Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Script to detect time drift
Operating Systems HP-UX Script to detect time drift Post 303017325 by rbatte1 on Monday 14th of May 2018 07:32:47 AM
Old 05-14-2018
You would have to do this on the client side. If you have a problem with your NTP time server, then treat that as the client and get it to align to another trusted clock, be that a radio-clock or internet address.

You can also use ntpdate -d refer-server to get a time difference from the reference server (which must be offering the NTP service, of course)

if the clock drift is too far, then you would need to step the clock on the local server to match something like this:-
  • Check the offset with - ntpdate -d ref-server
  • Stop the local NTP service in the normal way
  • Step the clock into sync - ntpdate ref-server
  • Start the local service in the normal way
  • Check the offset with - ntpdate -d ref-server

You should see debug information when you use the -d flag and the last line gives you the agreed offset from the reference server or servers (just a space separated list)


If you can't have the NTP client running all the time because your application doesn't like the clock going backwards even by tiny fractions of a second, you would probably need to schedule and idle minute to step the clock each day. You can run ntpdate -d ref-server at any time and just use the last line to show you the current offset from the trusted clock.



I hope that this helps,
Robin
 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

how to detect my script is already running

I have a script which must not be run more than once at any given time. THis script will be scheduled to run every 20 mins as a cron job. In my script can i have logic to say if this script is already running from the previous cron, then exit. How do i go about doing that. If you describe the... (11 Replies)
Discussion started by: rmulchandani
11 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK script to detect webpages from file

Hi guys I'm very new to unix and I have to create an awk script that detects webpage addresses from a file/webpage and outputs how many times each webpage was detected.e.g. if my file was: (Note: The symbol " was added to stop them being created into links) "www.google.com"... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ROFL
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

AWK script to detect webpages from file

Hi guys I'm very new to unix and I have to create an awk script that detects webpage addresses from a file/webpage and outputs how many times each webpage was detected.e.g. if my file was: www.google.com www.facebook.com www.google.com the output should be: www.google.com x2... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ROFL
2 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

Detect if script starts from queue

Dear community, what I'm try to do is deny users to run a script without parameters from command bash, but the same script should run without parameters only from crontab. Example runs by crontab:*/5 * * * * /tmp/script.sh Here the normal execution starts every 5 minutes Example #1 runs by... (16 Replies)
Discussion started by: Lord Spectre
16 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to detect Hanged process in shell script?

I have to check daily 20 processes each day. The names are like Network1 Network2 Network3 ....... Network20. There is built in utility for doing this. Following is the command to check a single network process. check_process_status 1 If we want to check the status of Network2 then the... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: Nakul_sh
6 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

Help with detect with regex and move script

Hi all, I am needing some help with a script that will search for a video file by known extensions and then do a pattern search (I'm guessing via regex) and then based on a match of one type of another move the file to an assigned directory. I would like to do this with either a shell script... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: Simplify
7 Replies

7. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

A script to detect system type

Hi forum, So I am trying to determine the OS type with the following script: #!/usr/bin/sh OStype1=`uname -s` Sunos1=SunOs if then echo "This system is Linux" exit 0 elif then echo "This system is SunOs" exit 0 elif (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: dampio
1 Replies

8. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

Script to detect time drift on server

Hello there, I am not an expert in networking related stuff but I got a requirement to create UNIX script to query our Company's internal time source via NTP for time drift detect and report it when > +/- 50ms. I have been googling a lot but thought to post it in this forum to get a... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Green_Star
1 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

How to detect url in use in a script?

Hello, I have a small script and it runs from web application in below format: pipe:///path_to_myscript.sh url1 url2 url3 myscript.sh: #!/bin/bash count=0 while do count=$((count+1)) exec 3>&1 ((ffmpeg -i $1 ...... -f mpegts pipe:1 2>/dev/null 1>&3 ) 2>&1 | \ while read LINE; do echo... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: baris35
9 Replies
ntpdate(1M)						  System Administration Commands					       ntpdate(1M)

NAME
ntpdate - set the date and time by way of NTP SYNOPSIS
/usr/sbin/ntpdate [-bBdoqsuv] [-a key#] [-e authdelay] [-k keyfile] [-m] [-o version] [-p samples] [-t timeout] [-w] server... DESCRIPTION
The ntpdate utility sets the local date and time. To determine the correct time, it polls the Network Time Protocol (NTP) servers on the hosts given as arguments. This utility must be run as root on the local host. It obtains a number of samples from each of the servers and applies the standard NTP clock filter and selection algorithms to select the best of these. The reliability and precision of ntpdate improve dramatically with a greater number of servers. While a single server may be used, better performance and greater resistance to inaccuracy on the part of any one server can be obtained by providing at least three or four servers, if not more. The ntpdate utility makes time adjustments in one of two ways. If it determines that your clock is off by more than 0.5 seconds it simply steps the time by calling gettimeofday(3C). If the error is less than 0.5 seconds, by default, it slews the clock's time with the offset, by way of a call to adjtime(2). The latter technique is less disruptive and more accurate when the offset is small; it works quite well when ntpdate is run by cron every hour or two. The adjustment made in the latter case is actually 50% larger than the measured offset. This adjustment tends to keep a badly drifting clock more accurate, at some expense to stability. This tradeoff is usually advantageous. At boot time, however, it is usually better to step the time. This can be forced in all cases by specifying the -b option on the command line. The ntpdate utility declines to set the date if an NTP server daemon like xntpd(1M) is running on the same host. It can be run on a regular basis from cron(1M) as an alternative to running a daemon. Doing so once every one to two hours results in precise enough timekeeping to avoid stepping the clock. OPTIONS
The following options are supported: -a key# Authenticate transactions, using the key number, key#. -b Step the time by calling gettimeofday(3C). -B Force the time to always be slewed using the adjtime(2) system call, even if the measured offset is greater than +-128 ms. The default is to step the time using settimeofday(3C) if the offset is greater than +-128 ms. If the offset is much greater than +-128 ms in this case, that it can take a long time (hours) to slew the clock to the correct value. During this time the host should not be used to synchronize clients. -d Display what will be done without actually doing it. Information useful for general debugging is also printed. -e authdelay Specify an authentication processing delay, authdelay in seconds. See xntpd(1M) for details. This number is usually small enough to be negligible for purposes of ntpdate. However, specifying a value may improve timekeeping on very slow CPU's. -k keyfile Read keys from the file keyfile instead of the default file, /etc/inet/ntp.keys. keyfile should be in the format described in xntpd(1M). -m Join multicast group specified in server and synchronize to multicast NTP packets. The standard NTP group is 224.0.1.1. -o version Force the program to poll as a version 1 or version 2 implementation. By default ntpdate claims to be an NTP version 3 implementation in its outgoing packets. However, some older software declines to respond to version 3 queries. This option can be used in these cases. -p samples Set the number of samples ntpdate acquires from each server. samples can be between 1 and 8 inclusive. The default is 4. -q Query only. Do not set the clock. -s Log actions by way of the syslog(3C) facility rather than to the standard output -- a useful option when running the pro- gram from cron(1M). -t timeout Set the time ntpdate spends, waiting for a response. timeout is rounded to a multiple of 0.2 seconds. The default is 1 sec- ond, a value suitable for polling across a LAN. -u Use an unprivileged port to send the packets from. This option is useful when you are behind a firewall that blocks incom- ing traffic to privileged ports, and you want to synchronize with hosts beyond the firewall. The -d option always uses unprivileged ports. -v Be verbose. This option causes ntpdate's version identification string to be logged. -w Wait until able to synchronize with a server. When the -w option is used together with -m, ntpdate waits until able to join the group and synchronize. FILES
/etc/inet/ntp.keys Contains the encryption keys used by ntpdate. ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Availability |SUNWntpu | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
cron(1M), xntpd(1M), adjtime(2), gettimeofday(3C), settimeofday(3C)syslog(3C), attributes(5) NOTES
The technique of compensating for clock oscillator errors to improve accuracy is inadequate. However, to further improve accuracy would require the program to save state from previous runs. SunOS 5.10 29 Sep 1999 ntpdate(1M)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:41 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy