[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Chris Luke) writes:
> NTP is time-zone and season agnostic. It always transmits UTC.
Yup. This is the answer to the most common FAQ on
comp.protocols.time.ntp .
> Offsets from this are set in the client, including DST stuff. If they
> can't be set, get a better NTP client.
NTP is time-zone and season agnostic. It always transmits UTC.
Offsets from this are set in the client, including DST stuff. If they
can't be set, get a better NTP client. :)
Chris.
David Cook wrote (on Jul 06):
> Kevin Walsh noted that his SPA-2000 takes time from his local NTP server
> in a p
On Tuesday 06 July 2004 17:19, Rich Adamson wrote:
> It's not uncommon for vendors to embed the IP address of some known
> time source in code. Use ethereal, reboot the box, and watch.
True , and unfortunately, this sometimes goes horrendously wrong...
http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~plonka/netgear-sntp
> David Cook wrote:
> > Kevin Walsh noted that his SPA-2000 takes time from his local NTP
> > server in a post back on Fri June 25.
>
> Interesting that it must have broadcast to the local net for a NTP server.
> >From a net admin perspective, I'd consider that a benefit.
>
> > Q: Where do you t
http:///admin/advanced, click on "System" tab, bottom two options
are primary/secondary NTP server. I'm running 2.0.9(d)
> -Original Message-
> From: David Cook [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Tuesday, July 06, 2004 8:47 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: [Asterisk-Users] SPA-2000 a
David Cook wrote:
> Kevin Walsh noted that his SPA-2000 takes time from his local NTP
> server in a post back on Fri June 25.
Interesting that it must have broadcast to the local net for a NTP server.
>From a net admin perspective, I'd consider that a benefit.
> Q: Where do you tell it to use NT