> If you want your Windows clients to see the time server you
> must have samba
> running so Windows can read the time from the Linux server.
> On Linux if you
> don't have NTP running you should, use one server on your
> network as the
> Time Source (and have it
If you want your Windows clients to see the time server you must have samba
running so Windows can read the time from the Linux server. On Linux if you
don't have NTP running you should, use one server on your network as the
Time Source (and have it sync with another tier one/two NTP server
Can sync up the linux boxes manually with success.
manually?? Have you looked at ntp ? Network Time Protocol allows you to
setup a central time server at your location (man ntpd) that stays in
sync with the atomic clock. You can then have all your clients sync from
your site server. This is
I have set-up a dhcp server which works fine. Running RH7.3.
Would like centralize all time functions to this server for all windows
clients.
Can sync up the linux boxes manually with success. Are there any other
options that are needed for the windows boxes to be successful?
Any comments?
su
On Wed, 2002-10-02 at 11:27, Marabate, Frank wrote:
> The two systems are on the same network, there is no firewall between them.
> It appears that the Linux server is just not answering the workstations ntp
> request. Is there some way, a utility perhaps, that I would show what the
> Linux server
On Wed, 2002-10-02 at 12:27, Marabate, Frank wrote:
> The two systems are on the same network, there is no firewall between them.
> It appears that the Linux server is just not answering the workstations ntp
> request. Is there some way, a utility perhaps, that I would show what the
> Linux server
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
>Is there some way, a utility perhaps, that I would show what the Linux
>server is doing when a request comes in?
Yeah, it's called 'cat'... Look at the logs.
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Title: Re: Time Server
The two systems are on the same network, there is no firewall between them. It appears that the Linux server is just not answering the workstations ntp request. Is there some way, a utility perhaps, that I would show what the Linux server is doing when a request comes
My NTP server works nicely... here is our ntp.conf file. We do not use
authentication though... I believe this is a pretty standard 7.2 or 7.3
Red Hat conf.
On a 2000 box, at the command line type net time /setsntp: and
make sure the Windows Time Service is started, too!
james
# Prohibit gener
On Wed, 2 Oct 2002, Marabate, Frank wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am currently running version 7.0, and I'm trying to build a time server. I
> have the ntpd running and I am able to pull the time off of public time
> servers on the Internet. The problem that I am having though is
Title: Time Server
Hello,
I am currently running version 7.0, and I'm trying to build a time server. I have the ntpd running and I am able to pull the time off of public time servers on the Internet. The problem that I am having though is when I try to pull time off of my time server w
Christopher Northrop wrote:
> Well its like this, If all the host on network say its time to go home maybe
> my boss will fall for it?
> Of course being late all the time would be the down side.
>
In that case cron would definetly be your friend. set the time back at around
4AM and back up when
On Tue, 03 Oct 2000, Charles Galpin wrote:
> Oh, well then, you want the "smarttime" rpm. It starts the day one hour
> early (so you look like you got to work an hour earlier than you did) and
> then over a period of 5 hours increments the time one hour early (so you
> can leave an hour earlier).
e -
> From: Jonathan Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2000 12:37 PM
> Subject: Re: Network time server?
>
>
> > Look for "xntp". I cannot imagine why you don't want to stay in sync
, 2000 12:37 PM
Subject: Re: Network time server?
> Look for "xntp". I cannot imagine why you don't want to stay in sync with
the rest of the world's time - are you trying some time warping experiment?
:-)
>
> At 04:01 PM 10/2/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>
>
> >
Look for "xntp". I cannot imagine why you don't want to stay in sync with the rest of
the world's time - are you trying some time warping experiment? :-)
At 04:01 PM 10/2/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>Hello group
>
>I was hoping to set up a Linux box to act as a time
EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 03 October 2000 13:47
To: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]'
Subject: RE: Network time server?
NTP will still do what you want. You simply declare that the
server you're pointing to is a stratum 1 and you are gold. Of
course, NTP has it's own baggage, so you
throp [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, October 02, 2000 4:02 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Network time server?
Hello group
I was hoping to set up a Linux box to act as a time server. I have looked
into NTP and in.timed.
It seems NTP has to be linked up with ethe
ober 2000 4:01
Subject: Network time server?
Hello group
I was hoping to set up a Linux box to act as a time server. I have looked
into NTP and in.timed.
It seems NTP has to be linked up with ether a radio, time server or GPS to
function and in.timed has to little instruction to be of any use.
Hello group
I was hoping to set up a Linux box to act as a time server. I have looked
into NTP and in.timed.
It seems NTP has to be linked up with ether a radio, time server or GPS to
function and in.timed has to little instruction to be of any use. All I
would like to do is set a server and
one-shot
ntp client) will (AFAIK) give you a marginally more exact match to a
particular time server, but your clock will still drift off the correct
time (on PC's a clock drift of 1 to 2 seconds per day is not uncommon). A
more complex system like xntpd will allow you to average time from se
On 21-Sep-00 Vidiot wrote:
>>How can I make my PC a 'time server' for another PC in my LAN?
>>
>>What service do I have to run on the server?
>>Gustav
>
> Just run rdate on the client. Put rdate in a root crontab and run it once
> a day. See the
Thanks, Vidiot. It works like a charm. :-)
Gustav
Vidiot wrote:
>
> >How can I make my PC a 'time server' for another PC in my LAN?
> >
> >What service do I have to run on the server?
> >Gustav
>
> Just run rdate on the client. Put rdate in a roo
>How can I make my PC a 'time server' for another PC in my LAN?
>
>What service do I have to run on the server?
>Gustav
Just run rdate on the client. Put rdate in a root crontab and run it once
a day. See the man page for the simple details.
MB
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Hi,
How can I make my PC a 'time server' for another PC in my LAN?
What service do I have to run on the server?
Regards
Gustav
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Visit my web site at http://www.sch
> This is going from either machine to the other, what do I need to set up
> to make this work?
try:
/usr/bin/rdate -s clock.psu.edu; /sbin/clock -w
Hope this helps
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To u
I have a couple of Red Hat boxes and want to use one as a time server,
then use the rdate command to sync the others. When I go to run the
command I get the following
rdate: got EOF from time server
This is going from either machine to the other, what do I need to set up
to make this work
This is easy using timeserv which comes with the NT reskit. There's a
little ini file and you just point it towards a time server. Easy as that.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: 10
Jim Cunning wrote:
> There's also an NT (shareware, I think) program called "atomtime" that
> will talk to a time server, configurable.
Several years ago, a small company I was with selected a shareware program
called Tardis. It worked well and pricing was very sane.
Ju
machines. Of course, now I need
>> to sync these stupid NT boxes in
>
>How about using NT's "at" command to setup a regularly scheduled job to
sync
>the NT boxes to your time server:
>
> NET TIME /SET /YES \\timeserver
>
>It's not cron, but it
> What do I need to install to get my machine to allow a remote time server
> lookup? My other machine works, but since I didn't set it up to do it I am
> unsure exactly what I need. Sure I am just missing a package.
xntp is fine if you have a permanent Internet connection if you
At 14:07 2000-03-10 +0800, Edward Dekkers wrote:
>> NET TIME /SET /Y \\linuxbox
>
>Does this work without Samba?
I don't thinks so. The only non-samba box I have doesn't accept connections
from rdate either. Perhaps the command should actually read:
NET TIME /SET /Y \\sambabox
Tony
-
> NET TIME /SET /Y \\linuxbox
Does this work without Samba?
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P: +61 8 9397-1040
F: +61 8 9397-0548
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as the Subject.
m called "atomtime" that
> will talk to a time server, configurable.
>
> Jim Cunning
>
> On Thu, 9 Mar 2000, Anthony E. Greene wrote:
>
> > Ward William E PHDN wrote:
> > > It works almost flawlessly... the signals are in sync, and I can't see
> &
There's also an NT (shareware, I think) program called "atomtime" that
will talk to a time server, configurable.
Jim Cunning
On Thu, 9 Mar 2000, Anthony E. Greene wrote:
> Ward William E PHDN wrote:
> > It works almost flawlessly... the signals are in sync, and I ca
scheduled job to sync
the NT boxes to your time server:
NET TIME /SET /YES \\timeserver
It's not cron, but it ships with the OS and it works.
Tony
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Homepage & PGP Key <http://www.pobox.com/~agreene/>
If it's too good to be true,
Ward William E PHDN wrote:
> It works almost flawlessly... the signals are in sync, and I can't see
> any apparent differences in those machines. Of course, now I need
> to sync these stupid NT boxes in
check out tardis
Bret
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xntp is still what you need. You simply set one machine as a time server,
the others as guests. I use xntp because it's relatively light weight,
works across platforms (I have IRIX and Linux boxes mostly, with a
smattering
of HPUX and even a couple of dedicated WINNT servers) and becau
On Wed, Mar 08, 2000 at 11:22:28PM -0700, Brian Schneider wrote:
> I was mis-understood, what I want is to have my other machines get the
> time of of this machine, not the other way around.
I've been doing this with chrony:
http://www.rrbcurnow.freeserve.co.uk/chrony/
HTH,
Thomas
--
At 23:22 2000-03-08 -0700, Brian Schneider wrote:
>I was mis-understood, what I want is to have my other machines get the
>time of of this machine, not the other way around.
On a LAN, I don't bother with ntp. I use rdate. You just have to make sure
it's not blocked in the server's inetd.conf.
If
to point to the other server when you've finished installing it, and
> make sure that it knows to start the xntpd on bootup.
>
> Funny, it's rare to see a question on Time Synchronization on this list...
> but I asked one just this morning myself to see if anyone knows of
e if anyone knows of Linux
>drivers for IRIG Time Server boards... small world!
>
>Bill Ward
>
>-Original Message-
>From: Brian Schneider [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Wednesday, March 08, 2000 1:00 AM
>To: Red Hat List
>Cc: recipient.list.not.shown; @nswcphdn.
Brian Schneider wrote:
> What do I need to install to get my machine to allow a remote time server
> lookup? My other machine works, but since I didn't set it up to do it I am
> unsure exactly what I need. Sure I am just missing a package.
Depending on the accuracy needed, you ca
Check out xntp the package on my boxes is xntp3-5.93-12. No tellin
what 6.1 uses but probably called xntp3 something.
Bret
Brian Schneider wrote:
>
> What do I need to install to get my machine to allow a remote time server
> lookup? My other machine works, but since I didn'
list...
but I asked one just this morning myself to see if anyone knows of Linux
drivers for IRIG Time Server boards... small world!
Bill Ward
-Original Message-
From: Brian Schneider [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, March 08, 2000 1:00 AM
To: Red Hat List
Cc: reci
You need the ntp daemon.
J.
- Original Message -
From: "Brian Schneider" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Red Hat List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 08, 2000 7:00 AM
Subject: Time Server
| What do I need to install to get my machine to allow a
What do I need to install to get my machine to allow a remote time server
lookup? My other machine works, but since I didn't set it up to do it I am
unsure exactly what I need. Sure I am just missing a package.
BTW it is a 6.1 box.
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