Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd)
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@RobbieTT said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
The secret to comedy.
Ha
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@Sergei_Shablovsky said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
But anyway, it’s not “just put the GPS antenna somewhere out of the server room”. Definitely not.
You put the receiver and NTP server elsewhere, where there is a signal. Nothing new here. Often, both devices are in the same box. Here is one example.
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@RobbieTT said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
GSM
GSM is dying, if not already dead in most areas. These days, a 4G or 5G network can provide 1.5 µS accuracy. It will likely work better than GPS in many locations.
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@JKnott said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
@RobbieTT said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
GSM
GSM is dying, if not already dead in most areas. These days, a 4G or 5G network can provide 1.5 µS accuracy. It will likely work better than GPS in many locations.
Not sure why you picked-out GSM time reference from the list but the world is a big place and GSM-based time reference systems are out there in use for everything from military, police, ATC, banking, PoS, trading, networking, power networks, gas network, train signal & monitoring... and the list goes on.
I happen to live on a bit of the planet that is more advanced than other areas and we have a desire is to cease GSM use by 2033 (IIRC) but given that there are still major infrastructure elements that are not on track to meet that deadline some slippage will probably occur.
Again, we are talking timing reference use, not using a phone to call your kids. Most of the population of any given country does not have a clue about RF spectrum management let alone any idea* as to what uses or depends on GSM.
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[* Ok, this bit varies by country. Here in the UK there is growing public awareness that the typical domestic gas and electric meter will become 'dumb' soon and that medical service providers for home equipment (dialysis, CPAP, respirators etc) have quite a problem. But the average punter has no idea about substations, sewage, hydroelectrics or indeed all the other infra held together on obsolescent tech.]
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In many areas, GSM is gone. On my carrier, it's already been reduced to 1 band from 2. Also, spectrum costs the cell companies a lot of money. Do you think they're going to leave some spectrum they already have to sit almost unused and then spend on more spectrum? Already we're hearing about things like security systems and more not working because 2G & 3G are being discontinued. The world moves on and sticking with obsolete tech is not the way to go, even if there still is some GSM in your area. A few years ago, a friend received a free 4G phone because the company he was with was in the process of shutting down 2G & 3G.
So, hang onto your GPS time source for as long as you can, but don't be surprised if it stops working some day.
Another source which you didn't mention was NTSC TV signals. Some stations transmitted the time during the horizontal blanking interval and the colour burst oscillator was an excellent stable signal. Are those stations supposed to keep broadcasting, even though NTSC is rarely used these days?
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@JKnott said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
Here is one example.
TM1000A. I have one of those in a box somewhere as well, along with a TM2000A. The TM1000A NTP implementation was written in microcode, and was one of the very few to have implemented the broadcast mode of NTP. The TM2000A was focused on PTP, which it was reasonably good at, but instead of a microcode implementation for NTP it used busybox which made it a very poor NTP server.
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@JKnott said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
Do you think they're going to leave some spectrum they already have to sit almost unused and then spend on more spectrum? The world moves on and sticking with obsolete tech is not the way to go, even if there still is some GSM in your area.
Whilst I was a member of the UK Frequency Allocation Committee we did cooperate with other national and international bodies (FCC, WRC etc) - otherwise how would we know, for example, that Tajikistan (amongst others) uses 25 kHz for time signals. It's been a few years since I left that role but the RF spectrum remains stubbornly fixed.
Again, please don't confuse the GSM you used to use for phone calls with the use of GSM time references or other industrial uses.
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There are a lot of time signals, on a variety of frequencies, around the world. They are broadcast stations and not likely to go away. Is there some other GSM out there, beyond the cell phone network? Also, CDMA was the 2G tech used for accurate time keeping, not GSM, which uses TDMA.
If it is the GSM cell network you're referring to then yeah, it's going away in the not too distant future. My friend's phone that had to be replaced was 2G CDMA.
BTW, I have a clock that's supposed to set itself with the 60 KHz WWVB signal. However, it hasn't worked in years and didn't very well when it did. I have also used WWV as a frequency standard and it & CHU for time of day. As I said, lots of time signals around the world.
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@johnpoz said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
@sergei_shablovsky said in Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
You have separate machine especially for timeserver?
Yeah I have a raspberry pi with a gps hat that I use as my networks stratum 1 server, and also serve this up to the ntp pool via both ipv4 and IPv6 ;)
BTW, why You have so much distortion in offsets? (Probably Pi not sufficient horsepower to keep many requests? What is loading of CPU/RAM/SSD?)
This is our recent
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@RobbieTT said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
Dedicated NTP time sources don't have to be expensive or be a hacky DIY job on a RPi.
I am watching this reasonable priced one on eBay: https://www.ebay.com/itm/385524217975
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@NollipfSense Haven't tested one of those myself, but more information can be found here: https://fc-ntp-100.toimii.fi.
FWIW, at 0.5-2ms the advertised accuracy for NTP on the LAN is low. This implies a simplistic NTP implementation without hardware timesamping.
For around the same price, you could do a Pi.
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@dennypage said in Chrony, PTP, Network Time Security (NTS, NTPsec) to replace unsecure/old NTP (ntpd):
here: https://fc-ntp-100.toimii.fi.
Cool...thank you for sharing.