Hi Zsolt, It's interesting because I did a traceroute from my network (since my recent improvement) and NTT is now gone:
traceroute to ntplax7.ntppool.net (207.171.3.17), 30 hops max, 60 byte packets 1 82-70-138-65.dsl.in-addr.zen.co.uk (82.70.138.65) 0.490 ms 0.534 ms 0.670 ms 2 losubs.subs.dsl4.wh-man.zen.net.uk (62.3.83.6) 13.756 ms 14.752 ms 15.580 ms 3 ae1-120.cr2.wh-man.zen.net.uk (62.3.86.9) 15.958 ms 16.536 ms 17.133 ms 4 ae2-117.cr1-man1.ip4.gtt.net (77.67.66.101) 44.214 ms 18.331 ms 44.120 ms 5 et-3-1-0.cr2-lax2.ip4.gtt.net (141.136.110.17) 160.481 ms 161.020 ms 162.505 ms 6 te7-2.r02.lax2.phyber.com (199.229.230.234) 182.805 ms 172.934 ms 173.232 ms 7 ntplax7.ntppool.net (207.171.3.17) 168.871 ms !X 167.289 ms !X 167.810 ms !X Although the return still does go via NTT https://trace.ntppool.org/traceroute/82.70.138.66 The change from NTT to GTT does seem to coincide with the improvement in stability. So, they do seem to be a common factor. Best regards, Peter. On 24 February 2017 at 07:59, Zsolt Zsiros <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Peter, > > The dark clouds of "Internet weather" just came over to Mid-Europe: > http://www.pool.ntp.org/scores/212.92.16.193 > This server is half ms away from the Budapest Internet Exchange. > > NTT is also involved: > https://trace.ntppool.org/traceroute/212.92.16.193 > > Regards, > Zsolt > > > On 23 February 2017 at 23:44, Peter <[email protected]> wrote: > > > Can I ask my European fellow home connection folk that posted here to > check > > their graphs. Mine looks suspiciously more stable since midnight today > > (Thursday) > > > > http://www.pool.ntp.org/scores/82.70.138.66 > > > > I'll need to see how it pans out, but certainly looks like there was a > very > > very sudden change somewhere. > > > > > _______________________________________________ > pool mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/pool > _______________________________________________ pool mailing list [email protected] http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/pool
