On 2/14/2006 6:32 AM Benno Schulenberg wrote:
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
I've tried both zeroing this file and removing it altogether.
Zeroing doesn't work and if I delete it, it never gets recreated.
I've even tried "touch"ing it but it remains empty. After
touching it, I chmod it to ntp:ntp b
Drew Tomlinson wrote:
> I've tried both zeroing this file and removing it altogether.
> Zeroing doesn't work and if I delete it, it never gets recreated.
> I've even tried "touch"ing it but it remains empty. After
> touching it, I chmod it to ntp:ntp but still remains empty.
>From 'man ntpd': "
On 2/13/2006 1:11 PM Nick Rout wrote:
If your system stopped suddenly the ntp.drfit file may have become corrupted.
As I understand it this file has a value in it that tells the system how much
drift there is in the system clock, and uses the figutre to compensate. If the
figure is way out th
If your system stopped suddenly the ntp.drfit file may have become corrupted.
As I understand it this file has a value in it that tells the system how much
drift there is in the system clock, and uses the figutre to compensate. If the
figure is way out then the compensation will be way out.
Ta
I have Gentoo 2.6.13-r5 kernel running and have used ntpd in
broadcastclient mode to keep its time in sync on my home network. The
other day, the system suffered and abrupt shutdown due to a power
outage. Ever since then, the system clock gains about 10 seconds every
5 minutes. Also, I can't
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