Ephraim F.Moya wrote:
On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 05:01:51 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Cam) wrote:


Hello list,

I've been alternately reading the NTP documentation and banging my head on the desk, so please excuse any intemperance and/or incoherence.

I'm glad my car's manual wasn't written by the same people who wrote the NTP documentation or it would start with an exhaustive treatment of the carnot cycle and then roar off into advanced thermodynamics when all I wanted to know was how often to change the d**n oil. Pauses to bang head on desk several more times. Apparently the idea of starting with simple examples ("hello world") and working up to complex examples ("program to prove the four-color theorem") didn't occur to them; they want to prove the theorem right away.

But I digress. I have a computer, lets call it MASTER, which has time of day that I'm happy with. I have a bunch of other computers, all on the same subnet, and I want them to set their clocks to match MASTER. That's it. Sounds like the making of a real simple example. I believe this can be done because the NTP pages make reference to an "Undisciplined Local Clock" but as with all the documentation it assumes you are already an expert so no simple example is given. Whack whack.

So, finally, the question is: Does anybody have a link to a web page that gives some simple examples (eg "to sync from machine 1.2.3.4 do this", "to setup a local undiciplined server do that")? If so it would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks

Cam Farnell

ps I've already R'd the F'ing M or at least made a serious attempt at it. I don't want to know every arcane detail of NTP in the known universe; I want to set up a *really* simple system.

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I've been down the exact same road. With the same results.

My problem is even simpler. I want my computer to periodically read a
time standard someplace and set the pc/xp hardware clock
appropriately. I haven't been able to find out whether ntp sets the
local clock or replaces it. I know how to set the cmos clock manually.
Does ntp know how?

Maybe someday I'll have more than one machine. Not yet, though.


ntpd on Windows does set the CMOS clock, at least it's supposed to.

Danny
EFM
http://moya.us/

"Los pintos y los pendejos se conocen desde lejos"

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