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Obsoleted by:5905 INFORMATIONAL
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Network Working Group                                           D. MillsRequest for Comments: 4330                        University of DelawareObsoletes:2030,1769                                       January 2006Category: InformationalSimple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) Version 4for IPv4, IPv6 and OSIStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).Abstract   This memorandum describes the Simple Network Time Protocol Version 4   (SNTPv4), which is a subset of the Network Time Protocol (NTP) used   to synchronize computer clocks in the Internet.  SNTPv4 can be used   when the ultimate performance of a full NTP implementation based onRFC 1305 is neither needed nor justified.  When operating with   current and previous NTP and SNTP versions, SNTPv4 requires no   changes to the specifications or known implementations, but rather   clarifies certain design features that allow operation in a simple,   stateless remote-procedure call (RPC) mode with accuracy and   reliability expectations similar to the UDP/TIME protocol described   inRFC 868.   This memorandum obsoletesRFC 1769, which describes SNTP Version 3   (SNTPv3), andRFC 2030, which describes SNTPv4.  Its purpose is to   correct certain inconsistencies in the previous documents and to   clarify header formats and protocol operations for NTPv3 (IPv4) and   SNTPv4 (IPv4, IPv6, and OSI), which are also used for SNTP.  A   further purpose is to provide guidance for home and business client   implementations for routers and other consumer devices to protect the   server population from abuse.  A working knowledge of the NTPv3   specification,RFC 1305, is not required for an implementation of   SNTP.Mills                        Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................21.1. Specification of Requirements ..............................52. Operating Modes and Addressing ..................................53. NTP Timestamp Format ............................................64. Message Format ..................................................85. SNTP Client Operations .........................................136. SNTP Server Operations .........................................167. Configuration and Management ...................................198. The Kiss-o'-Death Packet .......................................209. On Being a Good Network Citizen ................................2110. Best Practices ................................................2111. Security Considerations .......................................2412. Acknowledgements ..............................................2413. Contributors ..................................................2414. Informative References ........................................251.  Introduction   The Network Time Protocol Version 3 (NTPv3), specified inRFC 1305   [MIL92], is widely used to synchronize computer clocks in the global   Internet.  It provides comprehensive mechanisms to access national   time and frequency dissemination services, organize the NTP subnet of   servers and clients, and adjust the system clock in each participant.   In most places of the Internet of today, NTP provides accuracies of   1-50 ms, depending on the characteristics of the synchronization   source and network paths.RFC 1305 specifies the NTP protocol machine in terms of events,   states, transition functions and actions, and engineered algorithms   to improve the timekeeping quality and to mitigate several   synchronization sources, some of which may be faulty.  To achieve   accuracies in the low milliseconds over paths spanning major portions   of the Internet, these intricate algorithms, or their functional   equivalents, are necessary.  In many applications, accuracies on the   order of significant fractions of a second are acceptable.  In simple   home router applications, accuracies of up to a minute may suffice.   In such cases, simpler protocols, such as the Time Protocol specified   inRFC 868 [POS83], have been used for this purpose.  These protocols   involve an RPC exchange where the client requests the time of day and   the server returns it in seconds past a known reference epoch.   NTP is designed for use by clients and servers with a wide range of   capabilities and over a wide range of network jitter and clock   frequency wander characteristics.  Many users of NTP in the Internet   of today use a software distribution available from www.ntp.org.  The   distribution, which includes the full suite of NTP options,Mills                        Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   mitigation algorithms, and security schemes, is a relatively complex,   real-time application.  Although the software has been ported to a   wide variety of hardware platforms ranging from personal computers to   supercomputers, its sheer size and complexity is not appropriate for   many applications.  Accordingly, it is useful to explore alternative   strategies using simpler software appropriate for less stringent   accuracy expectations.   This memo describes the Simple Network Time Protocol Version 4   (SNTPv4), which is a simplified access paradigm for servers and   clients using current and previous versions of NTP and SNTP.  The   access paradigm is identical to the UDP/TIME Protocol, and, in fact,   it should be easy to adapt a UDP/TIME client implementation, say for   a personal computer, to operate using SNTP.  Moreover, SNTP is also   designed to operate in a dedicated server configuration including an   integrated radio clock.  With careful design and control of the   various latencies in the system, which is practical in a dedicated   design, it is possible to deliver time accurate on the order of   microseconds.   The only significant protocol change in SNTPv4 from previous SNTP   versions is a modified header interpretation to accommodate Internet   Protocol Version 6 (IPv6) (RFC 2460) and OSI (RFC 1629) addressing.   However, SNTPv4 includes certain optional extensions to the basic NTP   Version 3 (NTPv3) model, including a manycast mode and a public-key-   based authentication scheme designed specifically for broadcast and   manycast applications.  Although the manycast mode is described in   this memo, the authentication scheme is described in another RFC to   be submitted later.  Until such time that a definitive NTPv4   specification is published, the manycast and authentication features   should be considered provisional.  In addition, this memo introduces   the kiss-o'-death message, which can be used by servers to suppress   client requests as circumstances require.   When operating with current and previous versions of NTP and SNTP,   SNTPv4 requires no changes to the protocol or implementations now   running or likely to be implemented specifically for future NTP or   SNTP versions.  The NTP and SNTP packet formats are the same, and the   arithmetic operations to calculate the client time, clock offset, and   roundtrip delay are the same.  To an NTP or SNTP server, NTP and SNTP   clients are indistinguishable; to an NTP or SNTP client, NTP and SNTP   servers are indistinguishable.  Like NTP servers operating in non-   symmetric modes, SNTP servers are stateless and can support large   numbers of clients; however, unlike most NTP clients, SNTP clients   normally operate with only a single server at a time.   The full degree of reliability ordinarily expected of NTP servers is   possible only using redundant sources, diverse paths, and the craftedMills                        Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   algorithms of a full NTP implementation.  It is strongly recommended   that SNTP clients be used only at the extremities of the   synchronization subnet.  SNTP clients should operate only at the   leaves (highest stratum) of the subnet and in configurations where no   NTP or SNTP client is dependent on another SNTP client for   synchronization.  SNTP servers should operate only at the root   (stratum 1) of the subnet, and then only in configurations where no   other source of synchronization other than a reliable radio clock or   telephone modem is available.   An important provision in this memo is the interpretation of certain   NTP header fields that provide for IPv6 [DEE98] and OSI [COL94]   addressing.  The only significant difference between the NTP and   SNTPv4 header formats is the four-octet Reference Identifier field,   which is used primarily to detect and avoid synchronization loops.   In all NTP and SNTP versions providing IPv4 addressing, primary   servers use a four-character ASCII reference clock identifier in this   field, whereas secondary servers use the 32-bit IPv4 address of the   synchronization source.  In SNTPv4 providing IPv6 and OSI addressing,   primary servers use the same clock identifier, but secondary servers   use the first 32 bits of the MD5 hash of the IPv6 or NSAP address of   the synchronization source.  A further use of this field is when the   server sends a kiss-o'-death message, documented later in this memo.      NTP Version 4 (NTPv4), now in deployment, but not yet the subject      of a standards document, uses the same Reference Identifier field      as SNTPv4.   In the case of OSI, the Connectionless Transport Service (CLTS) is   used as in [ISO86].  Each SNTP packet is transmitted as the TS-   Userdata parameter of a T-UNITDATA Request primitive.  Alternately,   the header can be encapsulated in a Transport Protocol Data Unit   (TPDU), which itself is transported using UDP, as described inRFC1240 [DOB91].  It is not advised that NTP be operated at the upper   layers of the OSI stack, such as might be inferred fromRFC 1698   [FUR94], as this could seriously degrade accuracy.  With the header   formats defined in this memo, it is in principle possible to   interwork between servers and clients of one protocol family and   another, although the practical difficulties may make this   inadvisable.      In the following, indented paragraphs such as this one contain      information not required by the formal protocol specification, but      considered good practice in protocol implementations.   This memo is organized as follows.Section 2 describes how the   protocol works, the various modes, and how IP addresses and UDP ports   are used.Section 3 describes the NTP timestamp format, and SectionMills                        Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   4 the NTP message format.Section 5 summarizes SNTP client   operations, andSection 6 summarizes SNTP server operations.Section7 summarizes operation and management issues.Section 8 describes   the kiss-o'-death message, newly minted with functions similar to the   ICMP Source Quench and ICMP Destination Unreachable messages.Section 9 summarizes design issues important for good network   citizenry and presents an example algorithm designed to give good   reliability while minimizing network and server resource demands.1.1.  Specification of Requirements   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [BRA97].2.  Operating Modes and Addressing   Unless excepted in context, a reference to broadcast address means   IPv4 broadcast address, IPv4 multicast group address, or IPv6 address   of appropriate scope.  Further information on the broadcast/multicast   model is inRFC 1112 [DEE89].  Details of address format, scoping   rules, etc., are beyond the scope of this memo.  SNTPv4 can operate   with either unicast (point to point), broadcast (point to   multipoint), or manycast (multipoint to point) addressing modes.  A   unicast client sends a request to a designated server at its unicast   address and expects a reply from which it can determine the time and,   optionally, the roundtrip delay and clock offset relative to the   server.  A broadcast server periodically sends an unsolicited message   to a designated broadcast address.  A broadcast client listens on   this address and ordinarily sends no requests.   Manycast is an extension of the anycast paradigm described inRFC1546 [PAR93].  It is designed for use with a set of cooperating   servers whose addresses are not known beforehand.  The manycast   client sends an ordinary NTP client request to a designated broadcast   address.  One or more manycast servers listen on that address.  Upon   receiving a request, a manycast server sends an ordinary NTP server   reply to the client.  The client then mobilizes an association for   each server found and continues operation with all of them.   Subsequently, the NTP mitigation algorithms operate to cast out all   except the best three.      Broadcast servers should respond to client unicast requests, as      well as send unsolicited broadcast messages.  Broadcast clients      may send unicast requests in order to measure the network      propagation delay between the server and client and then continue      operation in listen-only mode.  However, broadcast servers mayMills                        Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006      choose not to respond to unicast requests, so unicast clients      should be prepared to abandon the measurement and assume a default      value for the delay.   The client and server addresses are assigned following the usual   IPv4, IPv6 or OSI conventions.  For NTP multicast, the IANA has   reserved the IPv4 group address 224.0.1.1 and the IPv6 address ending   :101 with appropriate scope.  The NTP broadcast address for OSI has   yet to be determined.  Notwithstanding the IANA reserved addresses,   other multicast addresses can be used that do not conflict with   others assigned in scope.  The scoping, routing, and group membership   procedures are determined by considerations beyond the scope of this   memo.      It is important to adjust the time-to-live (TTL) field in the IP      header of multicast messages to a reasonable value in order to      limit the network resources used by this (and any other) multicast      service.  Only multicast clients in scope will receive multicast      server messages.  Only cooperating manycast servers in scope will      reply to a client request.  The engineering principles that      determine the proper values to be used are beyond the scope of      this memo.      In the case of SNTP as specified herein, there is a very real      vulnerability that SNTP broadcast clients can be disrupted by      misbehaving or hostile SNTP or NTP broadcast servers elsewhere in      the Internet.  It is strongly recommended that access controls      and/or cryptographic authentication means be provided for      additional security in such cases.      It is intended that IP broadcast addresses will be used primarily      in IP subnets and LAN segments including a fully functional NTP      server with a number of dependent SNTP broadcast clients on the      same subnet, and that IP multicast group addresses will be used      only in cases where the TTL is engineered specifically for each      service domain.  However, these uses are not integral to the SNTP      specification.3.  NTP Timestamp Format   SNTP uses the standard NTP timestamp format described inRFC 1305 and   previous versions of that document.  In conformance with standard   Internet practice, NTP data are specified as integer or fixed-point   quantities, with bits numbered in big-endian fashion from 0 starting   at the left or most significant end.  Unless specified otherwise, all   quantities are unsigned and may occupy the full field width with an   implied 0 preceding bit 0.Mills                        Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   Because NTP timestamps are cherished data and, in fact, represent the   main product of the protocol, a special timestamp format has been   established.  NTP timestamps are represented as a 64-bit unsigned   fixed-point number, in seconds relative to 0h on 1 January 1900.  The   integer part is in the first 32 bits, and the fraction part in the   last 32 bits.  In the fraction part, the non-significant low-order   bits are not specified and are ordinarily set to 0.      It is advisable to fill the non-significant low-order bits of the      timestamp with a random, unbiased bitstring, both to avoid      systematic roundoff errors and to provide loop detection and      replay detection (see below).  It is important that the bitstring      be unpredictable by an intruder.  One way of doing this is to      generate a random 128-bit bitstring at startup.  After that, each      time the system clock is read, the string consisting of the      timestamp and bitstring is hashed with the MD5 algorithm, then the      non-significant bits of the timestamp are copied from the result.   The NTP format allows convenient multiple-precision arithmetic and   conversion to UDP/TIME message (seconds), but does complicate the   conversion to ICMP Timestamp message (milliseconds) and Unix time   values (seconds and microseconds or seconds and nanoseconds).  The   maximum number that can be represented is 4,294,967,295 seconds with   a precision of about 232 picoseconds, which should be adequate for   even the most exotic requirements.                           1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                           Seconds                             |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                  Seconds Fraction (0-padded)                  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Note that since some time in 1968 (second 2,147,483,648), the most   significant bit (bit 0 of the integer part) has been set and that the   64-bit field will overflow some time in 2036 (second 4,294,967,296).   There will exist a 232-picosecond interval, henceforth ignored, every   136 years when the 64-bit field will be 0, which by convention is   interpreted as an invalid or unavailable timestamp.      As the NTP timestamp format has been in use for over 20 years, it      is possible that it will be in use 32 years from now, when the      seconds field overflows.  As it is probably inappropriate to      archive NTP timestamps before bit 0 was set in 1968, a convenient      way to extend the useful life of NTP timestamps is the following      convention: If bit 0 is set, the UTC time is in the range 1968-      2036, and UTC time is reckoned from 0h 0m 0s UTC on 1 JanuaryMills                        Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006      1900.  If bit 0 is not set, the time is in the range 2036-2104 and      UTC time is reckoned from 6h 28m 16s UTC on 7 February 2036.  Note      that when calculating the correspondence, 2000 is a leap year, and      leap seconds are not included in the reckoning.      The arithmetic calculations used by NTP to determine the clock      offset and roundtrip delay require the client time to be within 34      years of the server time before the client is launched.  As the      time since the Unix base 1970 is now more than 34 years, means      must be available to initialize the clock at a date closer to the      present, either with a time-of-year (TOY) chip or from firmware.4.  Message Format   Both NTP and SNTP are clients of the User Datagram Protocol (UDP)   specified inRFC 768 [POS80].  The structures of the IP and UDP   headers are described in the cited specification documents and will   not be detailed further here.  The UDP port number assigned by the   IANA to NTP is 123.  The SNTP client should use this value in the UDP   Destination Port field for client request messages.  The Source Port   field of these messages can be any nonzero value chosen for   identification or multiplexing purposes.  The server interchanges   these fields for the corresponding reply messages.      This differs from theRFC 2030 specifications, which required both      the source and destination ports to be 123.  The intent of this      change is to allow the identification of particular client      implementations (which are now allowed to use unreserved port      numbers, including ones of their choosing) and to attain      compatibility with Network Address Port Translation (NAPT)      described inRFC 2663 [SRI99] andRFC 3022 [SRI01].   Figure 1 is a description of the NTP and SNTP message format, which   follows the IP and UDP headers in the message.  This format is   identical to the NTP message format described inRFC 1305, with the   exception of the Reference Identifier field described below.  For   SNTP client messages, most of these fields are zero or initialized   with pre-specified data.  For completeness, the function of each   field is briefly summarized below.Mills                        Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006                           1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9  0  1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |LI | VN  |Mode |    Stratum    |     Poll      |   Precision    |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                          Root  Delay                           |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                       Root  Dispersion                         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                     Reference Identifier                       |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                                |      |                    Reference Timestamp (64)                    |      |                                                                |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                                |      |                    Originate Timestamp (64)                    |      |                                                                |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                                |      |                     Receive Timestamp (64)                     |      |                                                                |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                                |      |                     Transmit Timestamp (64)                    |      |                                                                |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                 Key Identifier (optional) (32)                 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                                |      |                                                                |      |                 Message Digest (optional) (128)                |      |                                                                |      |                                                                |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                        Figure 1.  NTP Packet Header   Leap Indicator (LI): This is a two-bit code warning of an impending   leap second to be inserted/deleted in the last minute of the current   day.  This field is significant only in server messages, where the   values are defined as follows:Mills                        Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006      LI       Meaning      ---------------------------------------------      0        no warning      1        last minute has 61 seconds      2        last minute has 59 seconds      3        alarm condition (clock not synchronized)   On startup, servers set this field to 3 (clock not synchronized), and   set this field to some other value when synchronized to the primary   reference clock.  Once set to a value other than 3, the field is   never set to that value again, even if all synchronization sources   become unreachable or defective.   Version Number (VN): This is a three-bit integer indicating the   NTP/SNTP version number, currently 4.  If necessary to distinguish   between IPv4, IPv6, and OSI, the encapsulating context must be   inspected.   Mode: This is a three-bit number indicating the protocol mode.  The   values are defined as follows:      Mode     Meaning      ------------------------------------      0        reserved      1        symmetric active      2        symmetric passive      3        client      4        server      5        broadcast      6        reserved for NTP control message      7        reserved for private use   In unicast and manycast modes, the client sets this field to 3   (client) in the request, and the server sets it to 4 (server) in the   reply.  In broadcast mode, the server sets this field to 5   (broadcast).  The other modes are not used by SNTP servers and   clients.   Stratum: This is an eight-bit unsigned integer indicating the   stratum.  This field is significant only in SNTP server messages,   where the values are defined as follows:      Stratum  Meaning      ----------------------------------------------      0        kiss-o'-death message (see below)      1        primary reference (e.g., synchronized by radio clock)      2-15     secondary reference (synchronized by NTP or SNTP)      16-255   reservedMills                        Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   Poll Interval: This is an eight-bit unsigned integer used as an   exponent of two, where the resulting value is the maximum interval   between successive messages in seconds.  This field is significant   only in SNTP server messages, where the values range from 4 (16 s) to   17 (131,072 s -- about 36 h).   Precision: This is an eight-bit signed integer used as an exponent of   two, where the resulting value is the precision of the system clock   in seconds.  This field is significant only in server messages, where   the values range from -6 for mains-frequency clocks to -20 for   microsecond clocks found in some workstations.   Root Delay: This is a 32-bit signed fixed-point number indicating the   total roundtrip delay to the primary reference source, in seconds   with the fraction point between bits 15 and 16.  Note that this   variable can take on both positive and negative values, depending on   the relative time and frequency offsets.  This field is significant   only in server messages, where the values range from negative values   of a few milliseconds to positive values of several hundred   milliseconds.      Code       External Reference Source      ------------------------------------------------------------------      LOCL       uncalibrated local clock      CESM       calibrated Cesium clock      RBDM       calibrated Rubidium clock      PPS        calibrated quartz clock or other pulse-per-second                 source      IRIG       Inter-Range Instrumentation Group      ACTS       NIST telephone modem service      USNO       USNO telephone modem service      PTB        PTB (Germany) telephone modem service      TDF        Allouis (France) Radio 164 kHz      DCF        Mainflingen (Germany) Radio 77.5 kHz      MSF        Rugby (UK) Radio 60 kHz      WWV        Ft. Collins (US) Radio 2.5, 5, 10, 15, 20 MHz      WWVB       Boulder (US) Radio 60 kHz      WWVH       Kauai Hawaii (US) Radio 2.5, 5, 10, 15 MHz      CHU        Ottawa (Canada) Radio 3330, 7335, 14670 kHz      LORC       LORAN-C radionavigation system      OMEG       OMEGA radionavigation system      GPS        Global Positioning Service                     Figure 2.  Reference Identifier CodesMills                        Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   Root Dispersion: This is a 32-bit unsigned fixed-point number   indicating the maximum error due to the clock frequency tolerance, in   seconds with the fraction point between bits 15 and 16.  This field   is significant only in server messages, where the values range from   zero to several hundred milliseconds.   Reference Identifier: This is a 32-bit bitstring identifying the   particular reference source.  This field is significant only in   server messages, where for stratum 0 (kiss-o'-death message) and 1   (primary server), the value is a four-character ASCII string, left   justified and zero padded to 32 bits.  For IPv4 secondary servers,   the value is the 32-bit IPv4 address of the synchronization source.   For IPv6 and OSI secondary servers, the value is the first 32 bits of   the MD5 hash of the IPv6 or NSAP address of the synchronization   source.   Primary (stratum 1) servers set this field to a code identifying the   external reference source according to Figure 2.  If the external   reference is one of those listed, the associated code should be used.   Codes for sources not listed can be contrived, as appropriate.      In previous NTP and SNTP secondary servers and clients, this field      was often used to walk-back the synchronization subnet to the root      (primary server) for management purposes.  In SNTPv4 with IPv6 or      OSI, this feature is not available, because the addresses are      longer than 32 bits, and only a hash is available.  However, a      walk-back can be accomplished using the NTP control message and      the reference identifier field described inRFC 1305.   Reference Timestamp: This field is the time the system clock was last   set or corrected, in 64-bit timestamp format.   Originate Timestamp: This is the time at which the request departed   the client for the server, in 64-bit timestamp format.   Receive Timestamp: This is the time at which the request arrived at   the server or the reply arrived at the client, in 64-bit timestamp   format.   Transmit Timestamp: This is the time at which the request departed   the client or the reply departed the server, in 64-bit timestamp   format.   Authenticator (optional): When the NTP authentication scheme is   implemented, the Key Identifier and Message Digest fields contain the   message authentication code (MAC) information defined inAppendix C   of RFC 1305.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 20065.  SNTP Client Operations   An SNTP client can operate in unicast, broadcast, or manycast modes.   In unicast mode, the client sends a request (NTP mode 3) to a   designated unicast server and expects a reply (NTP mode 4) from that   server.  In broadcast client mode, it sends no request and waits for   a broadcast (NTP mode 5) from one or more broadcast servers.  In   manycast mode, the client sends a request (NTP mode 3) to a   designated broadcast address and expects a reply (NTP mode 4) from   one or more manycast servers.  The client uses the first reply   received to establish the particular server for subsequent unicast   operations.  Later replies from this server (duplicates) or any other   server are ignored.  Other than the selection of address in the   request, the operations of manycast and unicast clients are   identical.      Client requests are normally sent at intervals depending on the      frequency tolerance of the client clock and the required accuracy.      However, under no conditions should requests be sent at less than      one minute intervals.  Further discussion on this point is inSection 9.   A unicast or manycast client initializes the NTP message header,   sends the request to the server, and strips the time of day from the   Transmit Timestamp field of the reply.  For this purpose, all the NTP   header fields shown above are set to 0, except the Mode, VN, and   optional Transmit Timestamp fields.   NTP and SNTP clients set the mode field to 3 (client) for unicast and   manycast requests.  They set the VN field to any version number that   is supported by the server, selected by configuration or discovery,   and that can interoperate with all previous version NTP and SNTP   servers.  Servers reply with the same version as the request, so the   VN field of the request also specifies the VN field of the reply.  A   prudent SNTP client can specify the earliest acceptable version on   the expectation that any server of that or a later version will   respond.  NTP Version 3 (RFC 1305) and Version 2 (RFC 1119) servers   accept all previous versions, including Version 1 (RFC 1059).  Note   that Version 0 (RFC 959) is no longer supported by current and future   NTP and SNTP servers.   Although setting the Transmit Timestamp field in the request to the   time of day according to the client clock in NTP timestamp format is   not necessary in a conforming client implementation, it is highly   recommended in unicast and manycast modes.  This allows a simple   calculation to determine the propagation delay between the server and   client and to align the system clock generally within a few tens of   milliseconds relative to the server.  In addition, this provides aMills                        Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   simple method for verifying that the server reply is in fact a   legitimate response to the specific client request and thereby for   avoiding replays.  In broadcast mode, the client has no information   to calculate the propagation delay or to determine the validity of   the server, unless one of the NTP authentication schemes is used.   To calculate the roundtrip delay d and system clock offset t relative   to the server, the client sets the Transmit Timestamp field in the   request to the time of day according to the client clock in NTP   timestamp format.  For this purpose, the clock need not be   synchronized.  The server copies this field to the Originate   Timestamp in the reply and sets the Receive Timestamp and Transmit   Timestamp fields to the time of day according to the server clock in   NTP timestamp format.   When the server reply is received, the client determines a   Destination Timestamp variable as the time of arrival according to   its clock in NTP timestamp format.  The following table summarizes   the four timestamps.      Timestamp Name          ID   When Generated      ------------------------------------------------------------      Originate Timestamp     T1   time request sent by client      Receive Timestamp       T2   time request received by server      Transmit Timestamp      T3   time reply sent by server      Destination Timestamp   T4   time reply received by client   The roundtrip delay d and system clock offset t are defined as:      d = (T4 - T1) - (T3 - T2)     t = ((T2 - T1) + (T3 - T4)) / 2.   Note that in general both delay and offset are signed quantities and   can be less than zero; however, a delay less than zero is possible   only in symmetric modes, which SNTP clients are forbidden to use.   The following table summarizes the required SNTP client operations in   unicast, manycast, and broadcast modes.  The recommended error checks   are shown in the Reply and Broadcast columns in the table.  The   message should be considered valid only if all the fields shown   contain values in the respective ranges.  Whether to believe the   message if one or more of the fields marked "ignore" contain invalid   values is at the discretion of the implementation.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006      Field Name               Unicast/Manycast            Broadcast                               Request     Reply      ---------------------------------------------------------------      LI                       0           0-3            0-3      VN                       1-4         copied from    1-4                                           request      Mode                     3           4              5      Stratum                  0           0-15           0-15      Poll                     0           ignore         ignore      Precision                0           ignore         ignore      Root Delay               0           ignore         ignore      Root Dispersion          0           ignore         ignore      Reference Identifier     0           ignore         ignore      Reference Timestamp      0           ignore         ignore      Originate Timestamp      0           (see text)     ignore      Receive Timestamp        0           (see text)     ignore      Transmit Timestamp       (see text)  nonzero        nonzero      Authenticator            optional    optional       optional   Although not required in a conforming SNTP client implementation, it   is wise to consider a suite of sanity checks designed to avoid   various kinds of abuse that might happen as the result of server   implementation errors or malicious attack.  Following is a list of   suggested checks.   1.  When the IP source and destination addresses are available for       the client request, they should match the interchanged addresses       in the server reply.   2.  When the UDP source and destination ports are available for the       client request, they should match the interchanged ports in the       server reply.   3.  The Originate Timestamp in the server reply should match the       Transmit Timestamp used in the client request.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   4.  The server reply should be discarded if any of the LI, Stratum,       or Transmit Timestamp fields is 0 or the Mode field is not 4       (unicast) or 5 (broadcast).   5.  A truly paranoid client can check that the Root Delay and Root       Dispersion fields are each greater than or equal to 0 and less       than infinity, where infinity is currently a cozy number like one       second.  This check avoids using a server whose synchronization       source has expired for a very long time.6.  SNTP Server Operations   A SNTP server operating with either an NTP or SNTP client of the same   or previous versions retains no persistent state.  Because an SNTP   server ordinarily does not implement the full suite of grooming and   mitigation algorithms intended to support redundant servers and   diverse network paths, it should be operated only in conjunction with   a source of external synchronization, such as a reliable radio clock   or telephone modem.  In this case it operates as a primary (stratum   1) server.   A SNTP server can operate with any unicast, manycast, or broadcast   address or any combination of these addresses.  A unicast or manycast   server receives a request (NTP mode 3), modifies certain fields in   the NTP header, and sends a reply (NTP mode 4), possibly using the   same message buffer as the request.  A manycast server listens on the   designated broadcast address, but uses its own unicast IP address in   the source address field of the reply.  Other than the selection of   address in the reply, the operations of manycast and unicast servers   are identical.  Broadcast messages are normally sent at intervals   from 64 s to 1024 s, depending on the expected frequency tolerance of   the client clocks and the required accuracy.   Unicast and manycast servers copy the VN and Poll fields of the   request intact to the reply and set the Stratum field to 1.      Note that SNTP servers normally operate as primary (stratum 1)      servers.  Although operating at higher strata (up to 15) while      synchronizing to an external source such as a GPS receiver is not      forbidden, this is strongly discouraged.   If the Mode field of the request is 3 (client), the reply is set to 4   (server).  If this field is set to 1 (symmetric active), the reply is   set to 2 (symmetric passive).  This allows clients configured in   either client (NTP mode 3) or symmetric active (NTP mode 1) to   interoperate successfully, even if configured in possibly suboptimal   ways.  For any other value in the Mode field, the request isMills                        Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   discarded.  In broadcast (unsolicited) mode, the VN field is set to   4, the Mode field is set to 5 (broadcast), and the Poll field set to   the nearest integer base-2 logarithm of the poll interval.      Note that it is highly desirable that a broadcast server also      supports unicast clients.  This is so a potential broadcast client      can calculate the propagation delay using a client/server exchange      prior to switching to broadcast client (listen-only) mode.  By      design, a manycast server is also a unicast server.  There does      not seem to be a great advantage for a server to operate as both      broadcast and manycast at the same time, although the protocol      specification does not forbid it.   A broadcast or manycast server does not send packets if not   synchronized to a correctly operating reference source.  It may or   may not respond to a client request if it is not synchronized, but   the preferred option is to respond because this allows reachability   to be determined regardless of synchronization state.  If the server   has never synchronized to a reference source, the LI field is set to   3 (unsynchronized).  Once synchronized to a reference source, the LI   field is set to one of the other three values and remains at the last   value set even if the reference source becomes unreachable or turns   faulty.   If the server is synchronized to a reference source, the Stratum   field is set to 1, and the Reference Identifier field is set to the   ASCII source identifier shown in Figure 2.  If the server is not   synchronized, the Stratum field is set to zero, and the Reference   Identifier field is set to an ASCII error identifier described below.   The Precision field is set to reflect the maximum reading error of   the system clock.  For all practical cases it is computed as the   negative base-2 logarithm of the number of significant bits to the   right of the decimal point in the NTP timestamp format.  The Root   Delay and Root Dispersion fields are set to 0 for a primary server.   The timestamp fields in the server message are set as follows.  If   the server is unsynchronized or first coming up, all timestamp fields   are set to zero, with one exception.  If the message is a reply to a   previously received client request, the Transmit Timestamp field of   the request is copied unchanged to the Originate Timestamp field of   the reply.  It is important that this field be copied intact, as an   NTP or SNTP client uses it to avoid bogus messages.   If the server is synchronized, the Reference Timestamp is set to the   time the last update was received from the reference source.  The   Originate Timestamp field is set as in the unsynchronized case above.   The Transmit Timestamp field is set to the time of day when theMills                        Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   message is sent.  In broadcast messages the Receive Timestamp field   is set to zero and copied from the Transmit Timestamp field in other   messages.  The following table summarizes these actions.      Field Name             Unicast/Manycast             Broadcast                             Request     Reply      ----------------------------------------------------------------      LI                     ignore      as needed       as needed      VN                     1-4         copied from     4                                         request      Mode                   3           4               5      Stratum                ignore      1               1      Poll                   ignore      copied from     log2 poll                                         request         interval      Precision              ignore      -log2 server    -log2 server                                         significant     significant                                         bits            bits      Root Delay             ignore      0               0      Root Dispersion        ignore      0               0      Reference Identifier   ignore      source ident    source ident      Reference Timestamp    ignore      time of last    time of last                                         source update   source update      Originate Timestamp    ignore      copied from     0                                         transmit                                         timestamp      Receive Timestamp      ignore      time of day     0      Transmit Timestamp     (see text)  time of day     time of day      Authenticator          optional    optional        optional   There is some latitude on the part of most clients to forgive invalid   timestamps, such as might occur when the server is first coming up or   during periods when the reference source is inoperative.  The most   important indicator of an unhealthy server is the Stratum field, inMills                        Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   which a value of 0 indicates an unsynchronized condition.  When this   value is displayed, clients should discard the server message,   regardless of the contents of other fields.7.  Configuration and Management   Initial setup for SNTP servers and clients can be done using a web   client, if available, or a serial port, if not.  Some folks hoped   that in-service management of NTP and SNTPv4 servers and clients   could be performed using SNMP and a suitable MIB to be published, and   this has happened in some commercial SNTP servers.  But, the means   that have been used in the last two decades and probably will be used   in the next is the NTP control and monitoring protocol defined inRFC1305.  Ordinarily, SNTP servers and clients are expected to operate   with little or no site-specific configuration, other than specifying   the client IP address, subnet mask, and gateway.   Unicast clients must be provided with one or more designated server   names or IP addresses.  If more than one server is provided, one can   be used for active operation and one of the others for backup should   the active one fail or show an error condition.  It is not normally   useful to use more than one server at a time, as with millions of   SNTP-enabled devices expected in the near future, such use would   represent unnecessary drain on network and server resources.   Broadcast servers and manycast clients must be provided with the TTL   and local broadcast or multicast group address.  Unicast and manycast   servers and broadcast clients may be configured with a list of   address-mask pairs for access control, so that only those clients or   servers known to be trusted will be accepted.  Multicast servers and   clients must implement the IGMP protocol and be provided with the   local broadcast or multicast group address as well.  The   configuration data for cryptographic authentication is beyond the   scope of this memo.   There are several scenarios that provide automatic server discovery   and selection for SNTP clients with no pre-specified server   configuration.  For instance, a role server with CNAME such as   pool.ntp.org returns a randomized list of volunteer secondary server   addresses, and the client can select one or more as candidates.  For   an IP subnet or LAN segment including an NTP or SNTP server, SNTP   clients can be configured as broadcast clients.  The same approach   can be used with multicast servers and clients.  In both cases,   provision of an access control list is a good way to ensure that only   trusted sources can be used to set the system clock.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   In another scenario suitable for an extended network with significant   network propagation delays, clients can be configured for manycast   addresses, both upon initial startup and after some period when the   currently selected unicast source has not been heard.  Following the   defined protocol, the client binds to the server from which the first   reply is received and continues operation in unicast mode.8.  The Kiss-o'-Death Packet   In the rambunctious Internet of today, it is imperative that some   means be available to tell a client to stop making requests and to go   somewhere else.  A recent experience involved a large number of   home/office routers all configured to use a particular university   time server.  Under some error conditions, a substantial fraction of   these routers would send packets at intervals of one second.  The   resulting traffic spike was dramatic, and extreme measures were   required to diagnose the problem and to bring it under control.  The   conclusion is that clients must respect the means available to   targeted servers to stop them from sending packets.   According to the NTP specificationRFC 1305, if the Stratum field in   the NTP header is 1, indicating a primary server, the Reference   Identifier field contains an ASCII string identifying the particular   reference clock type.  However, inRFC 1305 nothing is said about the   Reference Identifier field if the Stratum field is 0, which is called   out as "unspecified".  However, if the Stratum field is 0, the   Reference Identifier field can be used to convey messages useful for   status reporting and access control.  In NTPv4 and SNTPv4, packets of   this kind are called Kiss-o'-Death (KoD) packets, and the ASCII   messages they convey are called kiss codes.  The KoD packets got   their name because an early use was to tell clients to stop sending   packets that violate server access controls.   In general, an SNTP client should stop sending to a particular server   if that server returns a reply with a Stratum field of 0, regardless   of kiss code, and an alternate server is available.  If no alternate   server is available, the client should retransmit using an   exponential-backoff algorithm described in the next section.   The kiss codes can provide useful information for an intelligent   client.  These codes are encoded in four-character ASCII strings left   justified and zero filled.  The strings are designed for character   displays and log files.  Usually, only a few of these codes can occur   with SNTP clients, including DENY, RSTR, and RATE.  Others can occur   more rarely, including INIT and STEP, when the server is in some   special temporary condition.  Figure 3 shows a list of the kiss codes   currently defined.  These are for informational purposes only; the   list might be modified or extended in the future.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006      Code    Meaning      --------------------------------------------------------------      ACST    The association belongs to a anycast server      AUTH    Server authentication failed      AUTO    Autokey sequence failed      BCST    The association belongs to a broadcast server      CRYP    Cryptographic authentication or identification failed      DENY    Access denied by remote server      DROP    Lost peer in symmetric mode      RSTR    Access denied due to local policy      INIT    The association has not yet synchronized for the first              time      MCST    The association belongs to a manycast server      NKEY    No key found.  Either the key was never installed or              is not trusted      RATE    Rate exceeded.  The server has temporarily denied access              because the client exceeded the rate threshold      RMOT    Somebody is tinkering with the association from a remote              host running ntpdc.  Not to worry unless some rascal has              stolen your keys      STEP    A step change in system time has occurred, but the              association has not yet resynchronized                           Figure 3.  Kiss Codes9.  On Being a Good Network Citizen   SNTP and its big brother NTP have been in explosive growth over the   last few years, mirroring the growth of the Internet.  Just about   every Internet appliance has some kind of NTP support, including   Windows XP, Cisco routers, embedded controllers, and software systems   of all kinds.  This is the first edition of the SNTP RFC where it has   become necessary to lay down rules of engagement in the form of   design criteria for SNTP client implementations.  This is necessary   to educate software developers regarding the proper use of Internet   time server resources as the Internet expands and demands on time   servers increase, and to prevent the recurrence of the sort of   problem mentioned above.10.  Best Practices   NTP and SNTP clients can consume considerable network and server   resources if they are not good network citizens.  There are now   consumer Internet commodity devices numbering in the millions that   are potential customers of public and private NTP and SNTP servers.   Recent experience strongly suggests that device designers pay   particular attention to minimizing resource impacts, especially if   large numbers of these devices are deployed.  The most importantMills                        Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   design consideration is the interval between client requests, called   the poll interval.  It is extremely important that the design use the   maximum poll interval consistent with acceptable accuracy.   1.  A client MUST NOT under any conditions use a poll interval less       than 15 seconds.   2.  A client SHOULD increase the poll interval using exponential       backoff as performance permits and especially if the server does       not respond within a reasonable time.   3.  A client SHOULD use local servers whenever available to avoid       unnecessary traffic on backbone networks.   4.  A client MUST allow the operator to configure the primary and/or       alternate server names or addresses in addition to or in place of       a firmware default IP address.   5.  If a firmware default server IP address is provided, it MUST be a       server operated by the manufacturer or seller of the device or       another server, but only with the operator's permission.   6.  A client SHOULD use the Domain Name System (DNS) to resolve the       server IP addresses, so the operator can do effective load       balancing among a server clique and change IP address binding to       canonical names.   7.  A client SHOULD re-resolve the server IP address at periodic       intervals, but not at intervals less than the time-to-live field       in the DNS response.   8.  A client SHOULD support the NTP access-refusal mechanism so that       a server kiss-o'-death reply in response to a client request       causes the client to cease sending requests to that server and to       switch to an alternate, if available.   The following algorithm can be used as a pattern for specific   implementations.  It uses the following variables:   Timer: This is a counter that decrements at a fixed rate.  When it   reaches zero, a packet is sent, and the timer is initialized with the   timeout for the next packet.   Maximum timeout: This is the maximum timeout determined from the   given oscillator frequency tolerance and the required accuracy.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   Server Name: This is the DNS name of the server.  There may be more   than one of them, to be selected by some algorithm not considered   here.   Server IP Address: This is the IPv4, IPv6, or OSI address of the   server.   If the firmware or documentation includes specific server names, the   names should be those the manufacturer or seller operates as a   customer convenience or those for which specific permission has been   obtained from the operator.  A DNS request for a generic server name,   such as ntp.mytimeserver.com, should result in a random selection of   server IP addresses available for that purpose.  Each time a DNS   request is received, a new randomized list is returned.  The client   ordinarily uses the first address on the list.      When candidate SNTP or NTP servers are selected, it is imperative      to respect the server operator's conditions of access.  Lists of      public servers and their conditions of access are available at      www.ntp.org.  A semi-automatic server discovery scheme using DNS      is described at that site.  Some ISPs operate public servers,      although finding them via their help desks can be difficult.   A well-behaved client operates as follows (note that steps 2-4   constitute a synchronization loop):   1.  Consider the specified frequency tolerance of the system clock       oscillator.  Define the required accuracy of the system clock,       then calculate the maximum timeout.  For instance, if the       frequency tolerance is 200 parts per million (PPM) and the       required accuracy is one minute, the maximum timeout is about 3.5       days.  Use the longest maximum timeout possible given the system       constraints to minimize time server aggregate load, but never       make it less than 15 minutes.   2.  When the client is first coming up or after reset, randomize the       timeout from one to five minutes.  This is to minimize shock when       3000 PCs are rebooted at the same time power is restored after a       blackout.  Assume at this time that the IP address is unknown and       that the system clock is unsynchronized.  Otherwise, use the       timeout value as calculated in previous loop steps.  Note that it       may be necessary to refrain from implementing the aforementioned       random delay for some classes of International Computer Security       Association (ICSA) certification.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   3.  When the timer reaches zero, if the IP address is not known, send       a DNS query packet; otherwise, send an NTP request packet to that       address.  If no reply packet has been heard since the last       timeout, double the timeout, but do not make it greater than the       maximum timeout.  If primary and secondary time servers have been       configured, alternate queries between the primary and secondary       servers when no successful response has been received.   4.  If a DNS reply packet is received, save the IP address and       continue at step 2.  If a KoD packet is received, remove that       time server from the list, activate the secondary time server,       and continue at step 2.  If a received packet fails the sanity       checks, drop that packet and also continue at step 2.  If a valid       NTP packet is received, update the system clock, set the timeout       to the maximum, and continue at step 2.11.  Security Considerations   Without cryptographic authentication, SNTPv4 service is vulnerable to   disruption by misbehaving or hostile SNTP or NTP broadcast servers   elsewhere in the Internet.  It is strongly recommended that access   controls and/or cryptographic authentication means be provided for   additional security.  This document includes protocol provisions for   adding such security mechanisms, but it does not define the   mechanisms themselves.  A separate document [MIL03] in preparation   will define a cryptographic security mechanism for SNTP.12.  Acknowledgements   Jeff Learman was helpful in developing the OSI model for this   protocol.  Ajit Thyagarajan provided valuable suggestions and   corrections.13.  Contributors   D. Plonka   J. MontgomeryMills                        Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 200614.  Informative References   [BRA97]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate            Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [COL94]  Colella, R., Callon, R., Gardner, E., and Y. Rekhter,            "Guidelines for OSI NSAP Allocation in the Internet",RFC1629, May 1994.   [DEE89]  Deering, S., "Host extensions for IP multicasting", STD 5,RFC 1112, August 1989.   [DEE98]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6            (IPv6) Specification",RFC 2460, December 1998.   [DOB91]  Shue, C., Haggerty, W., and K. Dobbins, "OSI connectionless            transport services on top of UDP: Version 1",RFC 1240, June            1991.   [FUR94]  Furniss, P., "Octet Sequences for Upper-Layer OSI to Support            Basic Communications Applications",RFC 1698, October 1994.   [ISO86]  International Standards 8602 - Information Processing            Systems - OSI: Connectionless Transport Protocol            Specification.  International Standards Organization,            December 1986.   [MIL92]  Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3) Specification,            Implementation and Analysis",RFC 1305, March 1992.   [MIL03]  Mills, D., "The Autokey Security Architecture, Protocol and            Algorithms",http://eecis.udel.edu/~mills/database/reports/stime/stime.pdf, August 2003.   [PAR93]  Partridge, C., Mendez, T., and W. Milliken, "Host Anycasting            Service",RFC 1546, November 1993.   [POS80]  Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768, August            1980.   [POS83]  Postel, J. and K. Harrenstien, "Time Protocol", STD 26,RFC868, May 1983.   [SRI99]  Srisuresh, P. and M. Holdrege, "IP Network Address            Translator (NAT) Terminology and Considerations",RFC 2663,            August 1999.Mills                        Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006   [SRI01]  Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network            Address Translator (Traditional NAT)",RFC 3022, January            2001.Author's Address   David L. Mills   Electrical and Computer Engineering Department   University of Delaware   Newark, DE 19716   Phone: (302) 831-8247   EMail: mills@udel.eduMills                        Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 4330             SNTPv4 for IPv4, IPv6 and OSI          January 2006Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78 and at www.rfc-editor.org/copyright.html, and   except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is provided by the IETF   Administrative Support Activity (IASA).Mills                        Informational                     [Page 27]

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