The Raspberry Pi lacks a hardware clock. How do I force NTPD to update date/time immediately after every boot?
I'm running Raspbian and the Raspberry Pi is connected using an Ethernet cable.
The Raspberry Pi lacks a hardware clock. How do I force NTPD to update date/time immediately after every boot?
I'm running Raspbian and the Raspberry Pi is connected using an Ethernet cable.
After searching around, this method worked for me. As you know, the Raspberry Pi 3 has NTP disabled by default. So by just typing this, the NTP support will be enabled:
sudo timedatectl set-ntp True
Check result with timedatectl status
In case of warning, you may have to run sudo timedatectl set-local-rtc true
too.
Do an apt-get install ntpdate
.
ntpdate
will run when an Ethernet interface is brought up, and set the time from an ntp server (see /etc/default/ntpdate
).
If ntpd
is running, ntpdate will do nothing, however ntpdate
will run prior to ntpd
at bootup - so this should work out to set the time at bootup as long as there's an Ethernet connection.
If your clock is way off, you may need to force ntp to sync by doing:
sudo /etc/init.d/ntp stop
sudo ntpd -q -g
sudo /etc/init.d/ntp start
ntpd
daemon along with its configuration file. Don't use /etc/ntp.conf
as it is the wrong configuration file and is likely to be overwritten at boot. IIRC you should be able to put these startup parameters in /etc/default/ntpd
.
ntp
is no longer installed by default (since stretch
in 2017). Here's some background on that change if you're interested.
This question is apparently being "recycled" for some reason, and so it seems appropriate to recycle some old answers also :)
This question was asked in 2013. ntpd
was the timekeeping software included in the Raspbian distribution at that time (wheezy
). However, that changed with the stretch
distribution in 2017 when systemd-timesyncd
replaced ntpd
. The reasons for this change, and some of the technical tradeoffs were discussed in this old answer for those who are interested in such things.
With respect to the question here, perhaps the most salient point in the current environment (bullseye & onward, post-systemd
) is this: If you decide to install ntpd
(now ntpsec
) under your current Raspbian distribution, you will be required to REMOVE systemd-timesyncd
. IOW, Debian has declared other timekeeping services in conflict at the apt
package level. This method of conflict resolution required Debian to break systemd-timesyncd
out as a separate package (apart from systemd
), and declare a virtual package called time-daemon
. (See REFERENCE)
Note that this method of conflict resolution is (may be) unique to Debian-based distros such as raspbian, and has been fairly recently developed. During an earlier time (e.g. Aug 2018), systemd-timesyncd
would "excuse itself" by checking for the presence of other NTP daemons. Earlier versions of the config file for systemd-timesyncd
(listed via systemctl cat systemd-timesyncd
) included the following ConditionFileIsExecutable
statements:
# Under earlier (e.g. Aug 2018) releases of raspbian:
$ systemctl cat systemd-timesyncd
Note the last few lines of the ouput listing:
# don't run timesyncd if we have another NTP daemon installed
ConditionFileIsExecutable=!/usr/sbin/ntpd
ConditionFileIsExecutable=!/usr/sbin/openntpd
ConditionFileIsExecutable=!/usr/sbin/chronyd
ConditionFileIsExecutable=!/usr/sbin/VBoxService
In other words: systemd-timesyncd
checks to see if any of these alternative time services are running on your system, and if so, politely defers to them for providing your timekeeping services. It is left to the reader to decide whether the Debian method of conflict resolution is superior or inferior to using the ConditionFileIsExecutable
statements.
ntpd
to update after boot?!This was the OP's question. The answer (in 2023) hasn't changed: It shouldn't be necessary to do this on any RPi system - unless someone has changed the default configuration! You can verify this as follows:
$ timedatectl
Local time: Wed 2021-01-13 00:25:33 GMT
Universal time: Wed 2021-01-13 00:25:33 UTC
RTC time: n/a
Time zone: Europe/London (GMT, +0000)
System clock synchronized: yes
NTP service: active
RTC in local TZ: no
Note two items:
System clock synchronized: yes
NTP service: active
Item 1. tells you your system clock is synchronized with whatever the default time source is, and Item 2. is nearly true in that RPi uses the SNTP
protocol by default instead of NTP
(REF); i.e. this means RPi has a time source, and it is using it.
I think that's all that's needed for an up-to-date answer for 2023, except this: read man timedatectl
to learn more about its capabilities.
nc -z -v -u google.com 123
which always succeeds.
If you set the Time Zone in raspi-config
the Raspberry Pi will automatically update the time on boot, if connected to the internet.
sudo raspi-config
Internationalisation Options
I2 Change Timezone
Finish
Yes
to reboot nowSee forum post Time does not sync on Pi 3 and with official dongle.
ntpd emits IP/UDP packets with the ToS field set to 0xc0. So that is quite similar to the other issue I (and many others) have with Raspberry Pi3 when operated over a Wi-Fi internal interface.
As a workaround, add the command
/sbin/iptables -t mangle -I POSTROUTING 1 -o wlan0 -p udp --dport 123 -j TOS --set-tos 0x00
to the file
/etc/rc.local
before the exit 0 line. Next, reboot and check.
It should already be updating the time. The NTPD server should start just after the swap file and before SSHD.
Check your /etc/ntp.conf file to make sure it is configured.
It should list at least one server. I use time.nrc.ca for my server.
Manual page for ntp.conf is here: http://linux.die.net/man/5/ntp.conf
My son's Rasberry Pi would not update the time out of the box and after trying all the suggestions above I could get it to update manually but not automatically. Finally after looking elsewhere as well without success, I found that the ntp.conf file that came with the Rasberry Pi had the following lines commented out:
#restrict 127.0.0.1
#restrict ::1
I used
sudo nano /etc/ntp.conf
in the terminal to edit the ntp conf file to now be:
# Local users may interrogate the ntp server more closely.
restrict 127.0.0.1
restrict ::1
That solved the problem for us. It updates with both the WiFi and the ethernet cable. I don't know if it would update with WiFi without the change to rc.local suggested above, as by the time I found the solution above I had already made that change and I have not undone it.
You don't need to use ntp to solve the issue. There is a script that reads the date from a server and you only need set the date to be the result of that script (your Raspberry Pi needs to be connected to the internet). Then, you need to run that command at startup.
Step1: Retrieve the date from a server.
sudo date -s "$(wget -qSO- --max-redirect=0 google.com 2>&1 | grep Date: | cut -d' ' -f5-8)Z"
Step2: Run the command at startup by adding it to the file /etc/rc.local
(Worked on Ubuntu 16.04).
sudo gedit /etc/rc.local
CREDITS:
ntp
but you should. It's better, faster, more accurate, and the industry standard. Don't make up your own weird things when good standards exist please.
Commented
Mar 5, 2020 at 1:13
I had a similar problem with a Pi not syncing. None of these solutions worked. Turns out my network environment was blocking the NTP port (123). The solution for me was
sudo apt install htpdate
taken from: https://www.raspberrypi.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=222236
Which updates the system clock through HTTP calls instead.
I found the timedatectl
application to help me when I was having a similar issue. It's installed by default and '--help' gives a pretty good and simple overview of how to use the tool.
Note: make sure your timezone is set properly, which this tool can do as well.
This is the approach I ended up taking. Many of these answers seemed to indicate things that just didn't check out when I looked at my Raspian system:
$ cat /etc/os-release
PRETTY_NAME="Raspbian GNU/Linux 9 (stretch)"
NAME="Raspbian GNU/Linux"
VERSION_ID="9"
VERSION="9 (stretch)"
ID=raspbian
ID_LIKE=debian
HOME_URL="http://www.raspbian.org/"
SUPPORT_URL="http://www.raspbian.org/RaspbianForums"
BUG_REPORT_URL="http://www.raspbian.org/RaspbianBugs"
I had nothing that appeared in logs indicating that timedatectl
was doing anything, or that ntp
was syncing on the NIC's up state, or that NTPD was even installed/configured.
In the end I merely added this to my /etc/rc.local
:
$ cat /etc/rc.local
logger "Beginning force syncing NTP..."
service ntp stop
ntpd -gq
service ntp start
logger "Finished force syncing NTP..."
And installed ntp
:
$ sudo apt-get install ntp
Which results in this in /var/log/syslog
:
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntp[526]: Starting NTP server: ntpd.
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: proto: precision = 1.458 usec (-19)
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listen and drop on 0 v6wildcard [::]:123
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listen and drop on 1 v4wildcard 0.0.0.0:123
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listen normally on 2 lo 127.0.0.1:123
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listen normally on 3 eth0 192.168.1.85:123
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listen normally on 4 lo [::1]:123
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listen normally on 5 eth0 [fe80::f5ea:7663:4ec:784d%2]:123
Aug 5 09:10:20 pi-hole ntpd[555]: Listening on routing socket on fd #22 for interface updates
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[555]: ntpd exiting on signal 15 (Terminated)
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntp[661]: Stopping NTP server: ntpd.
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: ntpd [email protected] Sat Mar 10 18:03:33 UTC 2018 (1): Starting
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Command line: ntpd -gq
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: proto: precision = 0.625 usec (-21)
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listen and drop on 0 v6wildcard [::]:123
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listen and drop on 1 v4wildcard 0.0.0.0:123
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listen normally on 2 lo 127.0.0.1:123
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listen normally on 3 eth0 192.168.1.85:123
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listen normally on 4 lo [::1]:123
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listen normally on 5 eth0 [fe80::f5ea:7663:4ec:784d%2]:123
Aug 5 09:10:21 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Listening on routing socket on fd #22 for interface updates
Aug 5 09:10:34 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 198.98.57.16
Aug 5 09:10:35 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 74.82.59.149
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 23.131.160.7
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 52.37.26.163
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 204.2.134.163
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 96.126.100.203
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 199.223.248.101
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 66.228.42.59
Aug 5 09:10:36 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 208.75.89.4
Aug 5 09:10:37 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 204.2.134.164
Aug 5 09:10:37 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 104.236.116.147
Aug 5 09:10:38 pi-hole ntpd[674]: Soliciting pool server 204.9.54.119
Aug 5 09:10:48 pi-hole ntpd[674]: ntpd: time set +6.769186 s
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[853]: ntpd [email protected] Sat Mar 10 18:03:33 UTC 2018 (1): Starting
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[853]: Command line: /usr/sbin/ntpd -p /var/run/ntpd.pid -g -u 111:114
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntp[844]: Starting NTP server: ntpd.
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: proto: precision = 0.625 usec (-21)
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listen and drop on 0 v6wildcard [::]:123
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listen and drop on 1 v4wildcard 0.0.0.0:123
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listen normally on 2 lo 127.0.0.1:123
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listen normally on 3 eth0 192.168.1.85:123
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listen normally on 4 lo [::1]:123
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listen normally on 5 eth0 [fe80::f5ea:7663:4ec:784d%2]:123
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole ntpd[856]: Listening on routing socket on fd #22 for interface updates
Aug 5 09:10:49 pi-hole root: Finished force syncing NTP...
Failed to start ntp.service: Unit ntp.service not found.
And ntpd doesn't exist either. The Pi definitely eventually gains time. (I'm looking into this because my HTTPS curls fail without -k when run prior to that)
Commented
Aug 9, 2018 at 18:32
I use the following on the default image to sync time without installing additional packages:
timedatectl set-local-rtc 0
timedatectl set-ntp 1
timedatectl status
I found this somewhere on the interwebs. Seems to work on Buster:
sudo timedatectl set-ntp false && sudo timedatectl set-time "$(date --iso-8601=seconds | cut -d "+" -f1 | tr T ' ')" && sudo timedatectl set-ntp true
I'm not sure if the intermediate command (set-time
) is really needed.
Ok, so I did timedatectl and got everything looking fine.
But my raspberry pi never syncs clock when it is wrong. Typical problem scenario for me:
When I looked at it before, it seemed that some of the network startup was failing or not working properly because of the wrong clock, and this was interfering with clock sync.
What I would like is a way to force nptd to ignore all certificate expiry etc and just force an update of the clock, and for this to be something that reliably happens during boot, however far out the clock is.
I don't think this question is answered.
sudo ntpd -g -q
forces an update of the clock.
sudo ntpd -g -q
is guaranteed to set the clock (if online) as it overrides the 1000s limit on clock drift. This stuff all works on my RPis and within a minute of booting the clocks are all correctly sync'd.
I solved that in /etc/rc.local
by adding at the end (before any exit 0
):
sleep 10
ntpdate -u tempus1.gum.gov.pl > /dev/null
Sleep is needed because of starting Ethernet connection. Then immediately Pi synces date and time on each boot.
Check if you have rc.local service first (run at boot) as some of the recent systems lack it. If it does not exist - add it.
Also you can put the below in /etc/crontab
:
59 */3 * * * root ntpdate -u tempus1.gum.gov.pl > /dev/null