ntp.conf revision 1.12
1# $NetBSD: ntp.conf,v 1.12 2011/07/28 22:28:07 simonb Exp $ 2# 3# NetBSD default Network Time Protocol (NTP) configuration file for ntpd 4 5# This file is intended to be both a usable default, and a Quick-Start 6# Guide. The directives and options listed here are not at all complete. 7# A great deal of additional documentation, including links to FAQS and 8# other guides, may be found on the official NTP web site, in particular 9# 10# http://www.ntp.org/documentation.html 11# 12 13# Process ID file, so that the daemon can be signalled from scripts 14 15pidfile /var/run/ntpd.pid 16 17# The correction calculated by ntpd(8) for the local system clock's 18# drift is stored here. 19 20driftfile /var/db/ntp.drift 21 22# Suppress the syslog(3) message for each peer synchronization change. 23 24logconfig -syncstatus 25 26# This will help minimize disruptions due to network congestion. Don't 27# do this if you configure only one server! 28 29tos minsane 2 30 31# Set the number of tries to register with mdns. 0 means never 32# 33mdnstries 0 34 35# Hereafter should be "server" or "peer" statements to configure other 36# hosts to exchange NTP packets with. Peers should be selected in such 37# a way that the network path to them is symmetric (that is, the series 38# of links and routers used to get to the peer is the same one that the 39# peer uses to get back. NTP assumes such symmetry in its network delay 40# calculation. NTP will apply an incorrect adjustment to timestamps 41# received from the peer if the path is not symmetric. This can result 42# in clock skew (your system clock being maintained consistently wrong 43# by a certain amount). 44# 45# The best way to select symmetric peers is to make sure that the 46# network path to them is as short as possible (this reduces the chance 47# that there is more than one network path between you and your peer). 48# You can measure these distances with the traceroute(8) program. The 49# best place to start looking for NTP peers for your system is within 50# your own network, or at your Internet Service Provider (ISP). 51# 52# Ideally, you should select at least three other systems to talk NTP 53# with, for an "what I tell you three times is true" effect. 54# 55 56#peer an.ntp.peer.goes.here 57#server an.ntp.server.goes.here 58 59# Public servers from the pool.ntp.org project. Volunteer's servers 60# are dynamically assigned to the CNAMES below via DNS round-robin. 61# The pool.ntp.org project needs more volunteers! The only criteria to 62# join are a nailed-up connection and a static IP address. For details, 63# see the web page: 64# 65# http://www.pool.ntp.org/ 66# 67 68# The country codes can help you find servers that are net-wise close. 69# As explained above, closer is better... 70 71# Northern U.S.A 72#server ca.pool.ntp.org 73#server 0.us.pool.ntp.org 74#server 1.us.pool.ntp.org 75 76# Northern Europe 77#server 0.de.pool.ntp.org 78#server 1.de.pool.ntp.org 79#server dk.pool.ntp.org 80 81# Depending on the vagaries of DNS can occasionally pull in the same 82# server twice. The following CNAMES are guaranteed to be disjoint, at 83# least over some short interval. 84 85server 0.pool.ntp.org 86server 1.pool.ntp.org 87server 2.pool.ntp.org 88