Change the time and date
Gene Heskett
gene.heskett at verizon.net
Fri Dec 29 18:26:37 UTC 2006
On Friday 29 December 2006 02:13, Tim wrote:
>eng.waleed:
>>> how can I set the time and the date on FC3 from command line
>
>Brad Bonkoski:
>> man date
>
>An alternative is ntpdate. That'll set your clock according to a
>server, rather than you doing so against your wristwatch. You use it
>with the name of a NTP server (see the man file for it).
>
>e.g. ntpdate pool.ntp.org
>
>NB: It doesn't want to work while you've got an NTP server running on
>the same box. If you have, service ntpd stop, would stop it. You could
>then restart it, afterwards.
Or, in the case of the majority of the ntpd scripts that I've
read through, this will be done by the act of restarting ntpd,
as the script, on startup, first calls ntpdate to crash-set the
clock to somewhere near the right time before ntp actually starts
maintaining it. Therefore, no need to try calling ntpdate, just
"service ntpd restart" the script. A tail -f on the log will then
allow you to watch its performance. However it appears that
recent changes to ntpd have resulted in a quieter utility, so
if one really wants to watch how ntpd is working, this simple
script will show you:
------------
#!/bin/bash
while true
do
sleep 1800 #half an hour, adjust to suit
ntpq -p >>/var/log/ntp.log
echo -n "drift=" >>/var/log/ntp.log
cat /var/lib/ntp/drift >>/var/log/ntp.log
done
end
-----------
Run this, then put a tail -f on /var/log/ntp.log and see this:
remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
==============================================================================
*blackmage.ki.ii 195.111.99.186 2 u 96 128 377 149.365 7.647 0.805
+207-234-157-41. 209.51.161.238 2 u 77 128 377 73.404 5.652 0.776
+dehhs50srv0.oni 130.133.1.10 2 u 64 128 377 164.037 -1.142 2.796
LOCAL(0) .LOCL. 10 l 16 64 377 0.000 0.000 0.001
drift=64.826
remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
==============================================================================
*blackmage.ki.ii 195.111.96.158 2 u 99 128 377 150.000 7.268 0.800
+207-234-157-41. 209.51.161.238 2 u 76 128 377 73.964 5.036 0.476
+dehhs50srv0.oni 192.53.103.108 2 u 70 128 377 165.476 1.806 1.547
LOCAL(0) .LOCL. 10 l 9 64 377 0.000 0.000 0.001
drift=64.826
remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
==============================================================================
*blackmage.ki.ii 195.111.99.186 2 u 239 256 377 149.356 4.715 0.744
+207-234-157-41. 209.51.161.238 2 u 215 256 377 74.092 3.867 0.805
+dehhs50srv0.oni 194.25.115.122 2 u 207 256 377 165.900 4.364 3.891
LOCAL(0) .LOCL. 10 l 56 64 377 0.000 0.000 0.001
drift=65.190
Of course, once one is happy with the timekeeping, all this can be ignored.
The timing figures shown are I believe, in milliseconds. Needless
to say, I set my watches and clocks from the computer around here. :)
--
Cheers, Gene
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author)
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message by Gene Heskett are:
Copyright 2006 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.
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