* David Walker <[email protected]> [2009-10-29 16:02]:
> Bonjour.
> 
> I have one of those little box peecees - no battery = no clock.
> Regardless, I wish to use OpenNTPD to organize time.
> My ISP kindly provides an ntp server.
> 
> # uname -rsv
> OpenBSD 4.6 GENERIC#58
> 
> During boot I see this:
> starting network
> add net default: gateway 0.0.0.1
> starting system logger
> starting initial daemons: ntpd.
> 
> This sits there for maybe ten seconds and continues booting.
> Finally I see this (example):
> Mon Jul 13 10:23:29 CST 2009
> OpenBSD/i386 (myname.my.domain) (tty00)
> login:
> 
> The clock is using the time from the previous shutdown/reboot (and
> originally from the "timestamp" on the 4.6 install files).
> The only change appears to be from elapsed "uptime".

it didn't receive a reply from any of your configured ntp servers in
those 10 seconds and gave up on the initial stepping. what should ntpd
do? sit there forever?

-- 
Henning Brauer, [email protected], [email protected]
BS Web Services, http://bsws.de
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