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- How far is too far off for ntpd? Can it get there by a sudden jump to . . .
NTPD can adjust your clock in slow increments if it's off, clock slewing The idea behind that is that slow steps won't cause issues with software timers, strange gaps in log files etc
- Windows time always a few seconds off (w32time), compared to Linux ntp
That is because Windows doesn't seem to account for natural clock-skew as good as Linux does and Windows pulls time-updates less frequently than Linux does This makes a Windows computer deviate faster, especially if the internal clock on the motherboard isn't very accurate to begin with
- What is Clock offset in NTP server - Stack Overflow
For a tiny offset ntpd will adjust the local clock as usual; for small and larger offsets, ntpd will reject the reference time for a while In the latter case the operation system's clock will continue with the last corrections effective while the new reference time is being rejected
- The Windows Server Clock Drift service is in a Warning or . . . - N-able
Time Offset value: Indicates the difference (in seconds) between the clock time of the monitored device and the designated NTP server The difference (or offset) between the 2 determines the state of the service
- How can I measure and prevent clock drift? - Unix Linux Stack Exchange
By "measure clock drift", I didn't mean drift from a reference time source, such as NTP gives you I meant a tool which can detect "jumps" in the time of day clock over a continuous time range
- ntp - Ntpd on local network - Preventing clock drift causing high . . .
The initial offset between an NTP client and the NTP server can be arbitrary, e g a few milliseconds or even months As ntpd -g sets the clock of NTP client initially very precisely, it would be even enough for me to set the clock in each poll interval, but I am not sure if ntpd allows me to do so
- Why is my internal clock always 1. 3 seconds off? - Server Fault
To force it to always synch, set this value to 0 But first check that this value is within your desired value Some systems need to allow for more time difference
- Epoch Converter - Unix Timestamp Converter
Supports Unix timestamps in seconds, milliseconds, microseconds and nanoseconds
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