jtr1962
Storage? I am Storage!
I recently set up my desktop PC as an NTP server ( don't ask-it's a really long story ). Everything works well, time seems to match my G-Shock solar atomic watch exactly. I even set up my laptop to synchronize to the desktop over the LAN every 15 minutes. I used task scheduler to run the net time \\{time server name} /set command every 15 minutes indefinitely.
My question-is there an easier way to do this? It took a lot of trial and error to get the synchronization to work properly. When I was done, I couldn't help but think there had to be a better way. I tried Internet time synchronization using the name of my desktop as the time server, but it didn't work for some reason. Ultimately, since I went through the bother of setting up a time server, I want to use it to sync the clocks of all the PCs on the network.
BTW, the desktop is running XP Service Pack 3 and the laptop is running Vista Business 64.
Another question-the polling interval on the desktop seems to have settled down to 1024 seconds. Is this typical for NTP servers? To me it doesn't matter one way or another, but I don't want to be blocked from any Internet time servers on account of an abusively high polling rate. I'm assuming my NTP client decided that 1024 was as high as it could go without clock going outside the 128 ms NTP limit.
Oh, and the short version of the long story is that the time on my friend's XP desktop went wacko (i.e. it was off by 30 seconds ten minutes after syncing to Internet time). My attempts to help him fix the problem led me to the world of NTP. Being that I like to experiment, and I'm a stickler for having clocks keeping time to the second, it was inevitable that I'd end up setting up a time server. That's the short version. The long one would take about ten pages.
My question-is there an easier way to do this? It took a lot of trial and error to get the synchronization to work properly. When I was done, I couldn't help but think there had to be a better way. I tried Internet time synchronization using the name of my desktop as the time server, but it didn't work for some reason. Ultimately, since I went through the bother of setting up a time server, I want to use it to sync the clocks of all the PCs on the network.
BTW, the desktop is running XP Service Pack 3 and the laptop is running Vista Business 64.
Another question-the polling interval on the desktop seems to have settled down to 1024 seconds. Is this typical for NTP servers? To me it doesn't matter one way or another, but I don't want to be blocked from any Internet time servers on account of an abusively high polling rate. I'm assuming my NTP client decided that 1024 was as high as it could go without clock going outside the 128 ms NTP limit.
Oh, and the short version of the long story is that the time on my friend's XP desktop went wacko (i.e. it was off by 30 seconds ten minutes after syncing to Internet time). My attempts to help him fix the problem led me to the world of NTP. Being that I like to experiment, and I'm a stickler for having clocks keeping time to the second, it was inevitable that I'd end up setting up a time server. That's the short version. The long one would take about ten pages.