I have my Windows computer in network 192.168.1.0/24 plugged into one interface of my router.
I have another port on the router as network 192.168.168.0/24 where my nas is plugged in.
Now Windows doesn't discover my NAS automatically, of course. Anyone know what would be the most elegant way to... (2 Replies)
Hello.
During the holidays I've been developing an application on my desktop computer at home.
I setup a repository on github, so when I got back to work I cloned the repo to my laptop.
It wouldn't work.
The app is comprised of a client and a server, strangely enough the server would segfault... (10 Replies)
Hello,
I have a machine with Solaris 8, and it has multiple interfaces that are connected to the same network which means they all have metric 0 (1 hop) to the default gateway.
assume:
* e1000g0: 10.1.1.70
* e1000g2: 10.1.1.72
* e1000g4: 10.1.1.74
* e1000g5: 10.1.1.76
* gateway:... (11 Replies)
I have my iMac and MB pro connected by firewire. I can see the connection in the finderwindow, but can't locate the machines in terminal. Can someone help me? I do most of my work in Terminal and would like to move/copy files from one machine to another like that -- I could have sworn I was able... (4 Replies)
hello,
I'm planning to do inventory of all our servers but this time it's more on physical. Meaning I would like to check all hardware connected to it (external only like storage, power support) including the count Would like to get perhaps its serial nr..(linux and solaris different servers... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I have a software in one of the pcs connected in the network and I need to mount that file system in my PC. Both the pcs have Linux installed. Please let me know how can we achieve this.
Any pointers would be of great help.
Thanks & Regards,
Venkatesh. (3 Replies)
hi...
can anyone pls suggest a few methods to check whether a computer is connected to any network, using the terminal, not GUI.
thanks
eskay (1 Reply)
Hello all
i need to simulate method invocations between 2 machine ( using corba )
now i like to test the method invoke timeout from machine1 to machine2 for that i need to
simulate network being busy , can it be done some how ? (2 Replies)
TIMED(8) BSD System Manager's Manual TIMED(8)NAME
timed -- time server daemon
SYNOPSIS
timed [-M] [-t] [-d] [-i network] [-n network] [-F host1 host2 ...]
DESCRIPTION
This is a time server daemon and is normally invoked at boot time from the rc(8) file. It synchronizes the host's time with the time of
other machines in a local area network running timed 8. These time servers will slow down the clocks of some machines and speed up the
clocks of others to bring them to the average network time. The average network time is computed from measurements of clock differences
using the ICMP timestamp request message.
The service provided by timed is based on a master-slave scheme. When timed 8 is started on a machine, it asks the master for the network
time and sets the host's clock to that time. After that, it accepts synchronization messages periodically sent by the master and calls
adjtime(2) to perform the needed corrections on the host's clock.
It also communicates with date(1) in order to set the date globally, and with timedc(8), a timed control program. If the machine running the
master crashes, then the slaves will elect a new master from among slaves running with the -M flag. A timed running without the -M or -F
flags will remain a slave. The -t flag enables timed to trace the messages it receives in the file /var/log/timed.log. Tracing can be
turned on or off by the program timedc(8). The -d flag is for debugging the daemon. It causes the program to not put itself into the back-
ground. Normally timed checks for a master time server on each network to which it is connected, except as modified by the options described
below. It will request synchronization service from the first master server located. If permitted by the -M flag, it will provide synchro-
nization service on any attached networks on which no current master server was detected. Such a server propagates the time computed by the
top-level master. The -n flag, followed by the name of a network which the host is connected to (see networks(5)), overrides the default
choice of the network addresses made by the program. Each time the -n flag appears, that network name is added to a list of valid networks.
All other networks are ignored. The -i flag, followed by the name of a network to which the host is connected (see networks(5)), overrides
the default choice of the network addresses made by the program. Each time the -i flag appears, that network name is added to a list of net-
works to ignore. All other networks are used by the time daemon. The -n and -i flags are meaningless if used together.
Timed checks for a master time server on each network to which it is connected, except as modified by the -n and -i options described above.
If it finds masters on more than one network, it chooses one network on which to be a "slave," and then periodically checks the other net-
works to see if the masters there have disappeared.
One way to synchronize a group of machines is to use an NTP daemon to synchronize the clock of one machine to a distant standard or a radio
receiver and -F hostname to tell its timed daemon to trust only itself.
Messages printed by the kernel on the system console occur with interrupts disabled. This means that the clock stops while they are print-
ing. A machine with many disk or network hardware problems and consequent messages cannot keep good time by itself. Each message typically
causes the clock to lose a dozen milliseconds. A time daemon can correct the result.
Messages in the system log about machines that failed to respond usually indicate machines that crashed or were turned off. Complaints about
machines that failed to respond to initial time settings are often associated with "multi-homed" machines that looked for time masters on
more than one network and eventually chose to become a slave on the other network.
WARNING
If two or more time daemons, whether timed, NTP, try to adjust the same clock, temporal chaos will result. If both timed and another time
daemon are run on the same machine, ensure that the -F flag is used, so that timed never attempts to adjust the local clock.
The protocol is based on UDP/IP broadcasts. All machines within the range of a broadcast that are using the TSP protocol must cooperate.
There cannot be more than a single administrative domain using the -F flag among all machines reached by a broadcast packet. Failure to fol-
low this rule is usually indicated by complaints concerning "untrusted" machines in the system log.
FILES
/var/log/timed.log tracing file for timed
/var/log/timed.masterlog log file for master timed
SEE ALSO date(1), adjtime(2), gettimeofday(2), icmp(4), timedc(8),
R. Gusella and S. Zatti, TSP: The Time Synchronization Protocol for UNIX 4.3BSD.
HISTORY
The timed daemon appeared in 4.3BSD.
4.3 Berkeley Distribution June 6, 1993 4.3 Berkeley Distribution