thanks for sharing the solution.

:-)~MIKE~(-:


On Wed, Aug 20, 2014 at 11:36 AM, Gilbert T. Gutierrez, Jr. <mailing-lists@phoenixinternet.net> wrote:
I never did find out why I could not get ntpd service to start at boot. I looked at several services that I believe that systemd required to start prior to ntpd starting...

I finally went to their forum. Go figure there was an answer. CentOS7 uses chrony and not ntp as a client service.
http://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/Fedora/18/html/System_Administrators_Guide/sect-Checking_if_chrony_is_synchronized.html

My clock is now synchronizing with chrony. I am not necessarily a fan, but I only have so much time to research getting ntpd to start at boot. Chronyd is how my computer is going to sync.

Gilbert

On 8/14/2014 4:31 PM, James Crawford wrote:
>> I am monitoring /var/log/messages
>> Gilbert

I seem to recall that systemd uses journal

try

>journalctl --help
or
>journatctl --system

may provide some info

James C.
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