Network Time Protocol (NTP) is an application layer protocol used for clock synchronization between hosts on a TCP/IP network. The goal of NTP is to ensure that all computers on a network agree on the time since even a small difference can create problems. For example, if there is more than 5 minutes difference on your host and the Active Directory domain controller, you will not be able to login to your AD domain.
NTP uses a hierarchical system of time sources. At the top of the structure are highly accurate time sources – typically atomic or GPS clocks. These clocks are known as stratum 0 servers. Stratum 1 servers are directly linked to stratum 0 servers and computers run NTP servers that deliver the time to stratum 2 servers, and so on (image source: Wikipedia):
NTP uses a client-server architecture; one host is configured as the NTP server and all other hosts on the network are configured as NTP clients. Consider the following example:
Host A is configured to use a public NTP server uk.pool.ntp.org. Host A will periodically send an NTP request to the NTP server. The NTP server will provide accurate data and time, so Host A can synchronize its clock.
NOTE
NTP uses a well-known UDP port 123. The current version is NTPv4, and it is backward compatible with NTPv3.