On 30 December 2013 00:13, Steve Kostecke wrote: > On 2013-12-29, Adrian P wrote: > >> So "o" means PPS is used... In my case, I only have "*" in front of >> the driver IP... > > In my experience the NMEA driver displays the '*' talley-code even when > PPS is in use.
Hi Steve, Are you sure of that? I am looking to David Taylor's output and I see the "o" tally code, see below: On 29 December 2013 07:59, David Taylor wrote: > FreeBSD PC Pixie: > > server 127.127.20.1 mode 0 minpoll 4 maxpoll 4 prefer > fudge 127.127.20.1 flag1 1 flag3 1 refid PPS > > C:\Users\David>ntpq -crv -pn pixie > associd=0 status=041f leap_none, sync_uhf_radio, 1 event, > stale_leapsecond_values, > version="ntpd [email protected] Sat Dec 28 16:28:47 UTC 2013 (1)", > processor="i386", system="FreeBSD/8.2-RELEASE-p6", leap=00, stratum=1, > precision=-19, rootdelay=0.000, rootdisp=1.000, refid=PPS, > reftime=d66a36ed.19d84794 Sun, Dec 29 2013 5:51:41.100, > clock=d66a36ed.b372d389 Sun, Dec 29 2013 5:51:41.700, peer=32026, tc=4, > mintc=3, offset=0.007628, frequency=28.823, sys_jitter=0.001907, > clk_jitter=0.003, clk_wander=0.007, tai=35, leapsec=201207010000, > expire=201312010000 > remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset > jitter > ============================================================================== > o127.127.20.1 .PPS. 0 l - 16 377 0.000 0.008 > 0.002 Now I am wondering if there is any other way to see if the PPS signal is used or not... maybe with some debugging? Adrian _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/questions
