Hi,

I was wondering on Linux (with a recent kernel) if the commandline tool
ntptime would actually display the :60, since it seems way more associated
with ntp ?

# ntptime
ntp_gettime() returns code 1 (INS)
  time d3997841.701f2104  Sat, Jun 30 2012 22:06:09.437, (.437975867),
  maximum error 349006 us, estimated error 1528 us, TAI offset 0
ntp_adjtime() returns code 1 (INS)
  modes 0x0 (),
  offset -15.039 us, frequency 36.052 ppm, interval 1 s,
  maximum error 349006 us, estimated error 1528 us,
  status 0x6011 (PLL,INS,NANO,MODE),
  time constant 10, precision 0.001 us, tolerance 500 ppm,


Mark

On Sat, Jun 30, 2012 at 6:08 PM, Anssi Johansson <[email protected]>wrote:

> I don't know if this is related to the leap second, but it appears that
> all of Turkey seems to be syncing their time right now.
> http://kameli.miuku.net/stats/**ntppackets.html<http://kameli.miuku.net/stats/ntppackets.html>shows
>  you some pretty graphs. As of this writing, the average for the last
> two hours is around 16000 packets per second. Here's a breakdown of one
> million received packets and their origin networks:
> http://tursas.miuku.net/tmp/**jun30.ntp.kameli.sorted.txt<http://tursas.miuku.net/tmp/jun30.ntp.kameli.sorted.txt>
>
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