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Full Discussion: losing time
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers losing time Post 45724 by norsk hedensk on Tuesday 30th of December 2003 10:21:19 AM
Old 12-30-2003
you may want to look into sync'ing your clock with a NTP server.

first you will need to find an NTP client to run on your system. second you will need to find an actual NTP server. id contact your ISP and ask them, otherwise you will have to search the net for ntp servers serving your timezone.
 

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Net::Server::Proto::SSL(3)				User Contributed Perl Documentation				Net::Server::Proto::SSL(3)

NAME
Net::Server::Proto::SSL - Net::Server SSL protocol. SYNOPSIS
See Net::Server::Proto. DESCRIPTION
Experimental. If anybody has any successes or ideas for improvment under SSL, please email <paul@seamons.com>. Protocol module for Net::Server. This module implements a secure socket layer over tcp (also known as SSL). See Net::Server::Proto. There is a limit inherent from using IO::Socket::SSL, namely that only one SSL connection can be maintained by Net::Server. However, Net::Server should also be able to maintain any number of TCP, UDP, or UNIX connections in addition to the one SSL connection. Additionally, getline support is very limited and writing directly to STDOUT will not work. This is entirely dependent upon the implementation of IO::Socket::SSL. getline may work but the client is not copied to STDOUT under SSL. It is suggested that clients sysread and syswrite to the client handle (located in $self->{server}->{client} or passed to the process_request subroutine as the first argument). PARAMETERS
In addition to the normal Net::Server parameters, any of the SSL parameters from IO::Socket::SSL may also be specified. See IO::Socket::SSL for information on setting this up. BUGS
Christopher A Bongaarts pointed out that if the SSL negotiation is slow then the server won't be accepting for that period of time (because the locking of accept is around both the socket accept and the SSL negotiation). This means that as it stands now the SSL implementation is susceptible to DOS attacks. To fix this will require deviding up the accept call a little bit more finely which may not yet be possible with IO::Socket::SSL. Any ideas or patches on this bug are welcome. LICENCE
Distributed under the same terms as Net::Server THANKS
Thanks to Vadim for pointing out the IO::Socket::SSL accept was returning objects blessed into the wrong class. perl v5.12.1 2007-02-03 Net::Server::Proto::SSL(3)
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