Hi !
Thanks for your kind reply, but in the meantime I solved my problem
by declaring / configuring my clock as stratum 1 in /etc/npt.conf.
Now cisco accepts my FreeBSD machine as time server.
Andreas ///
On Thu, Aug 05, 1999 at 12:00:39AM +0200, Julian Stacey wrote:
> Hi, Andreas Klemm wrote:
> > wie kann man sich "mit wenig Geld" eine, möglichst genaue clock
> > bauen, um einen FreeBSD Rechner dann als NTP Server einsetzen
> > zu können ?
> > Wo gibt's das und was kostet das. Anschluß über serielle versteht
> > sich ...
>
> Sorry for late reply, but you'll like the answer: DM 20, @ Conrad.
>
> 5cm x 2.5 cm inc LCD display (DM 10 if just LCD display & no interface pins)
> I bought mine maybe 3 months ago, model No on back says LR44
>
> It has a 4 pin i/face (like power on a 3.5" floppy drive)
> but connects to a serial port, but not as serial asynch signal
> more like the signal gets strobed by the DC pins on the port,
> cant tell you more as been too busy to cable it up yet.
> ( gj(at)freebsd.org & CollinsM(at)csi.com also have 1 each, I think they've also
> been too busy to try it, so they just sit on top of monitors for now,
> listening to Braunschweig, & gently nagging us to find time :-)
>
> Julian
> Julian H. Stacey http://www.freebsd.org/~jhs/
> Considering Linux ? Then also consider the 2000+ free packages for FreeBSD.
-- Andreas Klemm http://www.FreeBSD.ORG/~andreas http://www.freebsd.org/~fsmp/SMP/SMP.html powered by Symmetric MultiProcessor FreeBSD Latest song from our band: http://www.freebsd.org/~andreas/mp3/schaukel.mp3 To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo(at)de.FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe de-bsd-chat" in the body of the messageReceived on Thu 05 Aug 1999 - 22:38:38 CEST