ntp_mon(5)ntp_mon(5)NAMEntp_mon - Monitoring Options
ntpd includes a comprehensive monitoring facility suitable for continu‐
ous, long term recording of server and client timekeeping performance.
See the statistics command below for a listing and example of each type
of statistics currently supported. Statistic files are managed using
file generation sets and scripts in the ./scripts directory of this
distribution. Using these facilities and Unix cron jobs, the datacan be
automatically summarized and archived for retrospective analysis.
MONITORING COMMANDS
statistics name [...]
Enables writing of statistics records. Currently, six kinds of
namestatistics are supported.
clockstats
Enables recording of clock driver statistics informa‐
tion. Each update received from a clock driver appends
a line of the following form to the file generation set
named clockstats: 49213 525.624 127.127.4.1 93 226
00:08:29.606 D The first two fields show the date (Mod‐
ified Julian Day) and time (seconds and fraction past
UTC midnight). The next field shows the clock address
in dotted-quad notation, The final field shows the last
timecode received from the clock in decoded ASCII for‐
mat, where meaningful. In some clock drivers a good
deal of additional information can be gathered and dis‐
played as well. See information specific to each clock
for further details.
cryptostats
This option requires the OpenSSL cryptographic software
library. It enables recording of cryptographic public
key protocol information. Each message received by the
protocol module appends a line of the following form to
the file generation set named cryptostats: 49213
525.624 127.127.4.1 message The first two fields show
the date (Modified Julian Day) and time (seconds and
fraction past UTC midnight). The next field shows the
peer address in dotted-quad notation, The final message
field includes the message type and certain ancillary
information. See the Authentication Options page for
further information.
loopstats
Enables recording of loop filter statistics informa‐
tion. Each update of the local clock outputs a line of
the following form to the file generation set named
loopstats: 50935 75440.031 0.000006019 13.778190
0.000351733 0.0133806 The first two fields show the
date (Modified Julian Day) and time (seconds and frac‐
tion past UTC midnight). The next five fields show time
offset (seconds), frequency offset (parts per million -
PPM), RMS jitter (seconds), Allan deviation (PPM) and
clock discipline time constant.
peerstats
Enables recording of peer statistics information. This
includes statistics records of all peers of a NTP
server and of special signals, where present and con‐
figured. Each valid update appends a line of the fol‐
lowing form to the current element of a file generation
set named peerstats:
48773 10847.650 127.127.4.1 9714 -0.001605376 0.000000000
0.001424877 0.000958674
The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian
Day) and time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
The next two fields show the peer address in dotted-
quad notation and status, respectively. The status
field is encoded in hex in the format described in Ap‐
pendix B of the NTP specification RFC 1305. The final
four fields show the offset, delay, dispersion and RMS
jitter, all in seconds.
rawstats
Enables recording of raw-timestamp statistics informa‐
tion. This includes statistics records of all peers of
a NTP server and of special signals, where present and
configured. Each NTP message received from a peer or
clock driver appends a line of the following form to
the file generation set named rawstats:
50928 2132.543 128.4.1.1 128.4.1.20 3102453281.584327000
3102453281.58622800031 02453332.540806000 3102453332.541458000
The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian
Day) and time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
The next two fields show the remote peer or clock
address followed by the local address in dotted-quad
notation, The final four fields show the originate,
receive, transmit and final NTP timestamps in order.
The timestamp values are as received and before pro‐
cessing by the various data smoothing and mitigation
algorithms.
sysstats
Enables recording of ntpd statistics counters on a
periodic basis. Each hour a line of the following form
is appended to the file generation set named sysstats:
50928 2132.543 36000 81965 0 9546 56 71793 512 540 10
147 The first two fields show the date (Modified Julian
Day) and time (seconds and fraction past UTC midnight).
The remaining ten fields show the statistics counter
values accumulated since the last generated line.
Time since restart 36000
Time in hours since the system was last
rebooted.
Packets received 81965
Total number of packets received.
Packets processed 0
Number of packets received in response to pre‐
vious packets sent
Current version 9546
Number of packets matching the current NTP ver‐
sion.
Previous version 56
Number of packets matching the previous NTP
version.
Bad version 71793
Number of packets matching neither NTP version.
Access denied 512
Number of packets denied access for any reason.
Bad length or format 540
Number of packets with invalid length, format
or port number.
Bad authentication 10
Number of packets not verified as authentic.
Rate exceeded 147
Number of packets discarded due to rate limita‐
tion.
statsdir directory_path
Indicates the full path of a directory where statistics
files should be created (see below). This keyword
allows the (otherwise constant) filegen filename prefix
to be modified for file generation sets, which is use‐
ful for handling statistics logs.
filegen name [file filename] [type typename] [link | nolink]
[enable | disable]
Configures setting of generation file set name. Genera‐
tion file sets provide a means for handling files that
are continuously growing during the lifetime of a
server. Server statistics are a typical example for
such files. Generation file sets provide access to a
set of files used to store the actual data. At any time
at most one element of the set is being written to. The
type given specifies when and how data will be directed
to a new element of the set. This way, information
stored in elements of a file set that are currently
unused are available for administrational operations
without the risk of disturbing the operation of ntpd.
(Most important: they can be removed to free space for
new data produced.) Note that this command can be sent
from the ntpdc program running at a remote location.
name This is the type of the statistics records, as
shown in the statistics command.
file filename
This is the file name for the statistics
records. Filenames of set members are built
from three concatenated elements prefix, file‐
name and suffix:
prefix This is a constant filename path. It is
not subject to modifications via the
filegen option. It is defined by the
server, usually specified as a compile-
time constant. It may, however, be con‐
figurable for individual file genera‐
tion sets via other commands. For exam‐
ple, the prefix used with loopstats and
peerstats generation can be configured
using the statsdir option explained
above.
filename
This string is directly concatenated to
the prefix mentioned above (no inter‐
vening / (slash)). This can be modified
using the file argument to the filegen
statement. No .. elements are allowed
in this component to prevent filenames
referring to parts outside the filesys‐
tem hierarchy denoted by prefix.
suffix This part is reflects individual ele‐
ments of a file set. It is generated
according to the type of a file set.
type typename
A file generation set is characterized by its
type. The following types are supported:
none The file set is actually a single plain
file.
pid One element of file set is used per
incarnation of a ntpd server. This type
does not perform any changes to file
set members during runtime, however it
provides an easy way of separating
files belonging to different ntpd
server incarnations. The set member
filename is built by appending a .
(dot) to concatenated prefix and file‐
name strings, and appending the decimal
representation of the process ID of the
ntpd server process.
day One file generation set element is cre‐
ated per day. A day is defined as the
period between 00:00 and 24:00 UTC. The
file set member suffix consists of a .
(dot) and a day specification in the
form YYYYMMdd. YYYY is a 4-digit year
number (e.g., 1992). MM is a two digit
month number. dd is a two digit day
number. Thus, all information written
at 10 December 1992 would end up in a
file named prefix filename.19921210.
week Any file set member contains data
related to a certain week of a year.
The term week is defined by computing
day-of-year modulo 7. Elements of such
a file generation set are distinguished
by appending the following suffix to
the file set filename base: A dot, a
4-digit year number, the letter W, and
a 2-digit week number. For example,
information from January, 10th 1992
would end up in a file with suffix
.1992W1.
month One generation file set element is gen‐
erated per month. The file name suffix
consists of a dot, a 4-digit year num‐
ber, and a 2-digit month.
year One generation file element is gener‐
ated per year. The filename suffix con‐
sists of a dot and a 4 digit year num‐
ber.
age This type of file generation sets
changes to a new element of the file
set every 24 hours of server operation.
The filename suffix consists of a dot,
the letter a, and an 8-digit number.
This number is taken to be the number
of seconds the server is running at the
start of the corresponding 24-hour
period. Information is only written to
a file generation by specifying enable;
output is prevented by specifying dis‐
able.
link | nolink
It is convenient to be able to access the cur‐
rent element of a file generation set by a
fixed name. This feature is enabled by specify‐
ing link and disabled using nolink. If link is
specified, a hard link from the current file
set element to a file without suffix is cre‐
ated. When there is already a file with this
name and the number of links of this file is
one, it is renamed appending a dot, the letter
C, and the pid of the ntpd server process. When
the number of links is greater than one, the
file is unlinked. This allows the current file
to be accessed by a constant name.
enable | disable
Enables or disables the recording function.
SEE ALSOntp.conf(5)
Primary source of documentation: /usr/share/doc/ntp-*
This file was automatically generated from HTML source.
ntp_mon(5)