Set the local time and date by polling NTP servers
ntpdate [-46bBdqsuv] [-a key] [-e authdelay] 
        [-k keyfile] [-M i=your_hostname] 
        [-o version]  [-p samples] 
        [-t timeout] server [...]  
Neutrino
- -4
  
 
- Force DNS resolution of hosts to the IP4 namespace.
  
 
- -6
  
 
- Force DNS resolution of hosts to the IP6 namespace.  
  
 
- -a key              
  
 
- Enable the authentication function,  where key is the key
      identifier. Both keys and the key identifiers
      must match the client and server key files. The default is to disable the
      authentication function.
  
 
- -B              
  
 
- Force the time to always be adjusted using
    ClockAdjust(),
    even if the measured offset is larger than ±128 milliseconds.
    The default is to set the time using
    settimeofday().
    In case the
      offset is much greater than ±128 milliseconds, a longer time (in hours) may be
      needed to adjust the clock to the correct value. During this time, the host
      is not  used to synchronize clients. 
  
 
- -b
  
 
- Force the time to be stepped using the settimeofday()
      function call. You should use this option when calling from a startup file
      at boot time.
  
 
- -d
  
 
- Enable the debugging mode, after going through all the steps. 
      Don't adjust the local clock. Print the useful information. 
  
 
- -e authdelay
  
 
- Specify the processing delay authdelay (in seconds and
      fractions thereof) to perform an authentication function. This option 
      improves timekeeping for slow CPUs. You may neglect it for most purposes.  
  
 
- -k keyfile
  
 
- Specify the path for the authentication key file as the string
      keyfile. The default is /etc/ntp/ntp.keys.
     For information about this file, see its entry in the
     FreeBSD documentation.
  
 
- -M i=your_hostname
  
 
- Enable your host to listen broadcast and multicast messages.
  
 
- -o version
  
 
- Specify the NTP version, which can be either 1 or 2 or 3. The default is 3.
      Use this option to use ntpdate with an older NTP version. 
  
 
- -p samples
  
 
- Specify the number of samples acquire from each server. The
      range is 1 to 8; the default is 4.
   
 
- -q 
   
 
- Query the clock; don't set it. 
   
 
- -s 
   
 
- Divert logging output to the system 
       syslog facility. This is designed primarily for
       the convenience of cron scripts. 
   
 
- -t timeout 
   
 
- Specify the maximum time for a server response — in seconds and
       fractions thereof. 
       The value is rounded to a multiple of 0.2 seconds. 
       The default is 1 second, a value suitable for polling across a LAN. 
   
 
- -u
   
 
- Direct ntpdate to use an unprivileged port for outgoing packets. This is 
       most useful when a firewall blocks incoming traffic to 
       privileged ports, and you want to synchronize with hosts beyond the 
       firewall. Note that the -d option always uses unprivileged ports.
   
 
- -v
   
 
- Be verbose. Log the  ntpdate version identification string. 
 
Use the  ntpdate utility to set the local time and date by polling 
NTP (Network Time Protocol) servers. The accuracy and reliability of this utility 
depends on the number of servers, the number of polls each time it is run, and
the interval between runs. 
  | 
Run the ntpdate utility as root on the local host.  | 
 
At boot time, you may use a host startup script to run the
ntpdate utility in order to set the clock. If necessary, 
you can also run this utility manually. Using the host script to set time
initially is sometimes useful, e.g. set the time before you start  
the NTP daemon, ntpd.  You can also run ntpdate 
from a cron script. 
The accuracy of the ntpdate utility is limited. 
You use an -M option to support broadcast and
multicast messages. Use -M
i=hostname  to join the multicast group. You are now able to
listen for broadcast and multicast messages from an broadcast/multicast
enabled server. 
Use the ntpdate utility to adjust time in two ways: 
- Use settimeofday() to step the time when the clock's in error by more than 0.5
seconds.
 
- Use ClockAdjust() to adjust the time when the clock's in error by less
than 0.5 seconds. 
 
The latter technique is less disruptive and more 
accurate when the error is small, and works quite well when
ntpdate is run by cron every hour or two.
  
When the ntpd utility is running on the same host, the 
ntpdate utility doesn't set the date.
  
You may force the DNS resolution to the IPv4 (or IPv6) 
namespace, if you use a  
-4 (or -6) option  that precedes a host name.  
Since the time adjustment is actually 50% larger than the measured offset, it
tends to keep a badly drifting clock more accurate. This is not good,
however, for some kernel variables such as tick or tickadj. 
ntpd,  
 ntpdc,
ntpq,
ntptrace
ClockAdjust(),
settimeofday()
in the Neutrino Library Reference
ntp.keys
in the FreeBSD documentation