconds (better with multiple servers). If
this is not good enough for you, try the ntpd package.
OPTIONS¶
- -0
- HTTP/1.0 request (default is HTTP/1.1).
- -4
- Force IPv4 name resolution only. Default behaviour is to
try IPv6 first and fall back to IPv4.
- -6
- Force IPv6 name resolution only.
- -a
- Adjust time smoothly (default in daemon mode).
- -b
- Burst mode uses multiple polls for each web server to
enhance accuracy.
- -d
- Turn debug on. Shows the "raw" timestamp, round
trip time, time delta and and basic statistics of web server responses.
Useful to determining the quality of a specific web server as time
source.
- -h
- Show help.
- -i
- Set the pid file (default /var/run/htpdate.pid).
- -l
- Use syslog for output (levels LOG_WARNING and LOG_INFO).
Convenient if you use htpdate from cron.
- -m -M
- These options specify the minimum (-m) and maximum (-M)
polling intervals for HTP requests, in seconds. The default range is
between 30 minutes and 32 hours. Htpdate calculates the optimal polling
frequency between minimum and maximum values. Only applicable when running
in daemon mode.
- -p
- Precision (in milliseconds) specifies the operating
accuracy of htpdate. Internally htpdate uses a different algorithm to
detect a time offset, when precision is specified. Precision only has
effect in daemon mode. Use with causion.
- -q
- Query web server and display time, but do not change time
(default in interactive mode).
- -s
- Set time immediate. In daemon mode -s only applies the
first poll.
- -t
- Turn off sanity time check. By default a time offset larger
than a year, compared to current localtime, is rejected. With -t set, any
time stamp will be accepted.
- -u
- Set the user and group that the server normally runs at
(default is root).
- -x
- Let htpdate compensate for the systematisch clock
drift.
- -D
- Run as daemon (requires root privileges).
- -P
- Proxy server hostname or ip-address.
- host
- Web server hostname or ip-address. Upto 16 hosts may be
specified, but in general 3 to 5 hosts should be enough for a redundant
and accurate setup.
- port
- Portnumber (default 80 and 8080 for proxy server)
EXAMPLES¶
Request time from web server (don't update local clock):
htpdate -q www.linux.org www.freebsd.org
Verbose output (don't update local clock):
htpdate -d -q www.linux.org www.freebsd.org
Adjust time smoothly and log output to syslog (eg. cron):
htpdate -a -l www.linux.org www.freebsd.org
HTTP/1.0 request in IPv6 literal format (RFC 2732):
htpdate -0 [2001:DB8:1af6::123]:80
Run htpdate as daemon:
htpdate -D www.linux.org www.freebsd.org
Daemon mode for the security minded:
htpdate -D -u nobody:nogroup www.linux.org www.freebsd.org
AUTHOR¶
Eddy Vervest <eddy@vervest.org>,
http://www.vervest.org/htp
SEE ALSO¶
rdate, timed, ntpd, adjtimex, ntp_adjtime,
HTP implementation by Roy Keene (
http://www.rkeene.org/oss/htp/)