A tool to synchronize system time from web servers, for linux, windows and macos. Download
htpdate
provides time calibration with 0.5
second accuracy.
- Websites are everywhere in the world, ntp servers are scarce that the access is centralized.
htpdate
can be used as a backup measure.- There are always cases where the device cannot use ntp.
Synchronize time from multiple URLs
C:\> htpdate -s www.pool.ntp.org www.openssl.org nodejs.org
HEAD https://www.pool.ntp.org
#1: +367325 ms
#2: +366966 ms
#3: +367462 ms
#4: +366960 ms
HEAD https://www.openssl.org
#1: +367258 ms
#2: +366983 ms
#3: +367487 ms
#4: +366986 ms
HEAD https://nodejs.org
#1: +367647 ms
#2: +367278 ms
#3: +367670 ms
#4: +367516 ms
Median: 367301.5 ms
Adjust time...
>
$ time 13:22:42.28 && date 11-04-21
>
$ exit
Done
Note: Windows users need to be aware of the date format in their region. Default format(from dayjs) is MM-DD-YY
, users in non-U.S. regions may need to customize it with the -C
parameter, eg:
htpdate -s -C "[time ]HH:mm:ss.SS[ && date ]YY-MM-DD" github.com
.
Query from multiple URLs
$ htpdate -c 5 -v www.pool.ntp.org www.openssl.org
HEAD https://www.pool.ntp.org
#1: -419 ms DNS: 95 TCP: 27 TSL: 43 Send: 3 Recv: 38
#2: +403 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 26
#3: -94 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 24
#4: +372 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 46
#5: -97 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 24
HEAD https://www.openssl.org
#1: +251 ms DNS: 38 TCP: 27 TSL: 67 Send: 1 Recv: 33
#2: -107 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 28
#3: +396 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 25
#4: -113 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 1 Recv: 30
#5: +385 ms DNS: 0 TCP: 0 TSL: 0 Send: 0 Recv: 31
Median: 78.5 ms
Change default protocol to 'http'
htpdate -s -p http www.pool.ntp.org
Mix http and https URLs
htpdate -s http://www.pool.ntp.org https://www.openssl.org
Access through a http proxy
export http_proxy=http://127.0.0.1:8118
htpdate -s www.pool.ntp.org
htpdate [options...] URLs...
-c, --count The number of requests for each URL
Default: 4
-C, --command Command to adjust system time, in https://day.js.org/ format
Default(Linux/Mac): '[date -s ]YYYY[-]MM[-]DDTHH[:]mm[:]ss[.]SSS'
Default(Windows): '[time ]HH[:]mm[:]ss[.]SS[ && date ]MM[-]DD[-]YY'
-h, --help This help text
Default: false
--http2 Try to choose either HTTP/1.1 or HTTP/2 depending on the ALPN protocol
Default: false
-i, --interval The minimum milliseconds between requests
Default: 500
-k, --insecure Allow insecure server connections when using https
Default: false
-m, --method HTTP method
Default: 'HEAD'
-p, --protocol Use this protocol when no protocol is specified in the URL
Default: 'https'
-r, --retry
Default: 0
-R, --redirect If redirect responses should be followed
Default: false
-s, --set Adjust system time if necessary
Default: false
-t, --threshold At least how many milliseconds are considered to adjust system time
Default: 1500
-T, --timeout
Default: 6000
-u, --user-agent
Type: string
-V, --version display the version of htpdate and exit
Default: false
-v, --verbose Make the operation more talkative
Default: false
Download the precompiled binary package from Releases page, uncompress it, and run it independently as an executable.
git clone https://github.com/bobwen-dev/htpdate
cd htpdate
npm install
npm run build
According to the definition of rfc7230/2822/2616, website places a Date
field in the response header, like this:
HTTP/2 200
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
Date: Wed, 03 Nov 2021 11:46:19 GMT
...
This field Date: Wed, 03 Nov 2021 11:46:19 GMT
is the moment the website was processing the request, which is between the time we sent the request and the time we received the response. Simply assuming that the period to send request and receive is equal, we can calculate that the difference between local time and website time:
duration = received_at - sent_at
delta = server_time - received_at - duration / 2
There is one more thing: the precision of the field. Imagine we get a value end with :23 GMT
, which could be 23.000
seconds, or 23.999
seconds. So we give +0.5s
as a compensation.
© 2021 Bob Wen
Licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 or later.