Fred (2018-08-09): > Someone complained off list about the timestamp in my emails being off. > Being a hardware person I think hardware should work properly and clocks > should keep accurate time. So I installed ntpdate as suggested but it is > not active yet.
Nowadays, unless you have religions objections, you should just enable systemd-timesyncd, it is the most lightweight and transparent way of enabling network time synchronization with nowadays Debian. ntpdate is not really good because it only does punctual queries; ntpd and timesyncd will keep stats and adjust more accurately. > If I ask google what time it is in Mesa AZ. the response agrees closely with > an "atomic" clock I have. The computer clock is about 10 min. fast. > > fred@ragnok:~$ /usr/sbin/ntpdate -q time.nist.gov > server 2610:20:6f96:96::4, stratum 1, offset -610.512368, delay 0.09421 > server 132.163.96.4, stratum 1, offset -610.509394, delay 0.08899 > 9 Aug 06:51:15 ntpdate[13672]: step time server 132.163.96.4 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > offset -610.509394 sec > > fred@ragnok:~$ date > Thu Aug 9 06:51:18 MST 2018 > > The time server is quite close to the computer clock. If you are looking at the time I underlined above, I am pretty sure (looking at the source) that it is the local time, not the time returned by the server. Regards, -- Nicolas George
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature