2006/4/4, Rich Adamson <<a href="mailto:radamson@routers.com">radamson@routers.com</a>>:<div><span class="gmail_quote"></span><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;">
Olivier Krief wrote:<br>> 2006/3/31, Rich Adamson <<a href="mailto:radamson@routers.com">radamson@routers.com</a><br>> <mailto:<a href="mailto:radamson@routers.com">radamson@routers.com</a>>>:<br>><br>
><br>> Yes, particularly for voice. For faxes, it may or may not be 90% and<br>> will be directly related to how far off the clocks are (eg, how far out<br>> of sync they are).<br>><br>> Which command should I use to measure clocks syncs ?
<br>> I'm thinking of something that for every fax, prints local and end clocks.<br><br>I don't know of any way to observe local clock sync; don't think it<br>exists since clock sync is done in hardware, not software.</blockquote>
<div><br>If there's no way to measure clock syncs, is there a reliable way to check your clock is correctly set as it seems that correctly receiving 90% of faxes doesn't prove it's the case ?<br><br>From what was previously written, clock sync is given by PSTN network : all an Asterisk server has to do is keep in sync with this clock.
<br><br>How would you check that ?<br> </div><br></div><br>