Le 26 nov. 2012 à 01:26, Steve Allen a écrit :

> On Sun 2012-11-25T19:59:14 +0000, Matsakis, Demetrios hath writ:
>> And I suppose many on this list will have even more to say ...
> 

Like you Steve, I think the silence is basically due to what you are 
complaining about, that is the lack of available technical analysis of the 
incident. I couldn't find any. 

> I think this list is largely silent while wondering whether the ITU-R
> is capable of doing anything besides the non-decisions during this year.

Any news from the WP7A junket to Ecuador?  

> 
> Thank you for the report on the USNO incident.  My concern upon
> reading this is that the notice on the web page
> http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/ntp.html
> looks as if it is a temporary modification which will, in short order,
> simply vanish from view.
> 

There is a lot of anecdotal evidence of its effects on the web. The USNO 
response in that link is frankly insufficient, but what it clearly indicates is 
that even the time lords don't have robust procedures in place to assure vital 
time dissemination. The big issue is of course is that incorrect data was being 
propagated and not just no data.  One would  hope that they have plugged that 
hole.

> Behind many arguments about leap seconds are references to previous
> events and decisions which, upon inspection, turn out not to be
> mentioned in the available documentation.  Among the effects of
> that are
> => in the future, sysadmins will not have access to documents which
> can warn about the severity of the effects and the importance of
> robust configurations

The fact that it caused so much grief is due to the lack of understanding some 
sysadmins have of the configuring NTP. Those affected will have probably fixed 
their setups, but new boys on the block won't have the history to prevent them 
falling into the same traps.   
NTP could itself do a sanity check at startup and simply kill itself if there 
is not enough redundancy ( need a non default override) and also log any 
descent into the danger zone of 2 clocks. 

> => similarly, delegates to subsequent ITU-R meetings about the
> broadcast time scale will lack basis for making their decisions
> 
> My question:  Is there a published description of this event which
> will be citeable for the sake of posterity?
> 
> --
> Steve Allen                 <[email protected]>                WGS-84 (GPS)
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