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Date:      Fri, 26 Dec 1997 19:31:05 -0700 (MST)
From:      Kenneth Merry <ken@plutotech.com>
To:        hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: procedure to adjust clock drift?
Message-ID:  <199712270231.TAA27023@pluto.plutotech.com>
In-Reply-To: <199712261753.SAA26396@uriah.heep.sax.de> from J Wunsch at "Dec 26, 97 06:53:01 pm"

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J Wunsch wrote...
> Vladimir Litovka <doka@grunt.vl.net.ua-nospam> wrote:
> 
> >> Calling ntpdate repeatedly in a running system is not a good idea,
> >> since it'll cause `time warp's.
> 
> >  You can call ntpdate every 1/2 hour, so time warps will be very
> > small.  About link to the world: I have local NTP-server, which
> > sinchronizes with external servers, and set of local stations, which
> > sinchronize with my server for reduce load on outgoing link.
> 
> Still, why can't you run xntpd on the clients against your local
> server?  Apart from some saved virtual memory (for xntpd), i can't
> find any advantage in the `run ntpdate every 30 minutes' method.

	I've got a 486 that won't ever sync up properly with ntp.  (i.e.
when you do a ntptrace, it always shows itself as stratum 16, etc.) I
have to run ntpdate to keep it synced up.

Ken
-- 
Kenneth Merry
ken@plutotech.com



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