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Operating Systems Solaris getting time independent of system time in solaries Post 302331769 by jlliagre on Tuesday 7th of July 2009 06:36:03 AM
Old 07-07-2009
Don't reboot or use NTP time to compute the HRT offset between reboots.
 

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ntptrace(8)						      System Manager's Manual						       ntptrace(8)

NAME
ntptrace - trace a chain of NTP servers back to the primary source SYNOPSIS
ntptrace [ -n ] [ -m maxhosts ] [ server ] DESCRIPTION
ntptrace is a perl script that uses the ntpq utility program to follow the chain of NTP servers from a given host back to the primary time source. For ntptrace to work properly, each of these servers must implement the NTP Control and Monitoring Protocol specified in RFC 1305 and enable NTP Mode 6 packets. If given no arguments, ntptrace 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
-n Turns off the printing of host names; instead, host IP addresses are given. This may be useful if a nameserver is down. BUGS
This program makes no attempt to improve accuracy by doing multiple samples. SEE ALSO
ntpd(8) The official HTML documentation. This file was automatically generated from HTML source. ntptrace(8)
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