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Date:      Thu, 13 Jul 2006 17:35:24 -0400 (EDT)
From:      Chris Hill <chris@monochrome.org>
To:        Jean-Paul Natola <jnatola@familycareintl.org>
Cc:        Andy Greenwood <greenwood.andy@gmail.com>, "Peter A. Giessel" <pgiessel@mac.com>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   RE: TIME loss
Message-ID:  <20060713172641.Q43814@tripel.monochrome.org>
In-Reply-To: <3A85D7EF44E1C744BF6434691F5659E997548B@www.fcimail.org>
References:  <3A85D7EF44E1C744BF6434691F5659E997548B@www.fcimail.org>

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On Thu, 13 Jul 2006, Jean-Paul Natola wrote:

> But as I mentioned earlier
>
>  ntpd is running , when I do top

...?

Anyway, make sure your drift file exists and is writeable. Mine looks 
like this:

$ ls -l /var/db/ntpd.drift
-rw-r--r--  1 root  wheel  6 Jul 13 17:01 /var/db/ntpd.drift

If it's not there, just
# touch /var/db/ntpd.drift
...and verify permissions. ntpd should be able to take over from there.



Another thing: (assuming you don't want to use ntpdate) ntpd may not 
sync to the time server if the local clock is "very" different from the 
server's clock. To sync the clock on boot, you can add

ntpd_sync_on_start="NO" # Sync time on ntpd startup, even if offset is high

...to /etc/rc.conf.



HTH.

--
Chris Hill               chris@monochrome.org
**                     [ Busy Expunging <|> ]



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