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- Description:
-

About Time-O-Matic:
Automatically synchronizes your system time using the port 37 time
service to a server on the Internet (or even a local network).
This
simple terminal application connects to a server or IP address you
specify, and updates your system clock to match the time provided by
the server. The service used is the TCP time service on port 37, which
returns the number of seconds since January 1st 1900 GMT. This should
make the program and choice of server timezone independent.
If you can't find any port 37 time servers by Googling around, try either of these:
time-a.timefreq.bldrdoc.gov
time-b.timefreq.bldrdoc.gov
There is no documentation provided other than this page, but it is
self-documenting when executed from the terminal -- it will display
clear instructions. An example command looks like this:
time_sync servername 2
This connects to "servername" (can be a name or an IP) and updates your
system time every two hours. If you leave out the hour count, it will
just set the time once and exit -- ideal for putting in a boot script.
Note: there is no way of specifying the port. You shouldn't need to; time service should be running on port 37.
Users who have discovered the fact that the BeOS clock often drifts a
lot on machines which were never designed to run BeOS will find this
app very useful.
Of course, there's probably an app which already does this. But knowing
how badly documented anything remotely Unix-like tends to be, it was
quicker to write a new one than look for a pre-written one =P
Details about this version:
Version 2.0 provides a bugfix (which caused the program to exit if
there was a server error, even if set into "endless loop" mode) and
reduces the sheer bloat of this application by a whole 900 bytes or
more!
- License:
-
Freeware
- Submitted On:
-
14 Feb 2008
- Submitted By:
-
Karl vom Dorff (karl)
- File Date:
-
17 Oct 2003
- File Author:
-
Cyan
- File Version:
-
2.0
- File Size:
-
4.04 Kb
- File Type:
-
zip
- Downloads:
-
2
- Rating:
-
 Total Votes:0
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