Hi Kevin,

Well, I think it already accepted that there are applications where it is 
useful to know the local time.  Generating SMPTE Timecode is one that you know 
about.

>From Doug's comment, I'm not clear if he wanted to prohibit something 
>different, i.e. using an ARB timescale to represent local time.  I'm happy to 
>prohibit that but I would like to see the Alternate Timescales TLV of section 
>16.3 allowed - not required, just allowed.

How can the endstation know which is the correct local time?  Most likely use 
case is that the PTP deployment is designed so that masters do not serve more 
than one timezone.  Failing that, it could be user selection based on the name 
of the alternate timescale.

Yes, you can route multicast messages beyond a subnet but many network 
administrators, e.g. in my own company's enterprise network, choose not to 
allow that, especially for "Any Source Multicast" as used by 1588.

John

From: Kevin Gross [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 29 October 2013 15:45
To: John Fletcher
Cc: Douglas Arnold; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [TICTOC] Enterprise Profile

Multicast IP routing allows multicast messaging beyond a subnet. Multicast IP 
routing is not available over the internet but it is now fairly common on 
enterprise networks.

John, can you describe a use case for alternate timescales and explain how the 
endstation can know that the timescale is correct local time or which alternate 
timescale to use if there are multiple?

Kevin Gross
+1-303-447-0517
Media Network Consultant
AVA Networks - www.AVAnw.com<http://www.avanw.com/>

On Tue, Oct 29, 2013 at 4:18 AM, John Fletcher 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Just to be clear, I am not suggesting use of a different epoch in timestamp 
fields.  I am talking about the optional TLV described in section 16.3 which 
can give you the offset(s) between PTP time and one or more timescales of your 
choice.

Regarding spanning timezones, there is a difference between the extent of the 
enterprise network and the extent of the part of network served by a PTP 
master.  The latter is probably a subnet since multicast messages (e.g. 
Announce) are usually confined to a subnet.  A subnet spanning multiple 
timezones would be less common.  However you can have more than one Alternate 
Timescale if necessary.

This feature is just an option; I'm not suggesting it be required, just that it 
not be forbidden.

John

From: Douglas Arnold 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: 28 October 2013 20:06
To: John Fletcher

Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [TICTOC] Enterprise Profile

Hello John,

I agree that local time is useful.  I would not be averse to creating a TLV to 
distribute local time offset, so that end node can convert to local time and 
present it to users.

However, I do not support the idea of using a local time epoch in the PTP 
timestamp fields. This is an allowed option in IEEE 1588-2008, but I believe 
that this is likely to cause interoperability problems, when some vendors 
support it and others do not.  Also some system architechs have indicated that 
they deploy PTP across large networks, which span time zones. This is the 
feature that should be forbidden.

In the NTP standard (RFC5905) the timestamps in the packet all use a specific 
time epoch, and generate all other desired time epoch as corrections performed 
at the end points.  Note also that in most computer operating systems a single 
standard time epoch is used in and local time is generated at the presentation 
layer for human readable interfaces.

Doug

On Mon, Oct 28, 2013 at 8:10 AM, John Fletcher 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I'd also like to ask that you don't prohibit the Alternate Timescales option.  
This is potentially useful to distribute "local time" (your time-zone and dst) 
and there doesn't seem to be any need to prohibit it.

John
________________________________
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] on behalf of John 
Fletcher [[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>]
Sent: 25 October 2013 11:01
To: Douglas Arnold
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [TICTOC] Enterprise Profile
Doug,

I would be interested to know the circumstances when you see the maximum phase 
adjustment information being used.

Some comments:

In section 6, you say, "In all three of the delay measurement modes...".  At 
that point in the text you have not yet mentioned multicast, hybrid and unicast 
modes so it's not clear which modes you are referring to.

In section 9, you say, "Slaves SHOULD NOT Synchronize to a Rogue Master."  It's 
not clear how a slave would know that a master is rogue; presumably it would 
need to examine the announce messages of all masters and do its own BMCA 
evaluation.  A more realistic "rogue" master would probably meet the BMCA 
criteria for selection.

In section 12, "Alternative Time Scales" should be "Alternate Timescales".


Regards,
John Fletcher

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of 
Douglas Arnold
Sent: 25 October 2013 01:35
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [TICTOC] Enterprise Profile

Hello Everyone,

Attached is an updated version of the Enterprise profile.  Sorry I missed the 
upload deadline for  the Vancouver meeting.  If you get a chance to look at it 
before then I will be there and would love to discuss it.

Summary of changes:

I also changed the TLV format to fit the latest proposal in the 1588 revision.

I added a statement about not going into the master state unless one had a 
current UTC offset.

I added to the TLV fields to indicate maximum phase correction over a sync 
cycle.

--
Doug Arnold
Principal Technologist
JTime! Meinberg USA
+1-707-303-5559<tel:%2B1-707-303-5559>





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