On 13/01/2020 10.53, Per Jessen wrote:
Carlos E. R. wrote:
both are on the lan, and each one has the one as peer. And they get listed:
Isengard:~ # ntpq -p remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
==============================================================================
LOCAL(0) .LOCL. 10 l 30d 64 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
#Telcontar.valin 85.199.*.* 2 u 1043 1024 377 0.298 -3.923 0.855
cer@Telcontar:~> ntpq -p remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
==============================================================================
LOCAL(0) .LOCL. 10 l 7h 64 0 0.000 0.000 0.000
- -Isengard.valino 194.80.*.* 2 u 308 1024 377 0.315 3.890 0.260
Just wondering - here you _do_ have a local unsynched refclock defined. Earlier I thought you said you didn't want that.
The entry is there, of course, it is a default. But I do not want it actually used. The result is the same if the daemon bails out or if it uses the internal clock: a bad clock.
Also, those two systems are not synchronized ? (or did you snip the output?)
Snipped, of course.
Can someone outside query me? Perhaps 0.opensuse.pool.ntp.org? No, they would bang on my firewall. Both on the router firewall and my machine firewall, IIRC.
Not unless you have port forwarding enabled for 123/udp in your NAT setup.
Right. I don't even know if they try, though. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.1 x86_64 at Telcontar)