Henrique M Holschuh wrote: > > On Sat, 29 Jan 2000, Ed Cogburn wrote: > > Actually, an end-user should have no business contacting public stratum 2 > servers either, they should use their ISP's timeservers. But not many ISPs > are this high-quality to offer timekeeping services... At the very least > their backbone providers should have *good* ntp servers open to anyone in > their net segment (which includes the ISP users), but not even this is true.
Uh Oh. I'll ask my ISP if they have an ntp servver, but I doubt it. > > > primary servers require "permission to access" first. Get to that > > Most secondary servers *do require permission to acess* as well. Only they > don't feel the need to packet-filter everybody else on a show of faith that > you will ask permission first. Start abusing and that won't last long. The list I read from when I set ntpdate up didn't show a "permission to access" for the servers I used; I avoided the ones which did. > > list, write down 3-4 of the secondary servers that are geographically > > close, and plug that info into ntpdate's config file. > > *NO*. At the very least ping them and discard the ones which are too far. > The docs don't say this unfortunately. The "use 3-4 servers" idea came from what I read, I didn't just pull that number out of a hat. Thanks, you're instructions are more clear than the docs that come with ntp/ntpdate. The docs seem to be primarily focused on setting up a ntp server, not an end-user's situation. -- "It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong." - Voltaire Ed C.