From: Chris Mott (cmott@xxxxxxxx)
Date: Thu Oct 11 2001 - 00:49:50 GMT-3
The best way I've found is to hop on your router that is the closest
secure router to your Internet connection (preferably behind your
firewall) ... then program that router to synchronize with a public
Stratum Level 2 Time Server, (found here
http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/clock2.htm ) ... then tune your
other routers and switches to use the main router as the NTP server ...
that way only one router has to sync up, and everyone else talks to it
... less filtering of NTP at the firewall (open the port only for the
single internal router), and get all of the network devices on the right
time ... great for debugging syslog messages and logging buffers ...
good luck!
Chris Mott, CCIE #7908
CCDP, CCNP-Voice, CCSE
Network Architect
Solarcom, LLC
cmott@home.com
-----Original Message-----
From: nobody@groupstudy.com [mailto:nobody@groupstudy.com] On Behalf Of
Wade Edwards
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2001 4:47 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Cc: Steve Barone
Subject: RE: GPS system for cisco router network
Many allow you to setup the GPS receiver as an NTP server and setup all
routers to get their time from the GPS receiver via NTP.
-----Original Message-----
From: Steve Barone [mailto:steve@chetona.com]
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2001 4:24 PM
To: ccielab@groupstudy.com
Subject: OT: GPS system for cisco router network
Hi all:
I need a time source for my network and was trying to
figure out how the GPS receiver integrates with the
router network?
TIA
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