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rfc:bcp:bcp223

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) D. Reilly, Ed. Request for Comments: 8633 Orolia USA BCP: 223 H. Stenn Category: Best Current Practice Network Time Foundation ISSN: 2070-1721 D. Sibold

                                                                   PTB
                                                             July 2019
            Network Time Protocol Best Current Practices

Abstract

 The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is one of the oldest protocols on the
 Internet and has been widely used since its initial publication.
 This document is a collection of best practices for the general
 operation of NTP servers and clients on the Internet.  It includes
 recommendations for the stable, accurate, and secure operation of NTP
 infrastructure.  This document is targeted at NTP version 4 as
 described in RFC 5905.

Status of This Memo

 This memo documents an Internet Best Current Practice.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
 BCPs is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8633.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 1] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2019 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 2] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
   1.1.  Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
 2.  General Network Security Best Practices . . . . . . . . . . .   4
   2.1.  BCP 38  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
 3.  NTP Configuration Best Practices  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   3.1.  Keeping NTP Up to Date  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   3.2.  Using Enough Time Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   3.3.  Using a Diversity of Reference Clocks . . . . . . . . . .   6
   3.4.  Control Messages  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   3.5.  Monitoring  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   3.6.  Using Pool Servers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
   3.7.  Leap-Second Handling  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
     3.7.1.  Leap Smearing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
 4.  NTP Security Mechanisms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
   4.1.  Pre-Shared Key Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
   4.2.  Autokey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
   4.3.  Network Time Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
   4.4.  External Security Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
 5.  NTP Security Best Practices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
   5.1.  Minimizing Information Leakage  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
   5.2.  Avoiding Daemon Restart Attacks . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   5.3.  Detection of Attacks through Monitoring . . . . . . . . .  14
   5.4.  Kiss-o'-Death Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
   5.5.  Broadcast Mode Only on Trusted Networks . . . . . . . . .  15
   5.6.  Symmetric Mode Only with Trusted Peers  . . . . . . . . .  16
 6.  NTP in Embedded Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
   6.1.  Updating Embedded Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
   6.2.  Server Configuration  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
 7.  NTP over Anycast  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
 8.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
 9.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
 10. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   10.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   10.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
 Appendix A.  Best Practices Specific to the Network Time
              Foundation Implementation  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
   A.1.  Use Enough Time Sources . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
   A.2.  NTP Control and Facility Messages . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
   A.3.  Monitoring  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
   A.4.  Leap-Second File  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
   A.5.  Leap Smearing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
   A.6.  Configuring ntpd  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
   A.7.  Pre-Shared Keys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
 Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 3] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

1. Introduction

 NTP version 4 (NTPv4) has been widely used since its publication as
 [RFC5905].  This document is a collection of best practices for the
 operation of NTP clients and servers.
 The recommendations in this document are intended to help operators
 distribute time on their networks more accurately and securely.  They
 are intended to apply generally to a broad range of networks.  Some
 specific networks may have higher accuracy requirements that call for
 additional techniques beyond what is documented here.
 Among the best practices covered are recommendations for general
 network security, time protocol-specific security, and NTP server and
 client configuration.  NTP operation in embedded devices is also
 covered.
 This document also contains information for protocol implementors who
 want to develop their own implementations compliant with RFC 5905.

1.1. Requirements Language

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
 "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
 capitals, as shown here.

2. General Network Security Best Practices

2.1. BCP 38

 Many network attacks rely on modifying the IP source address of a
 packet to point to a different IP address than the computer from
 which it originated.  UDP-based protocols, such as NTP, are generally
 more susceptible to spoofing attacks than connection-oriented
 protocols.  NTP control messages can generate a lot of data in
 response to a small query, which makes it attractive as a vector for
 distributed denial-of-service attacks (NTP Control messages are
 discussed further in Section 3.4).  One documented instance of such
 an attack can be found in [DDOS], with further discussion in [IMC14]
 and [NDSS14].
 BCP 38 [RFC2827] was published in 2000 to provide some level of
 remediation against address-spoofing attacks.  BCP 38 calls for
 filtering outgoing and incoming traffic to make sure that the source
 and destination IP addresses are consistent with the expected flow of
 traffic on each network interface.  It is RECOMMENDED that ISPs and

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 4] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 large corporate networks implement ingress and egress filtering.
 More information is available at [BCP38WIKI].

3. NTP Configuration Best Practices

 This section provides best practices for NTP configuration and
 operation.  Application of these best practices that are specific to
 the Network Time Foundation implementation, including example
 configuration directives valid at the time of this writing, are
 compiled in Appendix A.

3.1. Keeping NTP Up to Date

 There are multiple versions and implementations of the NTP protocol
 in use on many different platforms.  The practices in this document
 are meant to apply generally to any implementation of [RFC5905].  NTP
 users should select an implementation that is actively maintained.
 Users should keep up to date on any known attacks on their selected
 implementation and deploy updates containing security fixes as soon
 as it is practical.

3.2. Using Enough Time Sources

 An NTP implementation that is compliant with [RFC5905] takes the
 available sources of time and submits this timing data to
 sophisticated intersection, clustering, and combining algorithms to
 get the best estimate of the correct time.  The description of these
 algorithms is beyond the scope of this document.  Interested readers
 should read [RFC5905] or the detailed description of NTP in
 [MILLS2006].
 o  If there is only one source of time, the answer is obvious.  It
    may not be a good source of time, but it's the only source that
    can be considered.  Any issue with the time at the source will be
    passed on to the client.
 o  If there are two sources of time and they align well enough, then
    the best time can be calculated easily.  But if one source fails,
    then the solution degrades to the single-source solution outlined
    above.  And if the two sources don't agree, it will be difficult
    to know which one is correct without making use of information
    from outside of the protocol.
 o  If there are three sources of time, there is more data available
    to converge on the best calculated time, and this time is more
    likely to be accurate.  And the loss of one of the sources (by
    becoming unreachable or unusable) can be tolerated.  But at that
    point, the solution degrades to the two-source solution.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 5] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 o  Having four or more sources of time is better as long as the
    sources are diverse (Section 3.3).  If one of these sources
    develops a problem, there are still at least three other time
    sources.
 This analysis assumes that a majority of the servers used in the
 solution are honest, even if some may be inaccurate.  Operators
 should be aware of the possibility that if an attacker is in control
 of the network, the time coming from all servers could be
 compromised.
 Operators who are concerned with maintaining accurate time SHOULD use
 at least four independent, diverse sources of time.  Four sources
 will provide sufficient backup in case one source goes down.  If four
 sources are not available, operators MAY use fewer sources, which is
 subject to the risks outlined above.
 But even with four or more sources of time, systemic problems can
 happen.  One example involves the leap-smearing concept detailed in
 Section 3.7.1.  For several hours before and after the June 2015 leap
 second, several operators configured their NTP servers with leap
 smearing while others did not.  Many NTP end nodes could not
 determine an accurate time source because two of their four sources
 of time gave them consistent UTC/POSIX time, while the other two gave
 them consistent leap-smeared time.  This is just one of many
 potential causes of disagreement among time sources.
 Operators are advised to monitor all time sources that are in use.
 If time sources do not generally align, operators are encouraged to
 investigate the cause and either correct the problems or stop using
 defective servers.  See Section 3.5 for more information.

3.3. Using a Diversity of Reference Clocks

 When using servers with attached hardware reference clocks, it is
 suggested that different types of reference clocks be used.  Having a
 diversity of sources with independent implementations means that any
 one issue is less likely to cause a service interruption.
 Are all clocks on a network from the same vendor?  They may have the
 same bugs.  Even devices from different vendors may not be truly
 independent if they share common elements.  Are they using the same
 base chipset?  Are they all running the same version of firmware?
 Chipset and firmware bugs can happen, but they can be more difficult
 to diagnose than application software bugs.  When having the correct
 time is of critical importance, it's ultimately up to operators to
 ensure that their sources are sufficiently independent, even if they
 are not under the operator's control.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 6] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 A systemic problem with time from any satellite navigation service is
 possible and has happened.  Sunspot activity can render a satellite
 or radio-based time source unusable.  Depending on the application
 requirements, operators may need to consider backup scenarios in the
 rare circumstance when the satellite system is faulty or unavailable.

3.4. Control Messages

 Some implementations of NTPv4 provide the NTP control messages (also
 known as Mode 6 messages).  These messages were originally specified
 in Appendix B of [RFC1305], which defined NTPv3.  These messages do
 not appear in the NTPv4 specification [RFC5905], which obsoletes the
 NTPv3 specification [RFC1305], but they are still used.  At the time
 of this writing, work is being done to formally document the
 structure of these control messages for use with NTPv4 in [CTRLMSG].
 NTP control messages are designed to permit monitoring and optionally
 authenticated control of NTP and its configuration.  Used properly,
 these facilities provide vital debugging and performance information
 and control.  But these facilities can be a vector for amplification
 attacks when abused.  For this reason, it is RECOMMENDED that public-
 facing NTP servers block NTP control message queries from outside
 their organization.
 The ability to use NTP control messages beyond their basic monitoring
 capabilities SHOULD be limited to authenticated sessions that provide
 a 'controlkey'.  It can also be limited through mechanisms outside of
 the NTP specification, such as Access Control Lists, that only allow
 access from approved IP addresses.
 The NTP control message responses are much larger than the
 corresponding queries.  Thus, they can be abused in high-bandwidth
 DDoS attacks.  Section 2.1 gives more information on how to provide
 protection for this abuse by implementing BCP 38.

3.5. Monitoring

 Operators SHOULD use their NTP implementation's remote monitoring
 capabilities to quickly identify servers that are out of sync and
 ensure correct functioning of the service.  Operators SHOULD also
 monitor system logs for messages so that problems and abuse attempts
 can be quickly identified.
 If a system starts to receive NTP Reply packets from a remote time
 server that do not correspond to any requests sent by the system,
 that can be an indication that an attacker is forging that system's
 IP address in requests to the remote time server.  The goal of this
 attack is to adversely impact the availability of time to the

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 7] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 targeted system whose address is being forged.  Based on these forged
 packets, the remote time server might decide to throttle or rate-
 limit packets or even stop sending packets to the targeted system.
 If a system is a broadcast client and its system log shows that it is
 receiving early time messages from its server, that is an indication
 that somebody may be forging packets from a broadcast server
 (broadcast client and server modes are defined in Section 3 of
 [RFC5905]).
 If a server's system log shows messages that indicate it is receiving
 NTP timestamps that are much earlier than the current system time,
 then either the system clock is unusually fast or somebody is trying
 to launch a replay attack against that server.

3.6. Using Pool Servers

 It only takes a small amount of bandwidth and system resources to
 synchronize one NTP client, but NTP servers that can service tens of
 thousands of clients take more resources to run.  Network operators
 and advanced users who want to synchronize their computers MUST only
 synchronize to servers that they have permission to use.
 The NTP Pool Project is a group of volunteers who have donated their
 computing and bandwidth resources to freely distribute time from
 primary time sources to others on the Internet.  The time is
 generally of good quality but comes with no guarantee whatsoever.  If
 you are interested in using this pool, please review their
 instructions at [POOLUSE].
 Vendors can obtain their own subdomain that is part of the NTP Pool
 Project.  This offers vendors the ability to safely make use of the
 time distributed by the pool for their devices.  Details are
 available at [POOLVENDOR].
 If there is a need to synchronize many computers, an operator may
 want to run local NTP servers that are synchronized to the NTP Pool
 Project.  NTP users on that operator's networks can then be
 synchronized to local NTP servers.

3.7. Leap-Second Handling

 UTC is kept in agreement with the Universal Time UT1 [SOLAR] to
 within +/- 0.9 seconds by the insertion (or possibly deletion) of a
 leap second.  UTC is an atomic time scale, whereas UT1 is based on
 the rotational rate of the earth.  Leap seconds are not introduced at

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 8] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 a fixed rate.  They are announced by the International Earth Rotation
 and Reference Systems Service (IERS) in its Bulletin C [IERS] when
 necessary to keep UTC and UT1 aligned.
 NTP time is based on the UTC timescale, and the protocol has the
 capability to broadcast leap-second information.  Some global
 navigation satellite systems (like GPS) or radio transmitters (like
 DCF77) broadcast leap-second information.  If an NTP client is synced
 to an NTP server that provides leap-second notification, the client
 will get advance notification of impending leap seconds
 automatically.
 Since the length of the UT1 day generally slowly increases [SOLAR],
 all leap seconds that have been introduced since the practice started
 in 1972 have been positive leap seconds, where a second is added to
 UTC.  NTP also supports a negative leap second, where a second is
 removed from UTC if it ever becomes necessary.
 While earlier versions of NTP contained some ambiguity regarding when
 a leap second broadcast by a server should be applied by a client,
 RFC 5905 is clear that leap seconds are only applied on the last day
 of a month.  However, because some older clients may apply it at the
 end of the current day, it is RECOMMENDED that NTP servers wait until
 the last day of the month before broadcasting leap seconds.  Doing
 this will prevent older clients from applying a leap second at the
 wrong time.  When implementing this recommendation, operators should
 ensure that clients are not configured to use polling intervals
 greater than 24 hours so the leap-second notification is not missed.
 In circumstances where an NTP server is not receiving leap-second
 information from an automated source, certain organizations maintain
 files that are updated every time a new leap second is announced:
    NIST: <ftp://time.nist.gov/pub/leap-seconds.list>
    US Navy (maintains GPS Time):
    <ftp://tycho.usno.navy.mil/pub/ntp/leap-seconds.list>
    IERS (announces leap seconds):
    <https://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/ntp/leap-seconds.list>

3.7.1. Leap Smearing

 Some NTP installations make use of a technique called leap smearing.
 With this method, instead of introducing an extra second (or
 eliminating a second) in a leap-second event, NTP time is adjusted in
 small increments over a comparably large window of time (called the
 smear interval) around the leap-second event.  The smear interval

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 9] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 should be large enough for the time to be adjusted at a low rate, so
 that clients will follow the smeared time without objecting.  Periods
 ranging from two to twenty-four hours have been used successfully.
 During the adjustment window, all the NTP clients' times may be
 offset from UTC by as much as a full second, depending on the
 implementation.  However, all clients will generally agree on what
 time they think it is.
 The purpose of leap smearing is to enable systems that don't deal
 with the leap-second event properly to function consistently, at the
 expense of fidelity to UTC during the smear window.  During a
 standard leap-second event, a minute will have 61 (or possibly 59)
 seconds, and some applications (and even some OSs) are known to have
 problems with that.
 Operators who have legal obligations or other strong requirements to
 be synchronized with UTC or civil time SHOULD NOT use leap smearing
 because the distributed time cannot be guaranteed to be traceable to
 UTC during the smear interval.
 Clients that are connected to leap-smearing servers MUST NOT apply
 the standard NTP leap-second handling.  These clients must never have
 a leap-second file loaded, and the smearing servers must never
 advertise to clients for which a leap second is pending.
 Any use of leap-smearing servers should be limited to within a
 single, well-controlled environment.  Leap smearing MUST NOT be used
 for public-facing NTP servers, as they will disagree with non-
 smearing servers (as well as UTC) during the leap smear interval, and
 there is no standardized way for a client to detect that a server is
 using leap smearing.  However, be aware that some public-facing
 servers may be configured this way in spite of this guidance.
 System administrators are advised to be aware of impending leap
 seconds and how the servers (inside and outside their organization)
 they are using deal with them.  Individual clients MUST NOT be
 configured to use a mixture of smeared and non-smeared servers.  If a
 client uses smeared servers, the servers it uses must all have the
 same leap smear configuration.

4. NTP Security Mechanisms

 In the standard configuration, NTP packets are exchanged unprotected
 between client and server.  An adversary that is able to become a man
 in the middle is therefore able to drop, replay, or modify the
 content of the NTP packet, which leads to degradation of the time
 synchronization or transmission of false time information.  A threat
 analysis for time-synchronization protocols is given in [RFC7384].

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 10] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 NTP provides two internal security mechanisms to protect the
 authenticity and integrity of the NTP packets.  Both measures protect
 the NTP packet by means of a Message Authentication Code (MAC).
 Neither of them encrypts the NTP's payload because this payload
 information is not considered to be confidential.

4.1. Pre-Shared Key Approach

 This approach applies a symmetric key for the calculation of the MAC,
 which protects the authenticity and integrity of the exchanged
 packets for an association.  NTP does not provide a mechanism for the
 exchange of keys between the associated nodes.  Therefore, for each
 association, keys MUST be exchanged securely by external means, and
 they MUST be protected from disclosure.  It is RECOMMENDED that each
 association be protected by its own unique key.  It is RECOMMENDED
 that participants agree to refresh keys periodically.  However, NTP
 does not provide a mechanism to assist in doing so.  Each
 communication partner will need to keep track of its keys in its own
 local key storage.
 [RFC5905] specifies using the MD5 hash algorithm for calculation of
 the MAC, but other algorithms may be supported as well.  The MD5 hash
 is now considered to be too weak and unsuitable for cryptographic
 usage.  [RFC6151] has more information on the algorithm's weaknesses.
 Implementations will soon be available based on AES-128-CMAC
 [RFC8573], and users SHOULD use that when it is available.
 Some implementations store the key in clear text.  Therefore, it MUST
 only be readable by the NTP process.
 An NTP client has to be able to link a key to a particular server in
 order to establish a protected association.  This linkage is
 implementation specific.  Once applied, a key will be trusted until
 the link is removed.

4.2. Autokey

 [RFC5906] specifies the Autokey protocol.  It was published in 2010
 to provide automated key management and authentication of NTP
 servers.  However, security researchers have identified
 vulnerabilities [AUTOKEY] in the Autokey protocol.
 Autokey SHOULD NOT be used.

4.3. Network Time Security

 Work is in progress on an enhanced replacement for Autokey.  Refer to
 [NTSFORNTP] for more information.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 11] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

4.4. External Security Protocols

 If applicable, external security protocols such as IPsec and MACsec
 can be applied to enhance the integrity and authenticity protection
 of NTP time-synchronization packets.  Usage of such external security
 protocols can decrease time-synchronization performance [RFC7384].
 Therefore, operators are advised to carefully evaluate whether the
 decreased time-synchronization performance meets their specific
 timing requirements.
 Note that none of the security measures described in Section 4 can
 prevent packet delay manipulation attacks on NTP.  Such delay attacks
 can target time-synchronization packets sent as clear text or even
 within an encrypted tunnel.  These attacks are described further in
 Section 3.2.6 of [RFC7384].

5. NTP Security Best Practices

 This section lists some general NTP security practices, but these
 issues may (or may not) have been mitigated in particular versions of
 particular implementations.  Contact the maintainers of the relevant
 implementation for more information.

5.1. Minimizing Information Leakage

 The base NTP packet leaks important information (including reference
 ID and reference time) that may be used in attacks [NDSS16]
 [CVE-2015-8138] [CVE-2016-1548].  A remote attacker can learn this
 information by sending mode 3 queries to a target system and
 inspecting the fields in the mode 4 response packet.  NTP control
 queries also leak important information (including reference ID,
 expected origin timestamp, etc.) that may be used in attacks
 [CVE-2015-8139].  A remote attacker can learn this information by
 sending control queries to a target system and inspecting the leaked
 information in the response.
 As such, mechanisms outside of the NTP protocol, such as Access
 Control Lists, SHOULD be used to limit the exposure of this
 information to allowed IP addresses and keep it from remote attackers
 not on the list.  Hosts SHOULD only respond to NTP control queries
 from authorized parties.
 An NTP client that does not provide time on the network can
 additionally log and drop incoming mode 3 timing queries from
 unexpected sources.  Note well that the easiest way to monitor the
 status of an NTP instance is to send it a mode 3 query, so it may not
 be desirable to drop all mode 3 queries.  As an alternative,
 operators SHOULD either filter mode 3 queries from outside their

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 12] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 networks or make sure mode 3 queries are allowed only from trusted
 systems or networks.
 A "leaf-node host" is a host that uses NTP solely for the purpose of
 adjusting its own system time.  Such a host is not expected to
 provide time to other hosts and relies exclusively on NTP's basic
 mode to take time from a set of servers (that is, the host sends mode
 3 queries to its servers and receives mode 4 responses from these
 servers containing timing information.)  To minimize information
 leakage, leaf-node hosts SHOULD drop all incoming NTP packets except
 mode 4 response packets that come from known sources.  An exception
 to this can be made if a leaf-node host is being actively monitored,
 in which case incoming packets from the monitoring server can be
 allowed.
 Please refer to [DATAMIN] for more information.

5.2. Avoiding Daemon Restart Attacks

 [RFC5905] says NTP clients should not accept time shifts greater than
 the panic threshold.  Specifically, RFC 5905 says "PANIC means the
 offset is greater than the panic threshold PANICT (1000 s) and SHOULD
 cause the program to exit with a diagnostic message to the system
 log."
 However, this behavior can be exploited by attackers as described in
 [NDSS16] when the following two conditions hold:
 1.  The operating system automatically restarts the NTP client when
     it quits.  Modern UNIX and UNIX-like operating systems are
     replacing traditional init systems with process supervisors, such
     as systemd, which can be configured to automatically restart any
     daemons that quit.  This behavior is the default in CoreOS and
     Arch Linux.  As of the time of this writing, it appears likely to
     become the default behavior in other systems as they migrate
     legacy init scripts to process supervisors such as systemd.
 2.  The NTP client is configured to ignore the panic threshold on all
     restarts.
 In such cases, if the attacker can send the target an offset that
 exceeds the panic threshold, the client will quit.  Then, when it
 restarts, it ignores the panic threshold and accepts the attacker's
 large offset.
 Operators need to be aware that when operating with the above two
 conditions, the panic threshold offers no protection from attacks.
 The natural solution is not to run hosts with these conditions.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 13] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 Specifically, operators SHOULD NOT ignore the panic threshold in all
 cold-start situations unless sufficient oversight and checking is in
 place to make sure that this type of attack cannot happen.
 As an alternative, the following steps MAY be taken by operators to
 mitigate the risk of attack:
 o  Monitor the NTP system log to detect when the NTP daemon quit due
    to a panic event, as this could be a sign of an attack.
 o  Request manual intervention when a timestep larger than the panic
    threshold is detected.
 o  Configure the ntp client to only ignore the panic threshold in a
    cold-start situation.
 o  Increase the minimum number of servers required before the NTP
    client adjusts the system clock.  This will make the NTP client
    wait until enough trusted sources of time agree before declaring
    the time to be correct.
 In addition, the following steps SHOULD be taken by those who
 implement the NTP protocol:
 o  Prevent the NTP daemon from taking time steps that set the clock
    to a time earlier than the compile date of the NTP daemon.
 o  Prevent the NTP daemon from putting 'INIT' in the reference ID of
    its NTP packets upon initializing.  This will make it more
    difficult for attackers to know when the daemon reboots.

5.3. Detection of Attacks through Monitoring

 Operators SHOULD monitor their NTP instances to detect attacks.  Many
 known attacks on NTP have particular signatures.  Common attack
 signatures include:
 1.  Bogus packets - A packet whose origin timestamp does not match
     the value that is expected by the client.
 2.  Zero origin packet - A packet with an origin timestamp set to
     zero [CVE-2015-8138].
 3.  A packet with an invalid cryptographic MAC.
 The observation of many such packets could indicate that the client
 is under attack.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 14] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

5.4. Kiss-o'-Death Packets

 The "Kiss-o'-Death" (KoD) packet includes a rate-management mechanism
 where a server can tell a misbehaving client to reduce its query
 rate.  KoD packets in general (and the RATE packet in particular) are
 defined in Section 7.4 of [RFC5905].  It is RECOMMENDED that all NTP
 devices respect these packets and back off when asked to do so by a
 server.  This is even more important for an embedded device, which
 may not have an exposed control interface for NTP.
 That said, a client MUST only accept a KoD packet if it has a valid
 origin timestamp.  Once a RATE packet is accepted, the client should
 increase its poll interval value (thus decreasing its polling rate)
 to a reasonable maximum.  This maximum can vary by implementation but
 should not exceed a poll interval value of 13 (two hours).  The
 mechanism to determine how much to increase the poll interval value
 is undefined in [RFC5905].  If the client uses the poll interval
 value sent by the server in the RATE packet, it MUST NOT simply
 accept any value.  Using large interval values may create a vector
 for a denial-of-service attack that causes the client to stop
 querying its server [NDSS16].
 The KoD rate-management mechanism relies on clients behaving properly
 in order to be effective.  Some clients ignore the RATE packet
 entirely, and other poorly implemented clients might unintentionally
 increase their poll rate and simulate a denial-of-service attack.
 Server administrators are advised to be prepared for this and take
 measures outside of the NTP protocol to drop packets from misbehaving
 clients when these clients are detected.
 Kiss-o'-Death (KoD) packets can be used in denial-of-service attacks.
 Thus, the observation of even just one RATE packet with a high poll
 value could be sign that the client is under attack.  And KoD packets
 are commonly accepted even when not cryptographically authenticated,
 which increases the risk of denial-of-service attacks.

5.5. Broadcast Mode Only on Trusted Networks

 Per [RFC5905], NTP's broadcast mode is authenticated using symmetric
 key cryptography.  The broadcast server and all its broadcast clients
 share a symmetric cryptographic key, and the broadcast server uses
 this key to append a MAC to the broadcast packets it sends.
 Importantly, all broadcast clients that listen to this server have to
 know the cryptographic key.  This means that any client can use this
 key to send valid broadcast messages that look like they come from
 the broadcast server.  Thus, a rogue broadcast client can use its
 knowledge of this key to attack the other broadcast clients.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 15] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 For this reason, an NTP broadcast server and all its clients have to
 trust each other.  Broadcast mode SHOULD only be run from within a
 trusted network.

5.6. Symmetric Mode Only with Trusted Peers

 In symmetric mode, two peers, Alice and Bob, can both push and pull
 synchronization to and from each other using either ephemeral
 symmetric passive (mode 2) or persistent symmetric active (NTP mode
 1) packets.  The persistent association is preconfigured and
 initiated at the active peer but is not preconfigured at the passive
 peer (Bob).  Upon receipt of a mode 1 NTP packet from Alice, Bob
 mobilizes a new ephemeral association if he does not have one
 already.  This is a security risk for Bob because an arbitrary
 attacker can attempt to change Bob's time by asking Bob to become its
 symmetric passive peer.
 For this reason, a host SHOULD only allow symmetric passive
 associations to be established with trusted peers.  Specifically, a
 host SHOULD require each of its symmetric passive associations to be
 cryptographically authenticated.  Each symmetric passive association
 SHOULD be authenticated under a different cryptographic key.

6. NTP in Embedded Devices

 As computing becomes more ubiquitous, there will be many small
 embedded devices that require accurate time.  These devices may not
 have a persistent battery-backed clock, so using NTP to set the
 correct time on power-up may be critical for proper operation.  These
 devices may not have a traditional user interface, but if they
 connect to the Internet, they will be subject to the same security
 threats as traditional deployments.

6.1. Updating Embedded Devices

 Vendors of embedded devices are advised to pay attention to the
 current state of protocol security issues and bugs in their chosen
 implementation because their customers don't have the ability to
 update their NTP implementation on their own.  Those devices may have
 a single firmware upgrade, provided by the manufacturer, that updates
 all capabilities at once.  This means that the vendor assumes the
 responsibility of making sure their devices have an up-to-date and
 secure NTP implementation.
 Vendors of embedded devices SHOULD include the ability to update the
 list of NTP servers used by the device.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 16] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 There is a catalog of NTP server abuse incidents, some of which
 involve embedded devices, on the Wikipedia page for NTP Server Misuse
 and Abuse [MISUSE].

6.2. Server Configuration

 Vendors of embedded devices with preconfigured NTP servers need to
 carefully consider which servers to use.  There are several public-
 facing NTP servers available, but they may not be prepared to service
 requests from thousands of new devices on the Internet.  Vendors MUST
 only preconfigure NTP servers that they have permission to use.
 Vendors are encouraged to invest resources into providing their own
 time servers for their devices to connect to.  This may be done
 through the NTP Pool Project, as documented in Section 3.6.
 Vendors should read [RFC4085], which advises against embedding
 globally routable IP addresses in products and offers several better
 alternatives.

7. NTP over Anycast

 Anycast is described in BCP 126 [RFC4786] (see also [RFC7094]).  With
 anycast, a single IP address is assigned to multiple servers, and
 routers direct packets to the closest active server.
 Anycast is often used for Internet services at known IP addresses,
 such as DNS.  Anycast can also be used in large organizations to
 simplify the configuration of many NTP clients.  Each client can be
 configured with the same NTP server IP address, and a pool of anycast
 servers can be deployed to service those requests.  New servers can
 be added to or taken from the pool, and other than a temporary loss
 of service while a server is taken down, these additions can be
 transparent to the clients.
 Note well that using a single anycast address for NTP presents its
 own potential issues.  It means each client will likely use a single
 time server source.  A key element of a robust NTP deployment is each
 client using multiple sources of time.  With multiple time sources, a
 client will analyze the various time sources, select good ones, and
 disregard poor ones.  If a single anycast address is used, this
 analysis will not happen.  This can be mitigated by creating
 multiple, separate anycast pools so clients can have multiple sources
 of time while still gaining the configuration benefits of the anycast
 pools.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 17] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 If clients are connected to an NTP server via anycast, the client
 does not know which particular server they are connected to.  As
 anycast servers enter and leave the network or the network topology
 changes, the server to which a particular client is connected may
 change.  This may cause a small shift in time from the perspective of
 the client when the server to which it is connected changes.  Extreme
 cases where the network topology changes rapidly could cause the
 server seen by a client to rapidly change as well, which can lead to
 larger time inaccuracies.  It is RECOMMENDED that network operators
 only deploy anycast NTP in environments where operators know these
 small shifts can be tolerated by the applications running on the
 clients being synchronized in this manner.
 Configuration of an anycast interface is independent of NTP.  Clients
 will always connect to the closest server, even if that server is
 having NTP issues.  It is RECOMMENDED that anycast NTP
 implementations have an independent method of monitoring the
 performance of NTP on a server.  If the server is not performing to
 specification, it should remove itself from the anycast network.  It
 is also RECOMMENDED that each anycast NTP server have an alternative
 method of access, such as an alternate unicast IP address, so its
 performance can be checked independently of the anycast routing
 scheme.
 One useful application in large networks is to use a hybrid unicast/
 anycast approach.  Stratum 1 NTP servers can be deployed with unicast
 interfaces at several sites.  Each site may have several Stratum 2
 servers with two Ethernet interfaces or a single interface that can
 support multiple addresses.  One interface has a unique unicast IP
 address.  The second has an anycast IP interface (with a shared IP
 address per location).  The unicast interfaces can be used to obtain
 time from the Stratum 1 servers globally (and perhaps peer with the
 other Stratum 2 servers at their site).  Clients at each site can be
 configured to use the shared anycast address for their site,
 simplifying their configuration.  Keeping the anycast routing
 restricted on a per-site basis will minimize the disruption at the
 client if its closest anycast server changes.  Each Stratum 2 server
 can be uniquely identified on their unicast interface to make
 monitoring easier.

8. IANA Considerations

 This document has no IANA actions.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 18] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

9. Security Considerations

 Time is a fundamental component of security on the Internet.  The
 absence of a reliable source of current time subverts many common web
 authentication schemes, e.g., by allowing the use of expired
 credentials or allowing the replay of messages only intended to be
 processed once.
 Much of this document directly addresses how to secure NTP servers.
 In particular, see Section 2, Section 4, and Section 5.
 There are several general threats to time-synchronization protocols,
 which are discussed in [RFC7384].
 [NTSFORNTP] specifies the Network Time Security (NTS) mechanism and
 applies it to NTP.  Readers are encouraged to check the status of the
 document and make use of the methods it describes.

10. References

10.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC2827]  Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering:
            Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source
            Address Spoofing", BCP 38, RFC 2827, DOI 10.17487/RFC2827,
            May 2000, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2827>.
 [RFC4085]  Plonka, D., "Embedding Globally-Routable Internet
            Addresses Considered Harmful", BCP 105, RFC 4085,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC4085, June 2005,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4085>.
 [RFC4786]  Abley, J. and K. Lindqvist, "Operation of Anycast
            Services", BCP 126, RFC 4786, DOI 10.17487/RFC4786,
            December 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4786>.
 [RFC5905]  Mills, D., Martin, J., Ed., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,
            "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms
            Specification", RFC 5905, DOI 10.17487/RFC5905, June 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5905>.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 19] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

10.2. Informative References

 [AUTOKEY]  Roettger, S., "Autokey-Protocol Analysis", August 2011,
            <https://lists.ntp.org/pipermail/
            ntpwg/2011-August/001714.html>.
 [BCP38WIKI]
            "BCP38.info Wiki", October 2016, <http://www.bcp38.info>.
 [CCR16]    Malhotra, A. and S. Goldberg, "Attacking NTP's
            Authenticated Broadcast Mode", SIGCOMM Computer
            Communications Review (CCR) Volume 46, Issue 2,
            DOI 10.1145/2935634.2935637, April 2016.
 [CONFIGNTP]
            Network Time Foundation, "Configuring NTP", November 2018,
            <https://support.ntp.org/bin/view/Support/ConfiguringNTP>.
 [CTRLMSG]  Haberman, B., Ed., "Control Messages Protocol for Use with
            Network Time Protocol Version 4", Work in Progress,
            draft-ietf-ntp-mode-6-cmds-06, September 2018.
 [CVE-2015-8138]
            Van Gundy, M. and J. Gardner, "Network Time Protocol
            Origin Timestamp Check Impersonation Vulnerability",
            January 2016,
            <https://www.talosintel.com/reports/TALOS-2016-0077>.
 [CVE-2015-8139]
            Van Gundy, M., "Network Time Protocol ntpq and ntpdc
            Origin Timestamp Disclosure Vulnerability", January 2016,
            <https://www.talosintel.com/reports/TALOS-2016-0078>.
 [CVE-2016-1548]
            Gardner, J. and M. Lichvar, "Xleave Pivot: NTP Basic Mode
            to Interleaved", April 2016,
            <https://blog.talosintel.com/2016/04/
            vulnerability-spotlight-further-ntpd_27.html>.
 [DATAMIN]  Franke, D. and A. Malhotra, "NTP Client Data
            Minimization", Work in Progress, draft-ietf-ntp-data-
            minimization-04, March 2019.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 20] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 [DDOS]     Prince, M., "Technical Details Behind a 400Gbps NTP
            Amplification DDoS Attack", February 2014,
            <https://blog.cloudflare.com/technical-details-behind-a-
            400gbps-ntp-amplification-ddos-attack>.
 [IERS]     IERS, "IERS Bulletins",
            <https://www.iers.org/IERS/EN/Publications/Bulletins/
            bulletins.html>.
 [IMC14]    Czyz, J., Kallitsis, M., Gharaibeh, M., Papadopoulos, C.,
            Bailey, M., and M. Karir, "Taming the 800 Pound Gorilla:
            The Rise and Decline of NTP DDoS Attacks", Proceedings of
            the 2014 Internet Measurement Conference,
            DOI 10.1145/2663716.2663717, November 2014.
 [LEAPSEC]  Burnicki, M., "Leap Second Smearing", <http://bk1.ntp.org/
            ntp-stable/README.leapsmear?PAGE=anno>.
 [MILLS2006]
            Mills, D., "Computer network time synchronization: the
            Network Time Protocol", CRC Press, 2006.
 [MISUSE]   Wikipedia, "NTP Server Misuse and Abuse", May 2019,
            <https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
            title=NTP_server_misuse_and_abuse&oldid=899024751>.
 [NDSS14]   Rossow, C., "Amplification Hell: Revisiting Network
            Protocols for DDoS Abuse", Network and Distributed System
            Security (NDSS) Symposium 2014,
            DOI 10.14722/ndss.2014.23233, February 2014,
            <https://www.ndss-symposium.org/ndss2014/programme/
            amplification-hell-revisiting-network-protocols-ddos-
            abuse/>.
 [NDSS16]   Malhotra, A., Cohen, I., Brakke, E., and S. Goldberg,
            "Attacking the Network Time Protocol", Network and
            Distributed System Security (NDSS) Symposium 2016,
            DOI 10.14722/ndss.2016.23090, February 2016,
            <https://eprint.iacr.org/2015/1020.pdf>.
 [NTPDOWN]  Network Time Foundation, "NTP Software Downloads",
            <http://www.ntp.org/downloads.html>.
 [NTSFORNTP]
            Franke, D., Sibold, D., Teichel, K., Dansarie, M., and R.
            Sundblad, "Network Time Security for the Network Time
            Protocol", Work in Progress, draft-ietf-ntp-using-nts-for-
            ntp-20, July 2019.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 21] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 [POOLUSE]  NTP Pool Project, "Use the Pool",
            <https://www.pool.ntp.org/en/use.html>.
 [POOLVENDOR]
            NTP Pool Project, "The NTP Pool for Vendors",
            <https://www.pool.ntp.org/en/vendors.html>.
 [RFC1305]  Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 3)
            Specification, Implementation and Analysis", RFC 1305,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC1305, March 1992,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1305>.
 [RFC5906]  Haberman, B., Ed. and D. Mills, "Network Time Protocol
            Version 4: Autokey Specification", RFC 5906,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC5906, June 2010,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5906>.
 [RFC6151]  Turner, S. and L. Chen, "Updated Security Considerations
            for the MD5 Message-Digest and the HMAC-MD5 Algorithms",
            RFC 6151, DOI 10.17487/RFC6151, March 2011,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6151>.
 [RFC7094]  McPherson, D., Oran, D., Thaler, D., and E. Osterweil,
            "Architectural Considerations of IP Anycast", RFC 7094,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC7094, January 2014,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7094>.
 [RFC7384]  Mizrahi, T., "Security Requirements of Time Protocols in
            Packet Switched Networks", RFC 7384, DOI 10.17487/RFC7384,
            October 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7384>.
 [RFC8573]  Malhotra, A. and S. Goldberg, "Message Authentication Code
            for the Network Time Protocol", RFC 8573,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC8573, June 2019,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8573>.
 [SOLAR]    Wikipedia, "Solar Time", May 2019,
            <https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
            title=Solar_time&oldid=896601472#Mean_solar_time>.

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 22] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

Appendix A. Best Practices Specific to the Network Time Foundation

           Implementation
 The Network Time Foundation (NTF) provides a widely used
 implementation of NTP, known as ntpd [NTPDOWN].  It is an evolution
 of the first NTP implementations developed by David Mills at the
 University of Delaware.  This appendix contains additional
 recommendations specific to this implementation that are valid at the
 time of this writing.

A.1. Use Enough Time Sources

 In addition to the recommendation given in Section 3.2, the ntpd
 implementation provides the 'pool' directive.  Starting with ntp-
 4.2.6, using this directive in the ntp.conf file will spin up enough
 associations to provide robust time service and will disconnect poor
 servers and add in new servers as needed.  The 'minclock' and
 'maxclock' options of the 'tos' command may be used to override the
 default values of how many servers are discovered through the 'pool'
 directive.

A.2. NTP Control and Facility Messages

 In addition to NTP control messages, the ntpd implementation also
 offers the Mode 7 commands for monitoring and configuration.
 If Mode 7 has been explicitly enabled to be used for more than basic
 monitoring, it should be limited to authenticated sessions that
 provide a 'requestkey'.
 As mentioned above, there are two general ways to use Mode 6 and Mode
 7 requests.  One way is to query ntpd for information, and this mode
 can be disabled with:
 restrict ... noquery
 The second way to use Mode 6 and Mode 7 requests is to modify ntpd's
 behavior.  Modification of ntpd's configuration requires an
 authenticated session by default.  If no authentication keys have
 been specified, no modifications can be made.  For additional
 protection, the ability to perform these modifications can be
 controlled with:
 restrict ... nomodify

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 23] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 Users can prevent their NTP servers from considering query/
 configuration traffic by default by adding the following to their
 ntp.conf file:
 restrict default -4 nomodify notrap nopeer noquery
 restrict default -6 nomodify notrap nopeer noquery
 restrict source nomodify notrap noquery

A.3. Monitoring

 The ntpd implementation allows remote monitoring.  Access to this
 service is generally controlled by the "noquery" directive in NTP's
 configuration file (ntp.conf) via a "restrict" statement.  The syntax
 reads:
 restrict address mask address_mask noquery
 If a system is using broadcast mode and is running ntp-4.2.8p6 or
 later, use the fourth field of the ntp.keys file to specify the IPs
 of machines that are allowed to serve time to the group.

A.4. Leap-Second File

 The use of leap-second files requires ntpd 4.2.6 or later.  After
 fetching the leap-second file onto the server, add this line to
 ntpd.conf to apply and use the file, substituting the proper path:
 leapfile "/path/to/leap-file"
 There may be a need to restart ntpd to apply this change.
 ntpd servers with a manually configured leap-second file will ignore
 a leap-second information broadcast from upstream NTP servers until
 the leap-second file expires.  If no valid leap-second file is
 available, then a leap-second notification from an attached reference
 clock is always accepted by ntpd.
 If no valid leap-second file is available, a leap-second notification
 may be accepted from upstream NTP servers.  As of ntp-4.2.6, a
 majority of servers must provide the notification before it is
 accepted.  Before 4.2.6, a leap-second notification would be accepted
 if a single upstream server of a group of configured servers provided
 a leap-second notification.  This would lead to misbehavior if single
 NTP servers sent an invalid leap second warning, e.g., due to a
 faulty GPS receiver in one server, but this behavior was once chosen
 because in the "early days", there was a greater chance that leap-

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 24] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

 second information would be available from a very limited number of
 sources.

A.5. Leap Smearing

 Leap smearing was introduced in ntpd versions 4.2.8.p3 and 4.3.47 in
 response to client requests.  Support for leap smearing is not
 configured by default and must be added at compile time.  In
 addition, no leap smearing will occur unless a leap smear interval is
 specified in ntpd.conf.  For more information, refer to [LEAPSEC].

A.6. Configuring ntpd

 See [CONFIGNTP] for additional information on configuring ntpd.

A.7. Pre-Shared Keys

 Each communication partner must add the key information to their key
 file in the form:
 keyid type key
 where "keyid" is a number between 1 and 65534, inclusive; "type" is
 an ASCII character that defines the key format; and "key" is the key
 itself.
 An ntpd client establishes a protected association by appending the
 option "key keyid" to the server statement in ntp.conf,
 server address key keyid
 substituting the server address in the "address" field and the
 numerical keyid to use with that server in the "keyid" field.
 A key is deemed trusted when its keyid is added to the list of
 trusted keys by the "trustedkey" statement in ntp.conf.
 trustedkey keyid_1 keyid_2 ... keyid_n
 Starting with ntp-4.2.8p7, the ntp.keys file accepts an optional
 fourth column, a comma-separated list of IPs that are allowed to
 serve time.  Use this feature.  Note, however, that an adversarial
 client that knows the symmetric broadcast key could still easily
 spoof its source IP to an IP that is allowed to serve time.  This is
 easy to do because the origin timestamp on broadcast mode packets is
 not validated by the client.  By contrast, client/server and
 symmetric modes do require origin timestamp validation, making it
 more difficult to spoof packets [CCR16].

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 25] RFC 8633 Network Time Protocol BCP July 2019

Acknowledgments

 The authors wish to acknowledge the contributions of Sue Graves,
 Samuel Weiler, Lisa Perdue, Karen O'Donoghue, David Malone, Sharon
 Goldberg, Martin Burnicki, Miroslav Lichvar, Daniel Fox Franke,
 Robert Nagy, and Brian Haberman.

Authors' Addresses

 Denis Reilly (editor)
 Orolia USA
 1565 Jefferson Road, Suite 460
 Rochester, NY  14623
 United States of America
 Email: denis.reilly@orolia.com
 Harlan Stenn
 Network Time Foundation
 P.O. Box 918
 Talent, OR  97540
 United States of America
 Email: stenn@nwtime.org
 Dieter Sibold
 Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt
 Bundesallee 100
 Braunschweig  D-38116
 Germany
 Phone: +49-(0)531-592-8420
 Fax:   +49-531-592-698420
 Email: dieter.sibold@ptb.de

Reilly, et al. Best Current Practice [Page 26]

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