Network Time Server
Klaus Steinberger
k2 at bl.physik.tu-muenchen.de
Fri Apr 12 16:45:14 AEST 1991
rbraun at spdcc.COM (Rich Braun) writes:
>I recently brought up timed on a couple of SCO Unix systems and an RS-6000,
>hoping to have a reliable, synchronized time source on my TCP/IP LAN.
>Instead, I have a bunch of synchronized systems which lose about a
>minute per day. The SCO documentation doesn't say anything about how
>one sets up a reference time source; timed only serves the purpose of
>synchronization, and there's no way of telling it which system is "the"
>reference source.
>How do I solve this problem? I'm working for a company whose business
>is selling clocks, so needless to say, inaccurate clocks are particularly
>annoying to me ;=)
timed is the best method to get synchronized funny clocks.
Instead it's better to use ntp. (Network time protocol)
It can synchronize to a master clock. The master clock can be a stable
quartz clock, or even better a radio time standards.
There are many servers for ntp in the internet, and it's possible to
get a synchronized clock with a maximum error of 10 milliseconds.
Look into comp.protocols.time.ntp for more information.
Sincerely,
Klaus Steinberger
--
Klaus Steinberger Beschleunigerlabor der TU und LMU Muenchen
Phone: (+49 89)3209 4287 Hochschulgelaende
FAX: (+49 89)3209 4280 D-8046 Garching, Germany
BITNET: K2 at DGABLG5P Internet: k2 at bl.physik.tu-muenchen.de
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