Date: Tue, 12 Oct 2004 15:36:40 +0200 From: Jose M Rodriguez <josemi@freebsd.jazztel.es> To: freebsd-current@freebsd.org Cc: spam maps <spamrefuse@yahoo.com> Subject: Re: 5.3-Beta7 / router & ntpdate: bug in bootup script or sequence? Message-ID: <200410121536.41115.josemi@freebsd.jazztel.es> In-Reply-To: <20041012131652.33782.qmail@web54007.mail.yahoo.com> References: <20041012131652.33782.qmail@web54007.mail.yahoo.com>
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El Martes, 12 de Octubre de 2004 15:16, spam maps escribi=F3: > Hi, > > I have a router configured, which must properly > synchronize time at bootup. For that purpose I > use ntpdate to instantly adjust the time, then > have let ntpd keep syncing time while running. > All info for ntpdate and ntpd comes from > /etc/ntp.conf. > > (ntpd also becomes the server of the local > network, but that's now not so relevant) > > However, there seems to be something really odd > when network access is needed for ntpdate; it > simple cannot, and no time adjustment is done. > > Strangely enough: after bootup I can manually > do the same ntpdate command, and it all works. > > Whatever I tried, nothing seems to help to get > ntpdate do its work at bootup. My guess would > be that there's something wrong with the bootup > scripts or the sequence the scripts are called. > > The full bootup output, rc.conf and ntp.conf > files are here: > > http://cisr.snu.ac.kr/ntpdate.txt > I see this before. You are using named from here. Seems it may have a race condition between named and ntpdate. Try put an external nameserver on /etc/resolv.conf Also, you may try to use only ntpd. If you use this machine often, you=20 don't need ntpdate. Only ntpd. You can check this with ntptrace. =2D- josemi=20
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