Preamble
Some few years ago, Rick Thomas started collecting the "interesting"
messages to the comp.protocols.time.ntp newsgroup. Over time, the
collection got pretty large. He did some re-formatting and editing,
and published it as the NTP "pseudo-FAQ". It wasn't pretty, but it
did the job. Rick tried to publish updates every month or so, but then
his life got busy and the FAQ went for a couple of years without any
updates. There's been a lot happening in the world of time-keeping in
those years, and that old "pseudo-FAQ" is now badly out of date.
Largely out of habit Rick has kept up the collection, but he's not had
the time to edit it into a useful form, and it's become clear that
he's not going to have the time in the foreseeable future.
Fortunately, Ulrich Windl recently offered to take the raw collection
in hand and make something useful out of it. What you see here is the
result.
-
A short explanation of the result (written by Ulrich Windl):
(In case of comments for this section, please quote the following
information in your report: $RCSfile: preamble.html,v $ $Revision: 1.1 $)
To make the huge file with all the articles more handy, it is
split into several parts automatically. The hyper-linking program
(that has been written for this collection of articles) extracts
authors, subjects, message IDs, and
selectable keywords from the articles to build
indices or other types of hyper-links for these
categories.
Indices referring to these articles are possibly
also split and (once again) indexed by the main document (You
are currently visiting it).
That was necessary because the collection of articles was a rather
large file that several HTML browsers could not handle correctly nor
efficiently.
To make the articles (containing tabular output or other ASCII
artwork) most useful, the converter tries to preserve the original
layout wherever possible.
For convenience you can not only jump from the indices to the
articles, but also back to the indices (as well as from part to
part, plus some other wild things):
- Selecting the subject of an article, you'll reach the
index of all articles (See it) with the
same subject (disregarding common reply prefixes).
- Within that part of the index the articles are listed without any
sorting (that is ordered by arrival time). For convenience the
article's author is shown for each item (duplicates are possible).
- Each list item (author) is hyper-linked to the corresponding
article.
- Following the hyper-link of the author of an article,
you'll reach the index of authors (See
it). Optional hyper-links in the body of an article can refer to
other (or even the same) authors. The index names all articles sent
by that author. For convenience the subject is shown for each
article.
- For each author in the index there are at least two
links: The first one (author's name or EMail address) is a
mailto-link, while the following links (subjects) refer to
corresponding articles.
- For reasons of performance and file size, the mechanism is
different for the optional index of keywords (See it). In the default case keywords are neither
highlighted nor linked inside the articles as most browsers have a
search function (If you need that functionality).
Nevertheless I have added a new header field named ``X-Keywords''
that lists matching keywords in the body of the article
(Keywords are separated by one space form each other). Remember that
you can get back to the last link visited using the browser's `Back'
function.
If enabled, matching keywords can be highlighted and
hyper-linked back to the index of keywords (similar to
authors). That might help you to locate related articles.
The selection of keywords is a difficult and manual task.
- Neither the least, nor the most frequent words are good candidates.
Instead it depends on the subject discussed. I decided to require at
least three letters for a keyword, and I did not want more hits than
50 articles per keyword (So you probably won't find "help" or "error"
in the index).
-
I only wanted to have few keywords to limit the size of the
index. Remember that even though the selection of keywords is a
manual task, the assignment of articles to keywords is done
automatically. Therefore you might find a hit in someone's
signature or quotation.
Now that Performance since version 0.36 of the hyper-linking program
has been dramatically improved, let's explain and enjoy the additional
goodies:
- The keyword index (See it) lists both,
subject and author of the corresponding article. For no other reason
but convenience, the subject is hyper-linked with the
article, while the author is linked with the
index of authors.
- There is another optional hyper-link for Message-IDs: If
the header of an article has `References:' or
`In-Reply-To:' fields, and that message being referred to has
been found, the hyper-link will bring you to that article.
For reasons of performance, no hyper-links for message IDs are
currently created within the body of an article.
- If enabled, additional hyperlinks referring to common
URLs (ftp:, http:, mailto:) are made
active and they bring you to the indicated location.
- For convenience of sequential reading there are links at the end
of each file that link to the next part (or to the main part).
A corresponding mechanism exists at the start of the file.
There are some new optional hyperlinks at the end of some
header fields, all appearing as ``[-/+]''. These links let you jump
backwards and forwards within one category:
- At the ``Date:'' header you can go to the
previous or next article, assuming the articles were collected in
order.
- At the Header specifiying the author, usually ``From:'',
you can go to the previous or next article written by the same
author.
- At the header field ``Subject:'' you can select
the previous or next article about the same subject.
- At each keyword in the ``X-Keywords:'' header
field you can go to the previous or next article containing
the selected keyword.
These were the main features that the resulting HTML file have. Even
if you feel uncomfortable at the beginning, I hope you'll like it
eventually.
Currently the hyper-linking program can not incrementally add new
articles; everything has to be rebuilt from scratch. Therefore I'll
appreciate any offline collections of interesting articles. All
programming and formatting activity happened in my spare time.
[End of explanation]
Note, This is a "non-fat" FAQ. We include stuff from the newsgroup
that we think is interesting. We include it as it comes to us, warts
and all. Rick doesn't usually write things himself because he doesn't
have the time, though readers of the newsgroup will recognize Ulrich
as a frequent contributer.
For legal reasons we have to emphasize that neither this program nor
any of the people involved makes any attempt to evaluate the
individual articles for correctness, or in any other way except the
purely subjective criterion of being "interesting".
Because of the un-edited format, you should read all relevant items
before you act on anything you read here. Frequently, later items
contain corrections to earlier items.
Please post updates to the newsgroup.
This was last updated $Date: 1998/03/30 20:24:39 $
Rick Thomas, LCSR Computing Facility, CoRE Building
Rutgers University, Department of Computer Science
Busch Campus, Piscataway, NJ 08855-0879, USA
Internet: rbthomas@cs.rutgers.edu
Ulrich Windl, Rechenzentrum DV-med
Klinikum der Universität Regensburg
Franz-Josef-Strauß-Allee 11, 93042 Regensburg, Germany
Internet: Ulrich.Windl@rz.uni-regensburg.de
Standard disclaimers apply. All messages quoted here are the opinions
of their respective authors, and do not necessarily represent the opinions
(if any) of their respective employers, or of the compilers of this FAQ.
If you act on the advice contained herein you do so at your own risk.
Nobody involved makes any warranty.
Contents
- Articles (unsorted)
- 1 - 26
- 27 - 52
- 53 - 78
- 79 - 104
- 105 - 130
- 131 - 156
- 157 - 182
- 183 - 208
- 209 - 234
- 235 - 260
- 261 - 286
- 287 - 312
- 313 - 338
- 339 - 364
- 365 - 390
- 391 - 416
- 417 - 442
- 443 - 468
- 469 - 494
- 495 - 520
- 521 - 546
- 547 - 561
- Index by Author (sorted)
- "Don.[NO ... Carl Brewer
- Carl Byington ... David Ross
- David Woolley ... H. Peter Anvin
- Hansang Bae ... John M. Franke
- John R. DeWolfe ... Matthew D. Healy
- Metod Kozelj ... Raju Varghese
- Randolph Bentson ... Stuart Anderson
- Terje Mathisen ... Xavier NAZART
- Index by Subject (sorted)
- "no server suitable" on SunOS 4.1.4 ... compied ntp client
- Confused ... GPS time display
- GPS Time Sync for Windows NT ... is SNTP too simple?
- Is there a radio clock in Australia? ... New directory on louie
- New driver for GBP70 MSF receiver ... ntp for nt... nay or yeah ?
- NTP for VMS ... NTP server software for WindowS NT 3.51
- NTP Setup Help ... Real difference between server and peer modes.
- Recommendations? ... SunOS error: ntp/udp: unknown service
- Suspect code in ntp_loopfilter ... Timeserv on NT is using up CPU time
- Timetravel in NT ... xntp (ntp) for VMS.
- xntp 3-5.89 broken with UnixWare 2.1.1 ... xntpd[3985]: Can't adjust time: No such file or directory
- Year 2000 & NTP ... Yet another NTP client available...
- Index by Keyword (sorted)
- ACTS ... DCF
- DCF77 ... keytype
- LCL ... poll
- PPM ... TCP
- TIME_ERROR ... WWVB