You can go out and get yourself a nice Cesium source (like the ones in orbit) that 
will give you an accurate clock pulse with Stratum 1 quality.  Cost: about 45K.  Of 
course, this wont help you with Time Of Day information.  It will only keep you 
completely accurate in case of a loss of outside reference.

NTP should properly detect a loss of all outside sync sources.  In other words, if all 
the clocks in the world that you were syncing to all of a sudden said it was tommorrow 
NTP should properly disregard them as all being out of sync and refuse to sync to 
them.  If you try and start up NTP with your local clock too far out of sync, NTPD 
will not start up.  If they all go away or go out of sync after you have properly 
disciplined your LO, it should detect the fault and continue to provide accurate time 
but drift to the degree your local clock isn't of a Stratum 1 quality.  The net result 
is that you will stay accurate as long as your local reference oscillator is of 
Stratum 1 quality (or better).

As an aside, you can check the accuracy of your GPS signal by comparing it to a local 
Cesium.  That's how the government does it.  You'll only be able to tell if they agree 
or not though, not which one is right.

-Richard

 
Sean Donelan wrote:
 
>
> On Sun, 1 Jun 2003, Marshall Eubanks wrote:
> > Every major time service and most national standards labs maintain a
> > set of clocks of comparable accuracy - US, UK, France, Germany, Russia,
> > Japan, Australia, etc., so there is no shortage of timing info to
> > compare it with.
>
> Actually my question wasn't so much about other national standards labs,
> but that almost every major Internet backbone worldwide seems to trace
> their time source to GPS.  Maybe not that surprising for US/North American
> providers, but even non-american backbones seem to use GPS.
>
> To be clear, I'm not talking about individuals syncing things to lots of
> different clocks.  Clock.ORG has lots of clock sources around the world.
> I'm talking about what network providers use.
>
> It was just one of those midnight projects a month or so ago, when I
> noticed my carefully balanced selection of tickers had slowly over the
> last few years all changed from other time sources to GPS.  Probably
> not critical, but national standards labs have accidentily flipped
> the wrong switch in the past and done strange things to their time
> broadcasts. Yes, lots of people noticed, and it was fixed quickly.  NTP
> has all this great logic for sanity checking time sources, but if they
> all come from the same origin, what happens?
>
>
>

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