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Need trusted NTP Sources
- Subject: Need trusted NTP Sources
- From: mlm at pixelgate.net (Mark Milhollan)
- Date: Thu, 6 Feb 2014 04:57:51 -0800 (PST)
- In-reply-to: <CACK8u8L-f=H0-tbxbim+o8x_aHxq6JMs-fYGK489tUrRprxmog@mail.gmail.com>
- References: <CACK8u8JroK3aXP3Pq=PcRvnEwzjT=jiQtJifmoKyk6D5WuRhDg@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <CACK8u8L-f=H0-tbxbim+o8x_aHxq6JMs-fYGK489tUrRprxmog@mail.gmail.com>
On Thu, 6 Feb 2014, Notify Me wrote:
>According to the auditors, "trusted" means
>
>1. Universities or Research facilities (nuclear/atomic facilities,
>space research (such as NASA) etc.)
>2. Main country internet/telecom providers
>3. Government departments
>4. Satellites (using GPS module)
>
>Which is a bit of a tall order over here.
In general you should probably be asking <news:comp.protocols.time.ntp>.
You could run your own NTP server using GPS as its reference clock (#4),
at least I don't think it would be impossible for you to obtain such a
device. But not cheap either. But then RHEL and an audit suggest you
have some money to spend. You might even build your own using ntpd and
a receiver, e.g., GNSS. See
<http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills/ntp/index.html> for more information.
Some stratum 1 or 2 servers (which are generally run by entities 1 thru
3 from your list) may allow you to obtain time (perhaps using crypto),
but of course you'd need to contact them directly. ntp.org has a list:
<http://support.ntp.org/bin/view/Servers/WebHome>.
Generally speaking, you'll need at least 3 sources if you want stablity.
Mark