Yes, it looks to me like sntp is a sufficient replacement for ntpdate.

However, sntp is not currently packaged for Debian or Ubuntu:
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=793837

In addition, prior to that bug being introduced, sntp was included in
the 'ntp' package, so sntp could not be installed without installing
ntpd.  It would be useful to be able to install sntp so it can be used
for troubleshooting even when using systemd-timesyncd or chrony or
another ntp daemon.

Could you add sntp back to the build and package it in a separate 'sntp'
package?

** Bug watch added: Debian Bug tracker #793837
   http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=793837

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1577596

Title:
  ntpd not started when using ntpdate

Status in init-system-helpers package in Ubuntu:
  Confirmed
Status in ntp package in Ubuntu:
  Won't Fix

Bug description:
  After updating from 14.04 to 16.04 on a number of my systems, ntpd no
  longer starts at boot on any of those systems.

  `systemctl status ntp` shows:
     ntp.service - LSB: Start NTP daemon
     Loaded: loaded (/etc/init.d/ntp; bad; vendor preset: enabled)
     Active: inactive (dead)
       Docs: man:systemd-sysv-generator(8)
  May 02 19:10:14 host systemd[1]: Stopped LSB: Start NTP daemon.
  May 02 19:10:17 host systemd[1]: Stopped LSB: Start NTP daemon.

  Manually starting it using `systemctl start ntp` works fine.  However,
  systemd does not seem to want to start it automatically at boot time.


  As best as I can tell based on trial and error, there is something
  special about the combination of the service being named "ntp.service"
  and the service depending on network.target.  However, I haven't been
  able to identify exactly what is causing this.

  If I copy the init script to any other name, everything works fine:
  cp /etc/init.d/ntp /etc/init.d/ntpd
  Edit /etc/init.d/ntpd and change "Provides: ntp" to "Provides: ntpd"
  systemctl enable ntpd
  # After a reboot, ntpd.service is started, but ntp.service is not.

  If I remove "$network" from the "# Required-Start: $network $remote_fs
  $syslog" line in /etc/init.d/ntp, then systemd starts it automatically
  ... But of course it is started before the network comes up, so it
  fails.

  If I replace /etc/init.d/ntp with a file containing only the following, 
systemd won't try to start it automatically at boot:
  #!/bin/sh
  ### BEGIN INIT INFO
  # Provides: ntp
  # Required-Start: $network
  # Required-Stop: $network
  # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5
  # Default-Stop: 1
  # Short-Description: Start NTP daemon
  ### END INIT INFO
  echo "script was run" >> /ntp.log

  If I rename that same dummy script to /etc/init.d/ntp2, it is started
  automatically at boot.

  However, grepping the systemd source code and my systemd config files for ntp 
doesn't seem to find anything that might cause this behavior:
  /etc/systemd# grep -iR ntp *
  timesyncd.conf:#NTP=
  timesyncd.conf:#FallbackNTP=ntp.ubuntu.com
  /lib/systemd# grep -R ntp *
  
system/systemd-timesyncd.service.d/disable-with-time-daemon.conf:ConditionFileIsExecutable=!/usr/sbin/ntpd
  
system/systemd-timesyncd.service.d/disable-with-time-daemon.conf:ConditionFileIsExecutable=!/usr/sbin/openntpd
  Binary file systemd-networkd matches
  Binary file systemd-timedated matches
  Binary file systemd-timesyncd matches

  What else can I do to debug this further?

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