On 2020-01-10 10:57 AM, Per Jessen wrote:
What does "systemctl status ntpd" say?
Jan 10 10:48:56 linux systemd[1]: Starting NTP Server Daemon... Jan 10 10:48:56 linux ntpd[10075]: ntpd 4.2.8p13@1.3847-o (1): Starting Jan 10 10:48:56 linux ntpd[10075]: Command line: /usr/sbin/ntpd -p /var/run/ntp/ntpd.pid -g -u ntp:ntp -c /e> Jan 10 10:48:56 linux ntpd[10076]: proto: precision = 0.046 usec (-24) Jan 10 10:48:56 linux ntpd[10076]: basedate set to 2019-02-27 Jan 10 10:48:56 linux ntpd[10076]: gps base set to 2019-03-03 (week 2043) Jan 10 10:48:56 linux ntpd[10076]: switching logging to file /var/log/ntp Jan 10 10:48:56 linux start-ntpd[10067]: Starting network time protocol daemon (NTPD) Jan 10 10:48:56 linux systemd[1]: Started NTP Server Daemon.
d) your machine is so way out of sync that ntpd won't sync it unless forced. (run ntpdate). # ntpdate 10 Jan 11:03:43 ntpdate[25316]: no servers can be used, exiting
However, NTP is working. I can see the packets with Wireshark. I'm using my firewall as the source. Also, my computer time matches a clock that receives a signal from WWVB. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org