Jeff Cranmer wrote: > On Tue, 2012-01-10 at 13:56 +0800, W.Kenworthy wrote: >> Define crashing? >> >> This looks more like problems with yout TZ variables than ntpd. >> >> try "ntpq -p" to check if its actually running/locked. If ntpd is >> freewheeling, it is prpbably because your time is too far from lock so >> it will silently fail (default config). >> >> If ntpd has really crashed (ps aux will confirm), try running the daemon >> manually from a console - if it "segfaults" or comes up with a missing >> library, try "ldd /usr/sbin/ntpd" to find which lib is needed and fix. >> >> BillK >> > ntpd -p returns: > ntpq: read: Connection refused > > /etc/init.d/ntpd status returns: > * status: crashed > > /etc/init.d/ntpd stop returns > * Caching service dependencies > ... > > > [ ok ] > * Stopping ntpd ... > * start-stop-daemon: no matching processes found > > I tried running /usr/sbin/ntpd from a console, and nothing much happens. > There now appears to be a process running for ntpd, but my time is still > wrong. > > ps -aux shows > root 21470 0.0 0.0 26140 1908 ? Ss 07:22 0:00 > /usr/sbin/ntpd > > ntpq -p now returns > remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset > jitter > ============================================================================== > ntp.cox.net .GPS. 1 u 5 64 7 42.229 1800133 > 3.020 > 235-69-67-68.st 130.88.200.6 3 u 4 64 7 47.125 1800132 > 1.457 > clock.team-cymr 172.16.65.22 2 u 3 64 7 50.691 1800132 > 0.905 > sulfur.mednor.n 164.67.62.194 2 u 1 64 7 88.498 1800131 > 2.870 > > After a few minutes, I repeated ntpq -p, and got connection refused. > The program is crashed. No error messages appear in the command window. > > The offset is large, which may be why it's crashing. There may be some > problem setting the hardware clock, since I had an error on bootup > stating that I was unable to set the hardware clock by any method until > I set clock_systohc="NO" > in /etc/conf.d/hwclock (which just prevents it trying to set the > hardware clock). > > hwclock --debug output may be useful: > hwclock from util-linux 2.20.1 > hwclock: Open of /dev/rtc failed: No such file or directory > No usable clock interface found. > hwclock: Cannot access the Hardware Clock via any known method.
No kidding the offset is large. If you just sent this email a few minutes ago. The email's send date is "Tue, 10 Jan 2012 07:33:49 -0500". The mail server which received it logged it as on "Tue, 10 Jan 2012 10:33:53 -0700", which suggests you're about five hours off. Hm. That sounds like your tz (-0500) is being applied twice.