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NAMEntpq - standard NTP query programSYNOPSISntpq [-46adhinpkwWu] [-c command] [host] [...]DESCRIPTIONThe ntpq utility program is used to monitor NTP daemon ntpd operations and determine performance. It uses the standard NTP mode 6 control message formats defined in Appendix B of the NTPv3 specification RFC 1305. The same formats are used in NTPv4, although some of the variable names have changed, and new ones added. The description on this page is for the NTPv4 variables.The program can be run either in interactive mode or controlled using command line arguments. Requests to read and write arbitrary variables can be assembled, with raw and pretty-printed output options being available. It can also obtain and print a list of peers in a common format by sending multiple queries to the server. If one or more request options are included on the command line when ntpq is executed, each of the requests will be sent to the NTP servers running on each of the hosts given as command line arguments, or on localhost by default. If no request options are given, ntpq will attempt to read commands from the standard input and execute these on the NTP server running on the first host given on the command line, again defaulting to localhost when no other host is specified. ntpq will prompt for commands if the standard input is a terminal device. ntpq uses NTP mode 6 packets to communicate with the NTP server, and hence can be used to query any compatible server on the network which permits it. Note that since NTP is a UDP protocol this communication will be somewhat unreliable, especially over large distances in terms of network topology. ntpq makes one attempt to retransmit requests and will time requests out if the remote host is not heard from within a suitable timeout time. Note that in contexts where a host name is expected, a -4 qualifier preceding the host name forces DNS resolution to the IPv4 namespace, while a -6 qualifier forces DNS resolution to the IPv6 namespace. For examples and usage, see the NTP Debugging <debug.html> Techniques" page. For a simpler near-real-time monitor, see ntpmon(1). OPTIONSCommand line options are described following. Specifying the command line options -c or -p will cause the specified query (queries) to be sent to the indicated host(s) immediately. Otherwise, ntpq will attempt to read interactive format commands from the standard input.-4, --ipv4 Force DNS resolution of following host names on the
command line to the IPv4 namespace.
-6, --ipv6 Force DNS resolution of following host names on the
command line to the IPv6 namespace.
-a num, --authentication=num Enable authentication with the numbered key.
-c cmd, --command=cmd The following argument is interpreted as an interactive
format command and is added to the list of commands to be executed on the
specified host(s). Multiple -c options may be
given.
-d, --debug Increase debugging level by 1.
-D num, --set-debug-level=num The debug level is set to the following integer
argument.
-l filename, --logfile=filename Log debugging output to the specified file.
-h, --help Print a usage message summarizing options end exit.
-n, --numeric Output all host addresses in numeric format rather than
converting to the canonical host names. You may get hostnames anyway for peers
in the initialization phase before DNS has resolved the peer name.
-s, --srcname Output host addresses by: Names passed to ntpd, then
names reverse resolved from addresses and finally, IP addresses
themselves
-S, --srcnumber Output host addresses by: Names passed to ntpd, then IP
addresses themselves
-p, --peers Print a list of the peers known to the server as well as
a summary of their state; this is equivalent to the
peers interactive command. The refid field is as
described under "Event Messages and Status Words" in the NTP
documentation on the Web.
-k filename, --keyfile=filename Specify a keyfile. ntpq will look in this file for the
key specified with -a.
-V, --version Print the version string and exit.
-w, --wide Wide mode: if the host name or IP Address doesn’t
fit, write the full name/address and indent the next line, so columns line up.
The default truncates the name or address.
-W num, --width=num Force the terminal width. Only relevant for composition
of the peers display.
-u, --units Display timing information with units.
INTERNAL COMMANDSInteractive format commands consist of a keyword followed by zero to four arguments. Only enough characters of the full keyword to uniquely identify the command need be typed. The output of a command is normally sent to the standard output, but optionally the output of individual commands may be sent to a file by appending a >, followed by a file name, to the command line. Some interactive format commands are executed entirely within the ntpq program itself and do not result in NTP mode 6 requests being sent to a server. These are described as following.? [command_keyword], help [command_keyword] A ? by itself will print a list
of all the command keywords known to ntpq. A
? followed by a command keyword will print function
and usage information about the command.
addvars name [ = value] [...]; rmvars name [...]; clearvars The arguments to this command consist of a list of items
of the form name = value, where the =
value is ignored and can be omitted in read requests.
ntpq maintains an internal list in which data to be
included in control messages can be assembled and sent using the
readlist and writelist
commands described below. The addvars command allows
variables and optional values to be added to the list. If more than one
variable is to be added, the list should be comma-separated and not contain
white space. The rmvars command can be used to remove
individual variables from the list, while the
clearlist command removes all variables from the
list.
authenticate [yes | no] Normally ntpq does not
authenticate requests unless they are write requests. The command
authenticate yes causes ntpq
to send authentication with all requests it makes. Authenticated requests
causes some servers to handle requests slightly differently. The command
authenticate without arguments causes
ntpq to display whether or not
ntpq is currently authenticating requests.
cooked Display server messages in prettyprint format.
debug more | less | off Turns internal query program debugging on and off.
noflake, +doflake probability Disables or enables the dropping of control packets by
ntpq for testing. Probabilities 0 and 1 should be certainly accepted and
discarded respectively. No default, but 0.1 should be a one in ten loss
rate.
logfile <stderr> | filename Displays or sets the file for debug logging.
<stderr> will send logs to standard error.
delay milliseconds Specify a time interval to be added to timestamps
included in requests which require authentication; this is used to enable
(unreliable) server reconfiguration over long delay network paths or between
machines whose clocks are unsynchronized. The server does not now require
timestamps in authenticated requests so that this command may be
obsolete.
exit Exit ntpq.
host name Set the host to which future queries will be sent. The
name may be either a DNS name or a numeric address.
hostnames [yes | no] If yes is specified, host names
are printed in information displays. If no is
specified, numeric addresses are printed instead. The default is
yes unless modified using the command line
-n switch.
keyid keyid This command specifies the key number to be used to
authenticate configuration requests; this must correspond to a key ID
configured with the controlkey command in the
server’s ntp.conf
keytype Specify the digest algorithm to use for authenticated
requests, with default MD5. The keytype must match
what the server is expecting for the specified key ID.
ntpversion 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 Sets the NTP version number which
ntpq claims in packets. Defaults to 2, Note that mode
6 control messages (and modes, for that matter) didn’t exist in NTP
version 1.
passwd This command prompts for a password to authenticate
requests. The password must match what the server is expecting. Passwords
longer than 20 bytes are assumed to be hex encoding.
quit Exit ntpq.
raw Display server messages as received and without
reformatting. The only formatting/interpretation done on the data is to
transform non-ASCII data into a printable (but barely understandable)
form.
timeout milliseconds Specify a timeout period for responses to server queries.
The default is about 5000 milliseconds. Note that since
ntpq retries each query once after a timeout, the
total waiting time for a timeout will be twice the timeout value set.
units Toggle whether times in the peers display are shown with
units.
version Print the version of the ntpq
program.
CONTROL MESSAGE COMMANDSAssociation IDs are used to identify system, peer and clock variables. System variables are assigned an association ID of zero and system name space, while each association is assigned a nonzero association ID and peer namespace. Most control commands send a single mode 6 message to the server and expect a single response message. The exceptions are the peers command, which sends a series of messages, and the mreadlist and mreadvar commands, which iterate over a range of associations.associations Display a list of mobilized associations in the form
ind assid status conf reach auth condition last_event cnt
authinfo Display the authentication statistics.
clockvar assocID [name [ = value [...] ][...], cv assocID [name [ = value [...] ][...] Display a list of clock variables <#clock>
for those associations supporting a reference clock.
:config [...] Send the remainder of the command line, including
whitespace, to the server as a run-time configuration command in the same
format as the configuration file. This command is experimental until further
notice and clarification. Authentication is of course required.
config-from-file filename Send each line of filename to the server as
run-time configuration commands in the same format as the configuration file.
This command is experimental until further notice and clarification.
Authentication is required.
ifstats Display statistics for each local network address.
Authentication is required.
iostats Display network and reference clock I/O statistics.
kerninfo Display kernel loop and PPS statistics. As with other
ntpq output, times are in milliseconds. The precision value displayed is in
milliseconds as well, unlike the precision system variable.
lassociations Perform the same function as the associations command,
except display mobilized and unmobilized associations.
lpeers [-4 | -6] Print a peer spreadsheet for the appropriate IP
version(s). dstadr (associated with any given IP version).
monstats Display monitor facility statistics.
direct Normally, the mrulist command retrieves an entire MRU
report (possibly consisting of more than one MRU span), sorts it, and presents
the result. But attempting to fetch an entire MRU report may fail on a server
so loaded that none of its MRU entries age out before they are shipped. With
this option, each segment is reported as it arrives.
mrulist [limited | kod | mincount=count | mindrop=drop | minscore=score | maxlstint=seconds | minlstint=seconds | laddr=localaddr | sort=sortorder | resany=hexmask | resall=hexmask | limit=limit | addr.num=address] Obtain and print traffic counts collected and maintained
by the monitor facility. This is useful for tracking who uses or
abuses your server.
Except for sort=sortorder, the options filter the list returned by ntpd. The limited and kod options return only entries representing client addresses from which the last packet received triggered either discarding or a KoD response. the addr.num= option adds specific addresses to retrieve when limit=1. Values of 0 to 15 are supported for num. Also, used internally with last.num=hextime to select the starting point for retrieving continued response. the frags=frags option limits the number of datagrams (fragments) in response. Used by newer ntpq versions instead of limit= when retrieving multiple entries. The limit= option limits the MRU entries returned per response. limit=1 is a special case: Instead of fetching beginning with the supplied starting points (provided by a last.x and addr.x where 0 ⇐ x ⇐ 15, default the beginning of time) newer neighbor, fetch the supplied entries. This enables fetching multiple entries from given IP addresses (provided by addr.x= entries where 0 ⇐ x ⇐ 15). When limit is not one and frags= is provided, the fragment limit controls. NOTE: a single mrulist command may cause many query/response rounds allowing limits as low as 3 to potentially retrieve thousands of entries in responses. The mincount=count option filters out entries that have received less than count packets. The mindrop=drop option filters out entries that have dropped less than drop packets. The minscore=score option filters out entries with a score less than score. The maxlstint=seconds option filters out entries where no packets have arrived within seconds. The minlstint=seconds option filters out entries with a packet has arrived within seconds. The laddr=localaddr option filters out entries for packets received on any local address other than localaddr. resany=hexmask and resall=hexmask filter entries containing none or less than all, respectively, of the bits in hexmask, which must begin with 0x. The sortorder defaults to lstint and may be any of addr, count, avgint, lstint, score, drop or any of those preceded by a minus sign (hyphen) to reverse the sort order. The output columns are:
mreadvar assocID assocID [ variable_name [ = value[ ... ], mrv assocID assocID [ variable_name [ = value[ ... ] Perform the same function as the
readvar command, except for a range of association
IDs. This range is determined from the association list cached by the most
recent associations command.
opeers Obtain and print the old-style list of all peers and
clients showing dstadr (associated with any given IP version), rather
than the refid.
passociations Perform the same function as the
associations command, except that it uses previously
stored data rather than making a new query.
peers Display a list of peers in the form
tally remote refid st t when pool reach delay offset jitter
The tally code is one of the following:
apeers Display a list of peers in the form:
[tally]remote refid assid st t when pool reach delay offset jitter where the output is just like the peers command except that the refid is displayed in hex format and the association number is also displayed. rpeers Display a list of peers in the form
st t when pool reach delay offset jitter refid tally remote pstats assocID Show the statistics for the peer with the given
assocID.
readvar assocID [ name ] [,...], rv assocID [ name ] [,...] Display the specified variables. If
assocID is zero, the variables are from the system
variables <#system> name space, otherwise they are from the peer
variables <#peer> name space. The assocID is
required, as the same name can occur in both spaces. If no
name is included, all operative variables in the name
space are displayed. In this case only, if the assocID
is omitted, it is assumed zero. Multiple names are specified with comma
separators and without whitespace. Note that time values are represented in
milliseconds and frequency values in parts-per-million (PPM). Some NTP
timestamps are represented in the format YYYYMMDDTTTT, where YYYY is the year,
MM the month of the year, DD the day of the month and TTTT the time of
day.
reslist Show the access control (restrict) list for
ntpq.
timerstats Display interval timer counters.
writelist assocID Write the system or peer variables included in the
variable list.
writevar assocID name = value [,...] Write the specified variables. If the
assocID is zero, the variables are from the system
variables <#system> name space, otherwise they are from the peer
variables <#peer> name space. The assocID is
required, as the same name can occur in both spaces.
sysinfo Display operational summary.
sysstats Print statistics counters maintained in the protocol
module. Note that the relationships among these counters can look unlikely
because packets can get flagged for inclusion in exception statistics in more
than one way, for example by having both a bad length and an old
version.
ntsinfo Display a summary of the NTS state, including both the
the NTS client and NTS server components. Note that the format of the output
text may change as this feature is developed. This command is experimental
until further notice and clarification.
AUTHENTICATIONFour commands require authentication to the server: config-from-file, config, ifstats, and reslist. An authkey file must be in place and a control key declared in ntp.conf for these commands to work.If you are running as root or otherwise have read access to the authkey and ntp.conf file, ntpq will mine the required credentials for you. Otherwise, you will be prompted to enter a key ID and password. Credentials once entered, are retained and used for the duration of your ntpq session. STATUS WORDS AND KISS CODESThe current state of the operating program is shown in a set of status words maintained by the system and each association separately. These words are displayed in the rv and as commands both in hexadecimal and decoded short tip strings. The codes, tips, and short explanations are on the Event Messages and Status Words <decode.html> page. The page also includes a list of system and peer messages, the code for the latest of which is included in the status word.Information resulting from protocol machine state transitions is displayed using an informal set of ASCII strings called kiss codes <decode.html#kiss>. The original purpose was for kiss-o'-death (KoD) packets sent by the server to advise the client of an unusual condition. They are now displayed, when appropriate, in the reference identifier field in various billboards. SYSTEM VARIABLESThe following system variables appear in the rv billboard. Not all variables are displayed in some configurations.
The jitter and wander statistics are exponentially-weighted RMS averages. The system jitter is defined in the NTPv4 specification; the clock jitter statistic is computed by the clock discipline module. PEER VARIABLESThe following peer variables appear in the rv billboard for each association. Not all variables are displayed in some configurations.
CLOCK VARIABLESThe following clock variables appear in the cv billboard for each association with a reference clock. Not all variables are displayed in some configurations.
COMPATIBILITYWhen listing refids, addresses of the form 127.127.x.x are no longer automatically interpreted as local refclocks as in older versions of ntpq. Instead, a clock-format display is requested by the NTPsec daemon when appropriate (by setting the srcaddr peer variable). This means that when used to query legacy versions of ntpd, which do not know how to request this, this program will do a slightly wrong thing.In older versions, the type variable associated with a reference clock was a numeric driver type index. It has been replaced by name, a shortname for the driver type. In older versions, no count of control packets was listed under sysstats. The -O (--old-rv) option of legacy versions has been retired. KNOWN LIMITATIONSIt is possible for a ":config unpeer" command to fail silently, yielding "Config Succeeded", if it is given a peer identifier that looks like a driver type name or a hostname not present in the peer list. The error will, however, be reported in the system log.The config command cannot be used to change a server’s default restrictions. Under some circumstances python 2 cannot emit unicode. When true, the display of units is downgraded to non-unicode alternatives. One place a user is likely to encounter this is when diverting output through a pipe. Attempts have been made to force the use of UTF-8, all of which break the command history feature. When using the -u option, very old xterms may fail to render μ correctly. If this happens, be sure your xterm is started with the -u8 option, or the utf8 resource', and that your console font contains the UTF-8 μ character. Also confirm your LANG environment variable is set to a UTF-8 language, like this: "export LANG=en_US.utf8". Timestamp interpretation in this program is likely to fail in flaky ways if the local system clock has not already been approximately synchronized to UTC. Querying a server based in a different NTP era than the current one is especially likely to fail. This program will behave in apparently buggy and only semi-predictable ways when fetching MRU lists from any server with sufficiently high traffic. The problem is fundamental. The Mode 6 protocol can’t ship (and your client cannot accept) MRU records as fast as the daemon accepts incoming traffic. Under these circumstances, the daemon will repeatedly fail to ship an entire report, leading to long hangs as your client repeatedly re-sends the request. Eventually the Mode 6 client library will throw an error indicating that a maximum number of restarts has been exceeded. To avoid this problem, avoid monitoring over links that don’t have enough capacity to handle the monitored server’s entire NTP load. You may be able to retrieve partial data in very high-traffic conditions by using the direct option. EXIT STATUSOne of the following exit values will be returned:0 (EXIT_SUCCESS) Successful program execution.
1 (EXIT_FAILURE) The operation failed or the command syntax was not
valid.
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