Re: Setting the date and time

Brandon S. Allbery KF8NH (allbery@kf8nh.apk.net)
Sun, 10 Oct 1999 08:46:28 -0400


In message <199910100514.WAA14361@icarus.com>, Stephen Williams writes:
+-----
| mhw@wittsend.com said:
| > Xntpd keeps the system in sync by adjusting the clock and maintaining
| > information on it's rate of drift. This may not be so good if you are
| > on a dialup system, however.
|
| xntp includes ntpdate, which is similar to date but uses xntp servers.
| When I was dialup, I used ntpdate to resync my clock with a cron job
| and I got a good compromise of accurate time (including rate) and low
| re-dial rates. Twice a day may well be enough to keep pretty good time.
+--->8

For some PCs that isn't good enough.

BTW, xntpd works fine on a dialup. It complains mildly when the link goes
down, but keeps adjusting the clock according to the recent drift rate until
the link comes back, at which time it resynchs and goes on.

-- 
brandon s. allbery	   os/2,linux,solaris,perl	allbery@kf8nh.apk.net
system administrator	   kthkrb,heimdal,gnome,rt	  allbery@ece.cmu.edu
carnegie mellon / electrical and computer engineering			kf8nh
    We are Linux. Resistance is an indication that you missed the point.

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