RE: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and time of day

2004-07-06 Thread Andrew Thompson
David Cook wrote: Kevin Walsh noted that his SPA-2000 takes time from his local NTP server in a post back on Fri June 25. Interesting that it must have broadcast to the local net for a NTP server. From a net admin perspective, I'd consider that a benefit. Q: Where do you tell it to use NTP?

RE: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and time of day

2004-07-06 Thread Jay Milk
http://ip/admin/advanced, click on System tab, bottom two options are primary/secondary NTP server. I'm running 2.0.9(d) -Original Message- From: David Cook [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2004 8:47 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and

RE: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and time of day

2004-07-06 Thread Rich Adamson
David Cook wrote: Kevin Walsh noted that his SPA-2000 takes time from his local NTP server in a post back on Fri June 25. Interesting that it must have broadcast to the local net for a NTP server. From a net admin perspective, I'd consider that a benefit. Q: Where do you tell it to

Re: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and time of day

2004-07-06 Thread Gavin Hamill
On Tuesday 06 July 2004 17:19, Rich Adamson wrote: It's not uncommon for vendors to embed the IP address of some known time source in code. Use ethereal, reboot the box, and watch. True , and unfortunately, this sometimes goes horrendously wrong... http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~plonka/netgear-sntp/

Re: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and time of day

2004-07-06 Thread Chris Luke
NTP is time-zone and season agnostic. It always transmits UTC. Offsets from this are set in the client, including DST stuff. If they can't be set, get a better NTP client. :) Chris. David Cook wrote (on Jul 06): Kevin Walsh noted that his SPA-2000 takes time from his local NTP server in a

Re: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 and time of day

2004-07-06 Thread Wolfgang S. Rupprecht
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chris Luke) writes: NTP is time-zone and season agnostic. It always transmits UTC. Yup. This is the answer to the most common FAQ on comp.protocols.time.ntp . Offsets from this are set in the client, including DST stuff. If they can't be set, get a better NTP client. :)