On Sun, 26 Jun 2005 16:16:43 -0500
"J.D. Bronson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have several Cisco boxes that need to sync off of this obsd box for NTP
> and they are seeing connection refused.
Cisco works with ntpd.
> I enabled time (udp/tcp) in inetd.conf and gave it a HUP.
This is not how y
On 6/26/05, J.D. Bronson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 04:40 PM 6/26/2005, Jason Crawford wrote:
> >What about trying listen on *? And are you mabye running pf with
> >block-policy return? There are a bunch of reasons why connections
> >might be reset. If listen on * still doesn't work, maybe thi
At 04:40 PM 6/26/2005, Jason Crawford wrote:
What about trying listen on *? And are you mabye running pf with
block-policy return? There are a bunch of reasons why connections
might be reset. If listen on * still doesn't work, maybe think about
filing some sort of bug report, or posting more to t
What about trying listen on *? And are you mabye running pf with
block-policy return? There are a bunch of reasons why connections
might be reset. If listen on * still doesn't work, maybe think about
filing some sort of bug report, or posting more to the list to get the
problem solved, because Open
At 04:29 PM 6/26/2005, Jason Crawford wrote:
By default, OpenNTPd doesn't listen on any port, it just acts as a
client for the local machine only. In order for it to serve time to
other machines on your network, you must uncomment the listen * line
in /etc/ntpd.conf, then send a SIGHUP to ntpd, o
By default, OpenNTPd doesn't listen on any port, it just acts as a
client for the local machine only. In order for it to serve time to
other machines on your network, you must uncomment the listen * line
in /etc/ntpd.conf, then send a SIGHUP to ntpd, or restart it, in order
for it to listen on port
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