Time syncronisation in domain
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 @Dashrender said in Time syncronisation in domain: @dafyre said in Time syncronisation in domain: @Dashrender said in Time syncronisation in domain: @scottalanmiller said in Time syncronisation in domain: @dafyre said in Time syncronisation in domain: @scottalanmiller said in Time syncronisation in domain: @JaredBusch said in Time syncronisation in domain: @JaredBusch if this is an Offline LAN, then there would be no "local" time source at all, and no point to discuss the domain. Set the server to a global time source, confirm the BIOS battery is good. Of course there is a source. It is the local hardware. Could be the virtual clock, too. Which might explain the drift. It's possible, but pretty sure this isn't true here, that it would be something like a GPS adapter. Lots of larger companies wanting the offline LAN use a $50 GPS adapter to get really solid time for cheap without a network connection. It's accurate to a few milliseconds and cheap. In the financial world, we used Cesium clocks. Tens of thousands of dollars and use a sensor to measure radioactive Cesium decay. Accurate to nanoseconds. So this becomes a question for @meghal ... Do you have any kind of special hardware that provides a way for your DC to get its time without an internet conneciton -- or are you just using the time settings from the OS? And is the OS seeing a physical clock or a virtual one? And is there a healthy battery on that clock? Does VMWare 5, 6 or 7 use the hardware clock and pass that information along to the VMs? I was under the impression that all Hypervisors did this now days. Why would you not have been under this impression in the ESX 4 days? But clearly that wasn't the case as Scott mentioned above. I'm not sure when they resolved a lot of that. I know is GSX / Server 2 days it wasn't there. I know that it is now. Somewhere in between it changed  
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 We use a Meinberg in Stratum 1 mode, its good to a few microseconds. 
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 Here are my command notes when i setup it up on our windows domain. Obviously replace {local time server} with the ip of your local time server if it exists. net stop w32time 
 w32tm /config /syncfromflags:manual /manualpeerlist:"{local time server}, time.nist.gov"
 w32tm /config /reliable:yes
 net start w32timeI did not have to make any changes to users workstations, they automatically synced with the DC's. 
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 I think that we've lost the OP here! 
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 You know that thread we had once where someone was complaining about how a simple question here always digresses into a mutli-page discussion and then an argument? 
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 @BRRABill said in Time syncronisation in domain: You know that thread we had once where someone was complaining about how a simple question here always digresses into a mutli-page discussion and then an argument? At least this one was completely focused on the OP's needs (or explaining what he had said.) 
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 @scottalanmiller said in Time syncronisation in domain: @BRRABill said in Time syncronisation in domain: You know that thread we had once where someone was complaining about how a simple question here always digresses into a mutli-page discussion and then an argument? At least this one was completely focused on the OP's needs (or explaining what he had said.) Trains are pretty awesome! 
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 @scottalanmiller said in Time syncronisation in domain: @BRRABill said in Time syncronisation in domain: You know that thread we had once where someone was complaining about how a simple question here always digresses into a mutli-page discussion and then an argument? At least this one was completely focused on the OP's needs (or explaining what he had said.) Uh.... 



