Strange, I never had any problems with ntp when I was running gentoo. Setting it up in debian was a no brainer, and I never have any problems with my time being off by very much. Ntp is a great tool to have, but it's missing one thing: a plug-in for displaying Aztec dates and times.
Brian D.
--- Jonathan Hutchins wrote:
On Tue, March 22, 2005 4:02 pm, Gerald Combs said:
Jonathan Hutchins wrote:
Ntp doesn't guarantee correct time, it's just
another way to screw it
up.
It _does_ guarantee that you have the same time as
a server or a set of
peers, within a given tolerance. This is helpful
if you want to
correlate log data on different hosts, or run
"make" in an NFS-mounted
directory.
That's if/when it's configured and working correctly. Then it'll even provide the correct date for your email timestamps. That's not necessarily a given though.
I had a system that ... was six hours off after subsequent reboots. Gentoo had, in the absence of useful data from the DHCP server, overwritten the valid ntp config file with default garbage. (This is the default behavior for gentoo.) Caveat admin.
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