H3C S5500-SI Series Ethernet Switches Command Manual(V1.01)

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25-NTP Commands
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25-NTP Commands 114 KB

Chapter 1  NTP Configuration Commands

 

&  Note:

The local clock of an S5500-SI Ethernet switch cannot be set as a reference clock. It can serve as a reference clock source to synchronize the clock of other devices only after it is synchronized.

 

1.1  NTP Configuration Commands

1.1.1  display ntp-service sessions

Syntax

display ntp-service sessions [ verbose ]

View

Any view

Parameters

verbose: Displays the detailed information of all NTP sessions.

Description

Use the display ntp-service sessions command to view the information of all NTP sessions. Without the verbose keyword, this command will display only the brief information of all NTP service sessions.

Examples

# View the brief information of NTP service sessions.

<Sysname> display ntp-service sessions

       source          reference       stra reach poll  now offset  delay disper

**************************************************************************

[12345]192.168.0.28    127.127.1.0        2     1   64    1   31.1    9.0    0.0

note: 1 source(master),2 source(peer),3 selected,4 candidate,5 configured

Total associations :  1

Table 1-1 Description on the fields of the display ntp-service sessions command

Field

Description

source

IP address of the clock source

reference

Reference clock ID of the clock source

1)        If the reference clock is the local clock, the value of this field is related to the value of the stra field:

l       When the value of the stra field is 0 or 1, this field will be “LOCL”;

l      When the stra field has another value, this filed will be the IP address of the local clock

2)        If the reference clock is the clock of another device on the network, the value of this field will be the IP address of that device.

stra

Stratum level of the clock source

reach

Reachability count of the clock source. 0 indicates that the clock source in unreachable

poll

Poll interval, namely the maximum interval between successive NTP messages.

now

The length of time in minutes from when the last NTP message was received or when the local clock was last updated to the current time

The time is in second by default. If the time length is greater than 2048 seconds, it is displayed in minute; if greater than 300 minutes, in hour; if greater than 96 hours, in day.

offset

The offset of the system clock relative to the reference clock, in milliseconds

delay

the roundtrip delay from the local device to the clock source, in milliseconds

disper

The maximum error of the system clock relative to the reference source.

[12345]

1: Clock source selected by the system, namely the current reference source, with a system clock stratum level of 15

2: Stratum level of this system source is 15

3: This clock source has passed the clock selection process

4: This clock source is a candidate clock source

5: This clock source was created by a configuration command

Total associations

Total number of associations

 

&  Note:

When a device is working in the NTP broadcast/multicast server mode, the display ntp-service sessions command executed on the device will not display the NTP session information corresponding to the broadcast/multicast server, but the sessions will be counted in the total number of associations.

 

1.1.2  display ntp-service status

Syntax

display ntp-service status

View

Any view

Parameters

None

Description

Use the display ntp-service status command to view the NTP service status information.

Examples

# View the NTP service status information.

<Sysname> display ntp-service status

Clock status: unsynchronized

 Clock stratum: 16

 Reference clock ID: none

 Nominal frequency: 100.0000 Hz

 Actual frequency: 100.0000 Hz

 Clock precision: 2^18

 Clock offset: 0.0000 ms

 Root delay: 0.00 ms

 Root dispersion: 0.00 ms

 Peer dispersion: 0.00 ms

 Reference time: 00:00:00.000 UTC Jan 1 1900(00000000.00000000)

Table 1-2 Description on the fields of the display ntp-service status command

Field

Description

Clock status

Status of the system clock

Clock stratum

Stratum level of the local clock

Reference clock ID

After the system clock is synchronized to a remote time server or a local reference source, this field indicates the address of the remote time server or the identifier of the local clock source:

l      When the local clock has a stratum level of 1, the value of this field is “LOCL”;

l      When the local clock has another value, the value of this filed is the IP address of the local clock).

Nominal frequency

The nominal frequency of the local system hardware clock

Actual frequency

The actual frequency of the local system hardware clock

Clock precision

The precision of the system clock

Clock offset

The offset of the system clock relative to the reference source

Root delay

The roundtrip delay from the local device to the primary reference source

Root dispersion

The maximum error of the system clock relative to the primary reference source

Peer dispersion

The maximum error of the system clock relative to the reference source

Reference time

Reference timestamp

 

1.1.2  display ntp-service trace

Syntax

display ntp-service trace

View

Any view

Parameters

None

Description

Use the display ntp-service trace command view the brief information of each NTP server along the NTP server chain from the local device back to the primary reference source.

The display ntp-service trace command is available only if the local device can ping through all the devices on the NTP server chain; otherwise, this command will fail to display all the NTP servers on the NTP chain due to timeout.

Examples

# View the brief information of each NTP server from the local device back to the primary reference source.

<Sysname> display ntp-service trace

 server 127.0.0.1,stratum 2, offset -0.013500, synch distance 0.03154

 server 133.1.1.1,stratum 1, offset -0.506500, synch distance 0.03429

 refid LOCL

The information above shows an NTP server chain for the server 127.0.0.1: The server 127.0.0.1 is synchronized to the server 133.1.1.1, and the server 133.1.1.1 is synchronized to the local clock source.

Table 1-2 Description on the fields of the display ntp-service trace command

Field

Description

server

IP address of the NTP server

stratum

The stratum level of the corresponding system clock

offset

The clock offset relative to the upper-level clock

synch distance

The synchronization distance relative to the upper-level clock

refid

Identifier of the primary reference source. When the stratum level of the primary reference clock is 0, it is displayed as LOCL; otherwise, it is displayed as the IP address of the primary reference clock.

 

1.1.3  ntp-service access

Syntax

ntp-service access { peer | query | server | synchronization } acl-number

undo ntp-service access { peer | query | server | synchronization }

View

System view

Parameters

peer: Specifies to permit full access.

query: Specifies to permit control query.

server: Specifies to permit server access and query.

synchronization: Specifies to permit server access only.

acl-number: Basic ACL number, in the range of 2000 to 2999

Description

Use the ntp-service access command to configure the NTP service access-control right to the local device.

Use the undo ntp-service access command to remove the configured NTP service access-control right to the local device.

By default, the local NTP service access-control right is set to peer.

From the highest NTP service access-control right to the lowest one are peer, server, synchronization, and query. When a device receives an NTP request, it will perform an access-control right match and will use the first matched right.

 

&  Note:

l      The ntp-service access command provides only a minimum degree of security protection. A more secure method is identity authentication.

l      Before specifying an ACL number in the ntp-service access command, make sure you have already created and configured this ACL.

 

Examples

# Configure devices on the subnet 10.10.0.0/16 to have the full access right to the local device.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] acl number 2001

[Sysname-acl-basic-2001] rule permit source 10.10.0.0 0.0.255.255

[Sysname-acl-basic-2001] quit

[Sysname] ntp-service access peer 2001

1.1.4  ntp-service authentication enable

Syntax

ntp-service authentication enable

undo ntp-service authentication enable

View

System view

Parameters

None

Description

Use the ntp-service authentication enable command to enable NTP authentication.

Use the undo ntp-service authentication enable command to disable NTP authentication.

By default, NTP authentication is disabled.

Examples

# Enable NTP authentication.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service authentication enable

1.1.5  ntp-service authentication-keyid

Syntax

ntp-service authentication-keyid keyid authentication-mode md5 value

undo ntp-service authentication-keyid keyid

View

System view

Parameters

keyid: Authentication key ID, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

authentication-mode md5 value: Specifies to use the MD5 algorithm for key authentication, where value represents authentication key and is a string of 1 to 32 characters.

Description

Use the ntp-service authentication-keyid command to set the NTP authentication key.

Use the undo ntp-service authentication-keyid command to remove the set NTP authentication key.

By default, no NTP authentication key is set.

 

  Caution:

l      Presently the system supports only the MD5 algorithm for key authentication.

l      You can set a maximum of 1,024 keys for each device.

l      If an NTP authentication key is specified as a trusted key, the key automatically changes to not trusted after you delete the key. In this case, you do not need to execute the undo ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid command.

 

Examples

# Set an MD5 authentication key, with the key ID of 10 and key value of BetterKey.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service authentication-keyid 10 authentication-mode md5 BetterKey

1.1.6  ntp-service broadcast-client

Syntax

ntp-service broadcast-client

undo ntp-service broadcast-client

View

VLAN interface view

Parameters

None

Description

Use the ntp-service broadcast-client command to configure the device to work in the NTP broadcast client mode.

Use the undo ntp-service broadcast-client command to remove the device as an NTP broadcast client.

Examples

# Configure the device to work in the broadcast client mode and receive NTP broadcast messages on VLAN-interface 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface1] ntp-service broadcast-client

1.1.7  ntp-service broadcast-server

Syntax

ntp-service broadcast-server [ authentication-keyid keyid | version number ] *

undo ntp-service broadcast-server

View

VLAN interface view

Parameters

authentication-keyid keyid: Specifies the key ID to be used for sending broadcast messages to broadcast clients, where keyid is in the range of 1 to 4294967295. This parameter is not meaningful if authentication is not required.

version number: Specifies the NTP version, where number is in the range of 1 to 3 and defaults to 3.

Description

Use the ntp-service broadcast-server command to configure the device to work in the NTP broadcast server mode.

Use the undo ntp-service broadcast-server command to remove the device as an NTP broadcast server.

Examples

# Configure the device to work in the broadcast server mode and send NTP broadcast messages on VLAN-interface 1, using key 4 for encryption, and set the NTP version to 3.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface1] ntp-service broadcast-server authentication-keyid 4 version 3

1.1.8  ntp-service in-interface disable

Syntax

ntp-service in-interface disable

undo ntp-service in-interface disable

View

VLAN interface view

Parameters

None

Description

Use the ntp-service in-interface disable command to disable an interface from receiving NTP messages.

Use the undo ntp-service in-interface disable command to restore the default.

By default, all interfaces are enabled to receive NTP messages.

Examples

# Disable VLAN-interface 1 from receiving NTP messages.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface1] ntp-service in-interface disable

1.1.9  ntp-service max-dynamic-sessions

Syntax

ntp-service max-dynamic-sessions number

undo ntp-service max-dynamic-sessions

View

System view

Parameters

number: Maximum number of dynamic NTP sessions that allowed to be established, in the range of 0 to 100.

Description

Use the ntp-service max-dynamic-sessions command to set the maximum number of dynamic NTP sessions that allowed to be established locally.

Use the undo ntp-service max-dynamic-sessions command to restore the maximum number of dynamic NTP sessions to the system default.

By default, the number is 100.

Examples

# Set the maximum number of dynamic NTP sessions allowed to be established to 50.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service max-dynamic-sessions 50

1.1.10  ntp-service multicast-client

Syntax

ntp-service multicast-client [ ip-address ]

undo ntp-service multicast-client [ ip-address ]

View

VLAN interface view

Parameters

ip-address: Multicast IP address, defaulting to 224.0.1.1. The value ranges from 224.0.1.0 to 224.0.1.255.

Description

Use the ntp-service multicast-client command to configure the device to work in the NTP multicast client mode.

Use the undo ntp-service multicast-client command to remove the device as an NTP multicast client.

Examples

# Configure the device to work in the multicast client mode and receive NTP multicast messages on VLAN 1, and set the multicast address to 224.0.1.1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface1] ntp-service multicast-client 224.0.1.1

1.1.11  ntp-service multicast-server

Syntax

ntp-service multicast-server [ ip-address ] [ authentication-keyid keyid | ttl ttl-number | version number ] *

undo ntp-service multicast-server [ ip-address ]

View

VLAN interface view

Parameters

ip-address: Multicast IP address, defaulting to 224.0.1.1. The value ranges from 224.0.1.0 to 224.0.1.255.

authentication-keyid keyid: Specifies the key ID to be used for sending multicast messages to multicast clients, where keyid is in the range of 1 to 4294967295. This parameter is not meaningful if authentication is not required.

ttl ttl-number: Specifies the TTL of NTP multicast messages, where ttl-number is in the range of 1 to 255 and defaults to 16.

version number: Specifies the NTP version, where number is in the range of 1 to 3 and defaults to 3.

Description

Use the ntp-service multicast-server command to configure the device to work in the NTP multicast server mode.

Use the undo ntp-service multicast-server command to remove the device as an NTP multicast server.

Examples

# Configure the device to work in the multicast server mode and send NTP multicast messages on VLAN-interface 1 to the multicast address 224.0.1.1, using key 4 for encryption, and set the NTP version to 3.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] interface vlan-interface 1

[Sysname-Vlan-interface1] ntp-service multicast-server 224.0.1.1 version 3 authentication-keyid 4

1.1.12  ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid

Syntax

ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid keyid

undo ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid keyid

View

System view

Parameters

keyid: Authentication key number, in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

Description

Use the ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid command to specify that the created authentication key is a trusted key. When NTP authentication enabled, a client can be synchronized only to a server that can provide a trusted authentication key.

Use the ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid command to remove an authentication key as a trusted key.

No authentication key is configured to be trusted by default.

Examples

# Enable NTP authentication, specify to use MD5 encryption algorithm, with the key ID of 37 and key value of BetterKey, and specify that this key is a trusted key.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service authentication enable

[Sysname] ntp-service authentication-keyid 37 authentication-mode md5 BetterKey

[Sysname] ntp-service reliable authentication-keyid 37

1.1.13  ntp-service source-interface

Syntax

ntp-service source-interface interface-type interface-number

undo ntp-service source-interface

View

System view

Parameters

interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface by its interface type and interface number.

Description

Use the ntp-service source-interface command to specify an interface for sending NTP messages.

Use the undo ntp-service source-interface command to remove the configured interface for sending NTP messages.

If you do not wish the IP address of a certain interface on the local device to become the destination address of response messages, you can use this command to specify a particular interface for sending all NTP messages, so that the source address in all NTP messages is the primary IP address of this interface.

Examples

# Specify that all NTP messages are to be sent out from VLAN-interface 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service source-interface vlan-interface 1

1.1.14  ntp-service unicast-peer

Syntax

ntp-service unicast-peer { ip-address | peer-name } [ authentication-keyid keyid | priority | source-interface interface-type interface-number | version number ] *

undo ntp-service unicast-peer { ip-address | peer-name }

View

System view

Parameters

ip-address: IP address of the symmetric-passive peer. It must be a host address, rather than a broadcast address, a multicast address or the IP address of the local clock.

peer-name: Host name of the symmetric-passive peer, a string of 1 to 20 characters.

authentication-keyid keyid: Specifies the key ID to be used for sending NTP messages to the peer, where keyid is in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

priority: Specifies the peer designated by ip-address or peer-name as the first choice under the same condition.

source-interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface for sending NTP messages. In an NTP message the local device sends to its peer, the source IP address is the primary IP address of this interface. interface-type interface-number represents the interface type and number.

version number: Specifies the NTP version, where number is in the range of 1 to 3 and defaults to 3.

Description

Use the ntp-service unicast-peer command to designate a symmetric-passive peer for the device.

Use the undo ntp-service unicast-peer command to remove the symmetric-passive peer designated for the device.

No symmetric-passive peer is designated for the device by default.

Examples

# Designate the device with the IP address of 10.1.1.1 as the symmetric-passive peer of the device, and configure the device to run NTP version 3, and send NTP messages through VLAN-interface 1.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service unicast-peer 10.1.1.1 version 3 source-interface vlan-interface 1

1.1.15  ntp-service unicast-server

Syntax

ntp-service unicast-server { ip-address | server-name } [ authentication-keyid keyid | priority | source-interface interface-type interface-number | version number  ] *

undo ntp-service unicast-server { ip-address | server-name }

View

System view

Parameters

ip-address: IP address of the NTP server. It must be a host address, rather than a broadcast address, a multicast address or the IP address of the local clock.

server-name: Host name of the NTP server, a string of 1 to 20 characters.

authentication-keyid keyid: Specifies the key ID to be used for sending NTP messages to the NTP server, where keyid is in the range of 1 to 4294967295.

priority: Specifies this NTP server as the first choice under the same condition.

source-interface interface-type interface-number: Specifies an interface for sending NTP messages. In an NTP message the local device sends to the NTP server, the source IP address is the primary IP address of this interface. interface-type interface-number represents the interface type and number.

version number: Specifies the NTP version, where number is in the range of 1 to 3 and defaults to 3.

Description

Use the ntp-service unicast-server command to designate an NTP server for the device.

Use the undo ntp-service unicast-server command to remove an NTP server designated for the device.

No NTP server is designated for the device by default.

Examples

# Designate the device with the IP address of as 10.1.1.1 an NTP server for the device.

<Sysname> system-view

[Sysname] ntp-service unicast-server 10.1.1.1 version 3

 

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