NTP Access Control Menu
Page 12-42

Display the Traps Set in the Server

The ntpvtrap command allows you to view a list of trap receivers set for the server. To view
the trap list, enter the ntpvtrap command at the system prompt. A display similar to the
following is shown:
address 127.0.0.1, port 18447
interface: 0.0.0.5, configured
set for 0 seconds, last set 0 seconds ago
sequence 1, number of resets 1
Field Descriptions
The following section describes the fields shown with the ntpvtrap command.
address. The address of the server where the trap was set.
port. The port on which the server is listening for NTP messages.
Note
This is the TCP and UDP definition of a port, not a
switch interface port.
interface. The local interface address of the NTP server.
set for n seconds. The time the trap was initially set.
last set. The time in seconds from when the last trap was set for this server.
sequence. The number of times the trap was set.
number of resets. The number of times the trap has been reset.

Remove a Trap (Configured or Otherwise) from the Server

The ntpdtrap command allows you to remove a trap receiver for the given address. The trap
receiver will log event messages an other information for the server in a log file.
To delete a trap receiver, enter the ntpdtrap 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.
Note
This is the TCP/IP and UDP definition of a port, not a
switch interface port.
interface. The local interface address for this NTP entity. For more infor-
mation on interface addresses, see Display Peer Summary Infor-
mation on page 12-16.