[time-nuts] Timing performance of servers

Bob Camp lists at rtty.us
Sat Oct 27 18:45:20 UTC 2012


Hi

If you are running a non-RTOS, one test parameter should be a significant variation in the workload on the server. 

Bob

On Oct 27, 2012, at 2:34 PM, Magnus Danielson <magnus at rubidium.dyndns.org> wrote:

> Dear Edgardo,
> 
> On 10/27/2012 07:41 PM, Edgardo Molina wrote:
>> Dear Magnus,
>> 
>> I do not have a reference for the performance of Windows as NTP server.
>> This has been a busy week and long working nights. It is a logical
>> workload after being absent for nearly two weeks : )
>> 
>> I will browse the web and NIST to find some solid references to this
>> issue. I am still enthusiastic about doing the side by side comparison
>> for measuring various parameters between a Windows and a Linux box
>> running NTP. It will require time to set the test but the contribution
>> could be interesting, specially if no work has been done previously.
>> I will use my spare time this weekend to search for information on the
>> subject.
> 
> A wealth of information has already been show in this thread. I'm sure there is more out there.
> 
> I wonder to what degrees the different methods to illustrate errors have been used. Frequency stability for traditional white, flicker and random noises we illustrate with (modified) Allan Deviation, but it is maybe not the best method for illustrate temperature shift variants as well as the noise of packet networks. Similar for phase stability, where TDEV is being used. Typical way to illustrate time effect of systematic noises in telecom networks is the MTIE measure, which aids in showing the buffersizes and clock recovery PLL bandwidth needs, which also the traditional sinusoidal tolerance curves does. There are also new methods like MAFE for the packet world.
> 
> What will happen on lost of reference and the hold over properties can also be of interest. Then systematics will surely dominate.
> 
> Cheers,
> Magnus
> 
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