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Date:      Sun, 13 Jan 2002 01:59:32 -0600
From:      "Chad Albert" <chadalbert@home.com>
To:        <listsub@rambo.simx.org>, "Tim Kellers" <timothyk@serv1.wallnet.com>
Cc:        "FBSD Questions" <questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Subject:   Re: ntpd as time server?
Message-ID:  <00e801c19c08$400538c0$14010f0a@spgcalbert>
References:  <20020112204957.B20440-100000@serv1.wallnet.com> <3C41373B.6080106@rambo.simx.org>

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In Win2k you can use "at" from a command line, or you can use the scheduler
that appears as a folder called "Tasks" in your system root (usually
C:\winnt\).  There are advantages and disadvantages to both.  Try each and
decide for yourself.  Just make sure that the job runs under an account that
has "Change the system time" privilege.

----- Original Message -----
From: "Roger 'Rocky' Vetterberg" <listsub@rambo.simx.org>
To: "Tim Kellers" <timothyk@serv1.wallnet.com>
Cc: "FBSD Questions" <questions@FreeBSD.ORG>
Sent: Sunday, January 13, 2002 1:28 AM
Subject: Re: ntpd as time server?


> Tim Kellers wrote:
>
> > I used Samba to make my FreeBSD box look like an NT domain member and
> > set-up my Windows 2k workstations with:
> >
> > net time \\"FreeBSD box NETBIOS name" /s /u
> >
>
> [snip]
>
>
> A bit off topic for this list, I know, but where exactly in
> w2k do you set that up?
> I've tried it in dos, and 'net time \\"FreeBSD NETBIOS name"
> /set /y" seems to work and synchronize the time, but I
> assume there is a way to automate this.
> Is there a cron equivalent or something similar in w2k?
>
> --
> R
>
>
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