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Can we please stop this strange naming of system utilities.  chrony is so similar to chron, that I assumed it was related.  It never occured to me it might be a repalcement NTP daemon.
Can we please stop this strange naming of system utilities.  chrony is so similar to chron, that I assumed it was related.  It never occured to me it might be a repalcement NTP daemon.
...redacted...
...redacted...
Further, running chronyc as root should not require me to use a  "commandkey-password", especially since it seems to not work anyway
example below (HEX used was from /etc/chrony.keys - value here not shown, replaced with 1s)
<nowiki>
chronyc> password HEX:11111111111111111111111111111111111
501 Not authorised --- Reply not authenticated
chronyc>
</nowiki>

Revision as of 09:11, 5 February 2015

Any reason we don't call this just ntp-ng? It's getting harder to figure out what half these daemon projects are called. NTP is what it spells. 'Chrony' does not sound like time to me.

--Smitty (talk) 08:33, 5 February 2015 (UTC) Agreed. I had no idea I was already running an NTP client. It seems it doesn't work correctly, since I subsequently installed ntpd. Can we please stop this strange naming of system utilities. chrony is so similar to chron, that I assumed it was related. It never occured to me it might be a repalcement NTP daemon. ...redacted...

Further, running chronyc as root should not require me to use a "commandkey-password", especially since it seems to not work anyway example below (HEX used was from /etc/chrony.keys - value here not shown, replaced with 1s) chronyc> password HEX:11111111111111111111111111111111111 501 Not authorised --- Reply not authenticated chronyc>