Just FYI:
either use:
au.pool.ntp.org
or all of these:
0.au.pool.ntp.org
1.au.pool.ntp.org
2.au.pool.ntp.org
3.au.pool.ntp.org
Regards,
Matt
--
"Debugging is twice as hard as writing the code in the first place.
Theref
Chaps, I eventually stumbled upon instructions that led me to issue this
command:
w32tm /config /manualpeerlist:ntp1.tpg.com.au /syncfromflags:manual
/reliable:yes /update
I picked the tpg timer server because I saw lots of people complaining that
time.windows.com had stopped working. I
: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] Time sync on my domain
On 4 October 2010 10:25, Greg Keogh mailto:g...@mira.net>> wrote:
I also *thought* that the domain controller would sync to an external server,
like time.windows.com<http://time.windows.com>, which I can see in the registry
for the W32
Check out the command line option w32tm and start with a w32tm /monitor
-Original Message-
From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On
Behalf Of Sam Lai
Sent: Monday, 4 October 2010 10:52 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] Time sync on my domain
On 4
On 4 October 2010 10:25, Greg Keogh wrote:
> I also *thought* that the domain controller would sync to an external
> server, like time.windows.com, which I can see in the registry for the
> W32Time service. But I guess it’s not doing that.
>
Not by default, no. All computers on a domain sync vi
On 4 October 2010 10:25, Greg Keogh wrote:
> Folks, I just noticed that the time on all of the machines in my domain are
> drifting forward. I’ve never configured any time services on the domain,
> it’s the default behaviour.
>
>
>
> I *thought* that the Win3K domain controller automatically becam
Folks, I just noticed that the time on all of the machines in my domain are
drifting forward. I've never configured any time services on the domain,
it's the default behaviour.
I *thought* that the Win3K domain controller automatically became the time
server in a domain and all of the other mac