Lowell Gilbert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Freminlins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> Hello, >> >> After a power outaga (Level 3 at Goswell Road, London), all our FreeBSD >> machines came up OK. >> >> Nearly all of them had a problem though with ntpd. I'm guessing that most of >> these machines booted before the the ntp servers came up. What happens is >> that the machine runs two copies of ntpd: >> >> root 337 0.0 0.3 2964 1772 ?? Ss Sun04PM >> 0:24.75/usr/sbin/ntpd -c /etc/ntp.conf -p /var/run/ntpd.pid >> root 427 0.0 0.3 2964 1788 ?? S Sun04PM >> 0:00.76/usr/sbin/ntpd -c /etc/ntp.conf -p /var/run/ntpd.pid >> >> ... and they never sync. The only way to fix this is to kill both ntpds, >> then restart ntpd. >> >> Is there a tidy way round this? It's not much fun logging into 40+ machines >> and killing a restarting a key process. I have no idea why two ntpds are >> running in the first place. The machines that are correct have an identical >> config. > > For what it's worth, I spent a while looking at it, and I can't see > anything that would cause this. Ending up with *no* ntpd running, I > can imaging from various failures, but not two. I suspect I would > need another clue to look in the right place.
Once I tried ntpd on my laptop. The problem is if it couldn't connect to the server when it starts, it will never sync. I found out that it may be the problem within ntpd itself, so I stopped using that. I can't see why you have two copies of ntpd running. But if these client machines booted before the ntp servers, it's never going to sync. -- Xiao-Yong _______________________________________________ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"