pret3n...@gmail.com wrote:


Also, I don't want to use NTP to directly measure the one-way delay, I have 
OWAMP

You can't stop it measuring the delay asymmetry! The trouble is you will not have any way to obtain that value, which will tend to cancel out the asymmetry measured by your primary tool, assuming it depends on accurate time stamps!

(more specifically perfSonar - http://www.internet2.edu/performance/pS-PS/)
to do that for me.

The page is a commercial type hype, not a technical overview of the algorithms used, but the only way I know of measuring one way delay is synchronise the clocks somewhat better than the acceptable measurement error, which you can't do if the synchronisation process is vulnerable to the effects of the same delay asymmetry.

_______________________________________________
questions mailing list
questions@lists.ntp.org
http://lists.ntp.org/listinfo/questions

Reply via email to