Category: chronology

Common Time Synchronization Pitfalls Finding UTC

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Time synchronization can be a headache for many network administrators attempting to synchronize a network for the first time. There are many pitfalls that an unaware network administrator can fall into when attempting to get every machine on a network to synchronize to the same time.

The first problem many network administrators make is the selection of the time source. UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) is a global timescale and is used throughout the world as a basis for time synchronization as it doesn’t rely on time zones enabling the global community to base itself on one timescale.

UTC is also controlled by a constellation of atomic clocks which ensures its accuracy; however, it is regularly adjusted to ensure that it matches mean solar time by the addition of leap seconds which are added to counter the natural slowing of the Earth’s rotation.

UTC is readily available as a time reference from a number of sources. The Internet is a popular location to receive a UTC time source. However, an Internet time source is located through the network firewall and security issues can arise from having to leave the UDP port open to receive the time requests.

Internet time sources can also be inaccurate and as NTP’s own security system known as NTP authentication cannot work across the Internet further security issues can arise.

A far better solution for getting a source of UTC is to use either the Global Positioning System (GPS) or the long wave radio transmissions broadcast by several national physics laboratories such as NIST in the USA and the UK’s NPL.

Dedicated NTP time servers can receive these secure and authenticated signals and then distribute them amongst all devices on a network.

How Satellite Navigation Works

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Satellite navigational systems, or sat navs, have changed the way we navigate our way around the high roads. Gone are the days when travellers had to have a glove box full of maps and gone too is the need to stop and ask a local for directions.

Satellite navigation means that we an now go from point A to point B confident our systems will take us there and while sat nav systems are not fool proof (we must have all read the stories of people driving over cliffs and into rivers etc), it has certainly revolutionised our wayfinding.

Currently there is only one Global Navigational Satellite System (GNSS) the American run Global Positioning System (GPS). Although, a rival European System (Galileo) is set to go online sometime after 2012 and a both a Russian (GLONASS) and Chinese (COMPASS) system are being developed.

However, all these GNSS networks will operate using the same technology as employed by GPS, and in fact, current GPS systems should be able to utilise these future systems without much alteration.

The GPS system is basically a constellation of satellites (currently there are 27). These satellites each contain onboard an atomic clock (actually two are on most GPS satellites but for the purpose of this explanation only one need be considered). The signals that are transmitted from the GPS satellite contain several pieces of information sent as one integer:

* The time the message was sent

* The orbital position of the satellite (known as the ephemeris)

* The general system health and orbits of the other GPS satellites (known as the almanac)

A satellite navigation receiver, the kind found on the dashbopard of your car, receives this information and using the timing information works out the exact distance from the receiver to the satellite. By using three or more of these signals the exact position can be triangulated (four signals are actually required as height above sea level has to be worked out too).

Because the triangulation works out when the time signal was sent and how long it took to arrive at the receiver, the signals have to be incredibly accurate. Even a second of inaccuracy could see the navigational information out but thousands of kilometres as light, and therefore radio signals, can travel nearly 300,000 km each second.

Currently the GPS satellite network can provide navigational accuracy to within 5 metres which goes to show just how accurate atomic clocks can be.

Network Time Protocol Time Synchronisation Made Easy

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One of the most important aspects of networking is keeping all devices synchronised to the correct time. Incorrect network time and lack of synchronisation can play havoc with system processes and can lead to untold errors and problems debugging.

And failing to ensure devices are continually checked to prevent drift can also lead to a synchronised network slowly becoming unsynchronised and leading to the kinds of problems aforementioned.

However, ensuring a network not only has the correct time but that that time is not drifting is achieved using the time protocol NTP.

Network Time Protocol (NTP) is not the only time synchronisation protocol but it is by far the most widely used. It is an open source protocol but is continually updated by a large community of Internet time keepers.

NTP is based around an algorithm that can work out the correct and most accurate time from a range of sources. NTP allows a single time source to be used by a network of hundreds and thousands of machines and it can keep each one accurate to that time source to within a few milliseconds.

The easiest way of synchronising a network with NTP is to use a NTP time server, also known as a network time server.

NTP servers use an external source of time, either from the GPS network (Global Positioning System), or from broadcasts from national physics laboratories such as NIST in the US or NPL in the UK.

These time signals are generated by atomic clocks which are many times more accurate than the clocks on computers and servers. NTP will distribute this atomic clock time to all devices on a network it will then keep checking each device to ensure there is no drift and correcting the device if there is.

Auditable Time Synchronization with an NTP Server

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Time synchronization is crucial for many modern applications. Whilst computer networks all have to be running in perfect time to prevent errors and ensure security other systems require time synchronization for legal reasons.

Average speed cameras, traffic light cameras, CCTV, parking meters and alarm systems to name but a few, all require accurate time synchronization not just to ensure the correct operation of the systems but also to provide an auditable and legal trail for use in prosecutions.

Failure to do so can lead to the system being completely useless as any legal case based around the technology would need to be provable.

For instance, a CCTV network that is not synchronized would not be admissible in court, a defendant could easily claim that an image of them on a camera could not be them as they were not in the vicinity at the time and unless the camera system can be audited and proved to be accurate then reasonable doubt would see any case against the suspect dropped.

For this reason, systems like those mentioned above require complete auditable time synchronisation that can be proven beyond reasonable doubt in a court system.

An auditable system of time synchronization is only possible by using a dedicated NTP time server (Network Time Protocol). NTP servers not only provide an accurate method of synchronization being accurate to a few milliseconds they also provide a full audit trail that can’t be disputed.

NTP server systems use the GPS network or specialist radio transmissions to receive the atomic clock time which is so accurate the chance of it being even a second out from UTC time (Universal Coordinated Time) is over 3 billion to one which is even greater than the accuracy of other legal evidences such as DNA.

GPS Atomic Clock Time Signals

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It seems that nearly every car dashboard has a GPS receiver perched on the top. They have become incredibly popular as a navigational tool with many people relying on them solely to work their way around the road networks.

The Global Positioning System has been around for quite a few years now but was originally designed and built for US military applications but was extended for civilian use following an airline disaster.

Whilst it is incredibly useful and convenient a tool, the GPS systems is relatively simple in its operation. The navigation works using a constellation of 30 or so satellites (there are quite a few more that are orbiting but no longer operational).

The signals sent from the satellites contain three pieces of information that are received by the sat nav devices in our cars.

That information includes:

* The time the message was sent

* The orbital position of the satellite (known as the ephemeris)

* The general system health and orbits of the other GPS satellites (known as the almanac)

The way the navigational information is worked out is by using the information from four satellites. The time the signals left the each of the satellites is recorded by the sat nav receiver and the distance from each satellite is then worked out using this information. By using the information from four satellites it possible to work out exactly where the satellite receiver is, this process is known as triangulation.

However, working out exactly where you are in the world does rely on complete accuracy in the time signals that are broadcast by the satellites. As signals such as the GPS travel at the speed of light (approximately 300,000 km a second through a vacuum) even a one second inaccuracy could see positioning information out by 300 kilometres! Currently the GPS system is accurate to five metres which demonstrates just how accurate the timing information broadcast by the satellites is.

This high level of accuracy is possible because each GPS satellite contains atomic clocks. Atomic clocks are incredibly accurate relying on the unwavering oscillations of atoms to keep time – in fact each GPS satellite will run for over a million years before it will drift by as much as a second (compared to the average electronic watch which will drift by a second in a week or two)

Because of this high level of accuracy the atomic clocks on board GPS satellites can be used as a source of accurate time for the synchronization of computer networks and other devices that require synchronization.

Receiving this time signal requires the use of a NTP GPS server that will synchronize with the satellite and distribute the time to all devices on a network.

When Time is Money Accuracy Matters

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We live in a fast paced world where time matters. In some industries even a second can make all the difference. Millions of dollars are exchanged hands in the stock exchange each second and share prices can rise or plummet.

Getting the right price at the right time is essential for trading in such a fast paced money market and perfect network time synchronization is the essential to be able to make that happen.

Ensuring every machine that deals in stocks, shares and bonds has the correct time is vital if people are going to trade in the derivatives market but when traders are sat in different parts of the world how can this possibly be achieved.

Fortunately Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), a global timescale developed after the development of atomic clocks, allows the same time to govern every trader, regardless of where they are in the world.

As UTC is based on atomic clock time and is kept accurate by a constellation of these clocks, it is high reliable and accurate. And industries like the stock exchange use UTC to govern the time on their computer networks.

Computer network time synchronization is achieved in computer networks by using the NTP server (Network Time Protocol). NTP servers receive a source of UTC from an atomic clock reference. This is either from the GPS network or through specialist radio transmissions (it is available through the internet too but is not as reliable).

Once received, the NTP server distributes the highly accurate time throughout the network, continually checking each device and workstation to ensure the clock is as precise as possible.

These network time servers can keep entire networks of hundreds and thousands of machines in perfect synchronization – to within a few milliseconds of UTC!

IBM takes over London Congestion Charge with Galleon Time Servers

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Computer giants IBM have taken over the running of London’s congestion charge scheme this week and like their predecessors, Capita, they will be synchronizing the system with Galleon Systems time servers.

Essential for the running of the London congestion charge scheme and ensuring all the 400 cameras are synchronized to the exact same time, the blue-chip company have chosen Galleon Systems as their supplier of network time servers to control the congestion charging system.

Having supplied Capita the former controllers of the congestion charging scheme with its NTS network time servers to accurately synchronize the camera system, Galleon Systems are now supplying IBM with its mission critical hardware too.

Galleon Systems range of network time servers can synchronize networks with millisecond accuracy and receive an accurate and secure atomic clock time source from the GPS network (Global Positioning System) or the radio time signal broadcast by national physics laboratories like NPL.

The London congestion scheme may not be popular with many who have to pay the daily charge but the scheme has been recognised worldwide as an effective method of reducing city congestion and similar schemes to the London congestion zone are being implemented in cities across the globe.

Galleon Systems are the UK’s leading supplier of network time servers and NTP (Network Time Protocol) time synchronisation equipment, having been providing network timing solutions for over a decade.

Why we Synchronize the Time

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We live and work in a totally different world to the one that many of us were born into. We are now as likely to buy something from across the internet as stroll down the coal high street. And big business and commerce has changed too with the marketplace becoming truly global and the internet being the most common tool for trade.

Trading globally does provide its problems though as different timescales govern the different countries across the globe. To ensure parity a global timescale was introduced in the 1970’s knows Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). However, as e-commerce advanced so did the need to ensure accurate synchronization to UTC.

The biggest problem is that most clocks and watches, including those inbuilt into computer motherboards, are susceptible to drift. And as different machines will drift at different rates, global communication and e-commerce could be impossible. Just think of the difference a second can make in marketplaces like the stock exchange, where fortunes are won or lost, or when you purchase seat reservations online, what would happen if somebody on a computer with slower clock booked the same seat after you, the computer’s timestamps will show the person booked before you.

Other unforeseen errors can result, even in internal networks, when computers are running different times. Data can get lost, errors can be difficult to log, track down and fix and malicious users can take advantage of the time confusion.

To ensure truly global synchronization, computer networks can synchronize to an atomic clock allowing all computers on a network o remain within a few milliseconds of UTC. Compute networks use NTP servers (Network Time Protocol) to ensure accurate synchronization, most NTP servers receive the atomic clock time from either GPS satellites of radio frequencies.

The Way an Atomic Clock Works

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Atomic clocks are the most accurate chronometers we have. They are millions of times more accurate than digital clocks and can keep time for hundreds of millions of years without losing as much as a second. Their use has revolutionised the way we live and work and they have enabled technologies such as satellite navigation systems and global online commerce.

But how do they work? Strangely enough, atomic clocks work in the same way as ordinary mechanical clocks. But rather than have a coiled spring and mass or pendulum they use the oscillations of atoms. Atomic clocks are not radioactive as they do not rely on atomic decay instead they rely on the tiny vibrations at certain energy levels (oscillations) between the nucleus of an atom and the surrounding electrons.

When the atom receives microwave energy at exactly the right frequency, it changes energy state, this state is constant an unchanging and the oscillations can be measured just like the ticks of a mechanical clock. However, while mechanical clocks tick every second, atomic clocks ‘tick’ several billion times a second. In the case of caesium atoms, most commonly used in atomic clocks, they tick 9,192,631,770 per second – which is now the official definition of a second.

Atomic clocks now govern the entire global community as a universal timescale UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) based on atomic clock time has been developed to ensure synchronization. UTC atomic clock signals can be received by network time servers, often referred to as NTP Servers, that can synchronize computer networks to within a few milliseconds of UTC.

Seven Reasons why your Network needs a Time Server

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Time servers, often referred to as NTP time servers after the protocol (Network Time Protocol) used to distribute time are an increasingly important part of any computer network. The NTP server receives a timing signal from an accurate source (such as an atomic clock) and then distributes it to all devices on the network.

However, despite the increasing importance of these time synchronisation devices, many network administrators still fail to accurately synchronise their networks and can leave their entire computer system vulnerable.

Here are seven reasons why a NTP time server is a crucial piece of equipment for YOUR network:

• Security: NTP servers use an external source of time and don’t rely on an open firewall port. An unsynchronized server will also be vulnerable to malicious users who can take advantage of time differences.

• Error logging: failing to adequately synchronize a computer network may mean that it is near impossible to trace errors or malicious attack, especially if the times on the log files from different machine do not match.

• Legal Protection: Not being able to prove the time can have legal implications if somebody has committed fraud or other illegal activity against your company.

• Accuracy: NTP Time Servers ensure that all networked computers are synchronized automatically to the exact time throughout your network so everybody in your company can have access to the exact time.

• Global Harmony: A global timescale known as UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) has been developed to ensure that systems across the globe can run the exact same time. By utilising a NTP server not only will every device on you network be synchronised together but your network will be synchronised with every other network on Earth that is hooked up to UTC.

• Control: With a NTP server you have control of the configuration. You can allow automatic changes each spring and autumn for daylight saving time or set your server time to be locked to UTC time only – or indeed, any time zone you choose.

• Automatic update of time. No user intervention required, a NTP time server will account for leap seconds and time zones ensuring trouble free synchronisation.