Hello all, I want to thank all of you for your suggestions and for pointing me to those URL solutions. It seems I have joined a great community of people. This was my first posting for I only joined the group yesterday. :) I must fly to Denver tonight, so it won't be until next week that I can try some of your suggestions. Thanks George
________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Richard B. Gilbert Sent: Tue 4/8/2008 8:01 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [ntp:questions] Setting up a NTP Time Server Hal Murray wrote: >> Can someone point me to a good document that >> shows how to setup a Time Server? I have an >> isolated network that cannot get to the Internet >> to sync time. I have Solaris 8,9,10 and Red Hat Linux >> Advanced Server 4 servers as potential time server >> candidates. > > I don't know of any document that covers this case. > It does come up occasionally. There might be some > ideas in the newsgroup archives. > > I think your top level decision is do you want to setup > a refclock or do you want to coast between manual corrections. > > For under $100 you can rig up a GPS clock. The Garmin > GPS 18 LVC is usual suggestion. That will give you good > time. I don't know anything about Solaris. Linux needs > a serious patch to get PPS support. Without PPS support, > your time won't be "good". It will be much better than > coasting without any refclocks. Solaris has some sort of "PPS support". My Motorola M12+T feeds the PPS into, I believe, the DCD pin on the serial port. I'm not familiar with the Garmin driver; it may or may not have that support built in. If not, ISTR reading about a PPS driver. _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ntp.org/mailman/listinfo/questions _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ntp.org/mailman/listinfo/questions
