Compare commits

...

2 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
IMTheNachoMan
0d29a5cc8c Merge pull request #120 from wevinkang/patch-1
Update README.md
2024-06-30 22:30:32 -04:00
Kevin Wang
c836cbce79 Update README.md
Updated the full path for ntp.conf file.
2024-06-28 12:04:05 -04:00

View File

@@ -1018,7 +1018,7 @@ NTP stands for Network Time Protocol. In the context of this guide, an NTP clien
1. Make a backup of the NTP client's configuration file `/etc/ntp.conf`: 1. Make a backup of the NTP client's configuration file `/etc/ntp.conf`:
``` bash ``` bash
sudo cp --archive /etc/ntp.conf /etc/ntp.conf-COPY-$(date +"%Y%m%d%H%M%S") sudo cp --archive /etc/ntpsec/ntp.conf /etc/ntpsec/ntp.conf-COPY-$(date +"%Y%m%d%H%M%S")
``` ```
1. The default configuration, at least on Debian, is already pretty secure. The only thing we'll want to make sure is we're the `pool` directive and not any `server` directives. The `pool` directive allows the NTP client to stop using a server if it is unresponsive or serving bad time. Do this by commenting out all `server` directives and adding the below to `/etc/ntp.conf`. 1. The default configuration, at least on Debian, is already pretty secure. The only thing we'll want to make sure is we're the `pool` directive and not any `server` directives. The `pool` directive allows the NTP client to stop using a server if it is unresponsive or serving bad time. Do this by commenting out all `server` directives and adding the below to `/etc/ntp.conf`.