NTP Access Control Menu
Page 12-41

Remove Flags from a Restrict Entry

It is possible to place restriction flags on specific NTP entities in relation to the switch. Restric-
tion flags prevent messages or information coming from the NTP entity from affecting the
switch.
To remove a restriction flag from an NTP entity, enter the ntpmres command as shown:
ntpmres <address> <mask> <restriction>
where <address> is the IP address of the NTP entity, <mask> is the entity’s subnet mask, and
<restriction> is the specific flag you want to remove from the entity. For example, to remove
an ignore restriction from an entity with address 1.1.1.1 and a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0,
enter the following:
ntpmres 1.1.1.1 255.255.0.0 ignore

Delete a Restrict Entry

To remove an entry completely from the restriction list, enter the ntpdres command in the
following manner:
ntpdres <address> <mask>
where <address> is the IP address of the NTP entity, and <mask> is the entity’s subnet mask.
For example to remove an entity with address 1.1.1.1 and a subnet mask of 255.255.0.0, enter
the following:
ntpmres 1.1.1.1 255.255.0.0
This entity will no longer be listed in the restriction list and has no restriction flags placed on
messages it sends to the switch.

Configure a Trap in the Server

The ntpctrap command allows you to set a trap receiver for the given address and port
number. The trap receiver will log event messages and other information for the server in a
log file.
To create a trap receiver, enter the ntpctrap command in the following manner:
ntpctrap <address> [<port>] [<interface>]
where address is the IP address of the switch. There are two optional items you can specify:
port The port on the switch used for sending NTP messages. If no
port is specified, a default port of 18447 is used.
Note
This is the TCP and UDP definition of a port, not a
switch interface port.
interface The local interface address for this NTP entity. If no interface is
specified, the interface for the local NTP entity is used. For
more information on interface addresses, see Display Peer
Summary Information on page 12-16.