sfx2000
Part of the Furniture
The GPS satellites are possibly radiation-hardened?
It's the clients that are generally not RAD hardened - but if we get to that place, NTP is likely not our main concern...
The GPS satellites are possibly radiation-hardened?
In the UK we used the "Rugby clock" on 60kHz. I remember in the 1970's there were often little projects based on it in the monthly electronics magazines.In Europe, many clocks use the longwave time signal from a transmitter near Frankfurt, Germany.
Without GPS, the US military wouldn't be able to put a bomb on a target or do an extraction, and their UAVs would fall out of the sky. That's why I said it's impossible, it will never happen. For me, the WWV radio is a good plan B.It's the clients that are generally not RAD hardened - but if we get to that place, NTP is likely not our main concern...
I did something like this to one of my Raspberry Pi's. Had a Garmin GPS18x puc, hooked up over USB including the PPS. Had to compile a newer version of ntpd (stock Raspbian version to old to support PPS).This might be of interest for some - Stratum 1 NTP server using Raspberry Pi
(there's also a lot of good technical info that can be used for other platforms here as well)
http://www.satsignal.eu/ntp/Raspberry-Pi-NTP.html
i have my router doing it instead, it has a lot more computing power and resources than a raspberry pi.
its not really a question of speed, rather a question of latency. While my router is fast it still gets GPS via usb which is not ideal.
true, but every bit you can do to reduce latency helps, from getting the data from the GPS, to the CPU architecture and ram in being low latency and passing the data on via the ntp server. So even having gigabit ethernet helps a little in latency compared to 100Mb/s, and not having programs fully use up ram and CPU is also important in keeping that high accuracy. Even the OS choice is important.way back in the day - GPS via USB or Serial - it was just as accurate as CDMA system time - and this means much as we sync'ed laptops via GPS to the CDMA devices to track air interface events.
NTP with GPS and PPS support is spot-on accurate... serial or otherwise for most purposes. That's why I recommended using GPS w/PPS support along with NTP. One can always go deeper with the WWV and other long wave radio sources, but NTP is pretty accurate none the less...
The SBC's - Tinkerboard/Pi3 - they're fun solutions, and they work well enough for an application like this - along with others. They also have the strong option of building locally rather than doing a cross-compile, which is a big win if a package is not available upstream.
true, but every bit you can do to reduce latency helps, from getting the data from the GPS, to the CPU architecture and ram in being low latency and passing the data on via the ntp server. So even having gigabit ethernet helps a little in latency compared to 100Mb/s, and not having programs fully use up ram and CPU is also important in keeping that high accuracy. Even the OS choice is important.
If your setup is accurate, the difference in time will be constant compared to other time sources too (best to have less than 1 second difference than a site like time.is).
that ethernet cable is going to perform the same as a few $ ones. What i was saying is that using ways that can help reduce latency. Things like the computer architecture picked (i heard ARM A9 memory isnt very fast for example), the busses use and so on. I suppose i should compare usb1 and GPIO latency.Time geeks are going to do what they're going to do... not that much different that AudioPhile paying $10K for the golden ethernet cable...
I'm used to data centers and keeping things synced up...
I wish China makes a USB DCF77 receiver, it would be my plan B. Now, a North Korea DoS attack on a constellation of GPS satellites, that's something to bragg about. It will never happen, it's impossible.
A few years back our outfit lost the broadband for about three weeks.Out of curiosity, whats the hype of having such an accurate clock on your router, or is it just one of those "because I can" situations which I totally understand
Without GPS, the US military wouldn't be able to put a bomb on a target or do an extraction, and their UAVs would fall out of the sky. That's why I said it's impossible, it will never happen. For me, the WWV radio is a good plan B.
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That it does not see the satellites. In my case, it has to have view to the sky. :/
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