Linux clock-setting script
Chris Gonnerman
chris.gonnerman at newcenturycomputers.net
Tue Jul 9 23:06:55 EDT 2002
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Tue Jul 9 23:06:55 EDT 2002
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----- Original Message ----- From: "William Park" <opengeometry at rc.scd.yahoo.com> > Chris Gonnerman <chris.gonnerman at newcenturycomputers.net> wrote: > > I use chrony for time maintenance. If your computer has intermittent > > Internet access (i.e. dialup) it is hands-down the best way to do it > > IMHO. > > > > If this package has already been mentioned, sorry... I haven't followed > > this thread closely. > > > > http://chrony.sunsite.dk/ > > > > Off-topic since it's C, but I love it. > > I've seen it, but it's a tarball which you have to download and compile. This is a problem? > Whereas, 'netdate', 'ntpdate', and 'telnet 13' are ready to run on all > Linux distribution. I have DSL connection, so I run it once a day in > Crontab. If you dialup, then you can run it from '/etc/ppp/ip-up'. True. chrony doesn't update the time by "lurches" though, but by "skew," which is better in most cases. To each his own. Chris Gonnerman -- chris.gonnerman at newcenturycomputers.net http://newcenturycomputers.net
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