syncronizing clocks on workstations
John "Do The Bartman" Furlani
jlf at galaxy.East.Sun.COM
Tue Jun 4 03:33:29 AEST 1991
> >In article <1991May23.014145.212 at wizard.uucp>, bob at wizard.uucp (Bob Smith) writes:
> >- rdate will read the date/time from a specfied host and set the date/time
> >- of the local machine accordingly, I've never tried it, but it should be
> >- possible to cron up rdate periodically to keep clocks sync'd.(?)
> >
>
Hands down, then best way to synchronize clocks over a network is to use
NTP (Network Time Protocol). We use this to keep our machines in sync within
our own local netowork and throughout Sun. My fourteen servers stay within
a few miliseconds of each other and my time server stays within a few miliseconds
of Sun's time server. If you don't want to (as we don't) use NTP on all of your
systems, the others can rdate to assorted time servers.
NTP is public domain stuff.
j.
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John L. Furlani VIPER
MaBell: (919)460-8383 Sun Microsystems
Internet: john.furlani at East.Sun.COM P.O. Box 13447
Uucp: sun!sunpix!furlani at uunet.uu.net RTP, NC 27709
"Mars is essentially in the same orbit ... somewhat the same
distance from the Sun, which is very important. We have seen
pictures where there are canals, we believe, and water. If
there is water, that means there is oxygen. If oxygen, that
means we can breathe." -- Vice Pres. Dan Quayle on Mars
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