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How do I resolve clock offset issue?

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Explorer

I get following health issue.

 

The host's NTP service did not respond to a request for the clock offset.

 

How do I resolve it?

 

Thanks,

Kewal

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

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Contributor

Yes, the problem was at the Firewall , one of the rules was changes ;

after the problem was fix the NTP was updated.

 

Thanks so much for your help

View solution in original post

19 REPLIES 19

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I just saw this after an office move. The servers were offline for a while.

 

This is what I did for our CentOS Linux servers (similar, but not the same, steps would work for Ubuntu/Debian):

 

* verified/updated the /etc/ntp.conf file to be the same across the cluster

* stopped the ntp daemon: /etc/init.d/ntpd stop

* connected to the ntp server named in the ntp.conf file: ntpupdate <ntp_server>

* started the ntp daemon: /etc/init.d/ntpd start

* added ntpd to the startup manager: chkconfig add ntpd

* set ntpd to start in default reunlevels: chkconfig ntpd on

 

This cleared the offset issue. If this doesn't do it for you, you might also have to look into drift, or dig deeper into the time synchronization.

 

 

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Explorer

Thanks a lot for you detailed answer. 

 

I deleted the cluster and rebuilt it from scratch. Now, it is working fine.(Fingers crossed)

 

But, It seems, your procedure would definitely solve the problem.

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New Contributor

Thanks for your detailed answer. it helped me! 

 

I had to repeat the step 4 and 5 twice; but it fixed my issue. I'm keeping the fingers crossed now! 🙂 

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New Contributor

Many thanks. I followed these  steps and it fixed my clock offset issue.

 

* verified/updated the /etc/ntp.conf file to be the same across the cluster

* stopped the ntp daemon: /etc/init.d/ntpd stop

* connected to the ntp server named in the ntp.conf file: ntpupdate <ntp_server>

* started the ntp daemon: /etc/init.d/ntpd start

* added ntpd to the startup manager: chkconfig add ntpd

* set ntpd to start in default reunlevels: chkconfig ntpd on

avatar
Contributor

i got the next:

 

$sudo service ntp stop
* Stopping NTP server ntpd [ OK ]
root@cluster-01:~# sudo ntpdate ntp.ubuntu.com
11 Jun 06:47:14 ntpdate[29757]: no server suitable for synchronization found

 

i try to do it with the with NTP .. instead NTPD

 

....

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Expert Contributor

Hi anton_85

 

Try this article, it explains time zones and settings which is very well explained.

 

http://www.linuxsecrets.com/easyblog/2015/01/30/1374-fixing-date-and-setting-time-and-zone-on-rhel-6...

 

 

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Contributor

Hi nauseous, 

apprently, the problem is at my firewall, where I can't ping my gateway neither other sites out of my network.

so that's way i can't see it.

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Expert Contributor

Hi,

 

If firewall is the problem you can ask network admin to open add chains to that specific URL . or the other way you can set up your own NTP server within that network itself.

 

Thanks,

Sathish

Thanks,
Sathish (Satz)

avatar
Master Collaborator
Check with your network administrators, they have NTP services you can
point to most likely within the firewall.