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-
- Network Working Group D.L. Mills
- Request for Comments: 957 M/A-COM Linkabit
- September 1985
-
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This RFC discusses some experiments in clock synchronization in the
- ARPA-Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
- improvements. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Design of the Synchronization Algorithm
- 2.1. The Logical Clock
- 2.2. Linear Phase Adjustments
- 2.3. Nonlinear Phase Adjustments
- 3. Synchronizing Network Clocks
- 3.1. Reference Clocks and Reference Hosts
- 3.2. Distribution of Timing Information
- 4. Experimental Validation of the Design
- 4.1. Experiment Design
- 4.2. Experiment Execution
- 4.3. Discussion of Results
- 4.3.1. On Power-Grid Clocks
- 4.3.2. On Clocks Synchronized via Network Links
- 4.3.3. On the Accuracy of Radio Clocks
- 4.3.3.1. The Spectracom 8170 WWVB Radio Clock
- 4.3.3.2. The True Time 468-DC GOES Radio Clock
- 4.3.3.3. The Heath GC-1000 WWV Radio Clock
- 4.3.4. On Handling Disruptions
- 4.4. Additional Experiments
- 5. Summary and Conclusions
- 6. References
-
- List of Figures
-
- Figure 1. Clock Registers
- Figure 2. Network Configuration
-
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- Mills [Page 1]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- List of Tables
-
- Table 1. Experiment Hosts
- Table 2. Link Measurements
- Table 3. First Derivative of Delay
- Table 4. GOES Radio Clock Offsets
- Table 5. WWV Radio Clock Offsets
- Table 6. ISI-MCON-GW Clock Statistics
- Table 7. LL-GW Clock Statistics
- Table 8. LL-GW Clock Statistics
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- One of the services frequently neglected in computer network design
- is a high-quality, time-of-day clock capable of generating accurate
- timestamps with small residual errors compared to intrinsic one-way
- network delays. Such a service would be useful for tracing the
- progress of complex transactions, synchronizing cached data bases,
- monitoring network performance and isolating problems.
-
- Several mechanisms have been specified in the Internet protocol suite
- to record and transmit the time at which an event takes place,
- including the ICMP Timestamp message [6], Time Protocol [7], Daytime
- protocol [8] and IP Timestamp option [9]. A new Network Time
- Protocol [12] has been proposed as well. Additional information on
- network time synchronization can be found in the References at the
- end of this document. Synchronization protocols are described in [3]
- and [12] and synchronization algorithms in [2], [5], [10] and [11].
- Experimental results on measured roundtrip delays in the Internet are
- discussed in [4]. A comprehensive mathematical treatment of clock
- synchronization can be found in [1].
-
- Several mechanisms have been specified in the Internet protocol suite
- to record and transmit the time at which an event takes place,
- including the ICMP Timestamp message [6], Time protocol [7], Daytime
- protocol [8] and IP Timestamp option [9]. Issues on time
- synchronization are discussed in [4] and synchronization algorithms
- in [2] and [5]. Experimental results on measured roundtrip delays in
- the Internet are discussed in [2]. A comprehensive mathematical
- treatment of the subject can be found in [1], while an interesting
- discussion on mutual-synchonization techniques can be found in [10].
-
- There are several ways accurate timestamps can be generated. One is
- to provide at every service point an accurate, machine-readable clock
- synchronized to a central reference, such as the National Bureau of
- Standards (NBS). Such clocks are readily available in several models
- ranging in accuracies of a few hundred milliseconds to less than a
-
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- Mills [Page 2]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- millisecond and are typically synchronized to special ground-based or
- satellite-based radio broadcasts. While the expense of the clocks
- themselves, currently in the range $300 to $3000, can often be
- justified, all require carefully sited antennas well away from
- computer-generated electromagnetic noise, as well as shielded
- connections to the clocks. In addition, these clocks can require a
- lengthy synchonization period upon power-up, so that a battery-backup
- power supply is required for reliable service in the event of power
- interruptions.
-
- If the propagation delays in the network are stable or can be
- predicted accurately, timestamps can be generated by a central
- server, equipped with a clock such as described above, in response to
- requests from remote service points. However, there are many
- instances where the trans-network delay to obtain a timestamp would
- be intolerable, such as when timestamping a message before
- transmission. In addition, propagation delays are usually not
- predictable with precisions in the order required, due to
- probabilistic queuing and channel-contention delays.
-
- In principle, a clock of sufficient accuracy can be provided at each
- service point using a stable, crystal-controlled clock which is
- corrected from time to time by messages from a central server.
- Suitable inexpensive, crystal-controlled clock interfaces are
- available for virtually any computer. The interesting problem
- remaining is the design of the synchronization algorithm and protocol
- used to transmit the corrections. In this document one such design
- will be described and its performance assessed. This design has been
- incorprated as an integral part of the network routing and control
- protocols of the Distributed Computer Network (DCnet) architecture
- [5], clones of which have been established at several sites in the US
- and Europe. These protocols have been in use since 1979 and been
- continuously tested and refined since then.
-
- 2. Design of the Synchronization Algorithm
-
- The synchronization algorithm is distributed in nature, with protocol
- peers maintained in every host on the network. Peers communicate
- with each other on a pairwise basis using special control messages,
- called Hello messages, exchanged periodically over the ordinary data
- links between them. The Hello messages contain information necessary
- for each host to calculate the delay and offset between the local
- clock of the host and the clock of every other host on the network
- and are also used to drive the routing algorithm.
-
- The synchronization algorithm includes several features to improve
- the accuracy and stability of the local clock in the case of host or
-
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- Mills [Page 3]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- link failures. In following sections the design of the algorithm is
- summarized. Full design details are given in [5] along with a formal
- description of the Hello protocol.
-
- 2.1. The Logical Clock
-
- In the DCnet model each service point, or host, is equipped with a
- hardware clock, usually in the form of an off-the-shelf interface.
- Using this and software registers, a logical clock is constructed
- including a 48-bit Clock Register, which increments at a 1000 Hz
- rate, a 32-bit Clock-Adjust Register, which is used to slew the Clock
- Register in response to raw corrections received over the net, and a
- Counter Register, which is used in some interface designs as an
- auxilliary counter. The configuration and decimal point of these
- registers are shown in Figure 1.
-
- Clock Register
-
- 0 16 32
- +---------------+---------------+---------------+
- | | | |
- +---------------+---------------+---------------+
- A
- decimal point
-
- Clock-Adjust Register
-
- 0 16
- +---------------+---------------+
- | | |
- +---------------+---------------+
- A
- decimal point
-
- Counter Register
-
- 0 16
- +---------------+
- | |
- +---------------+
- A
- decimal point
-
- Figure 1. Clock Registers
-
- The Clock Register and Clock-Adjust Register are implemented in
- memory. In typical clock interface designs such as the DEC KMV11-A
-
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- Mills [Page 4]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- the Counter Register is implemented in the interface as a buffered
- counter driven by a crystal oscillator. A counter overflow is
- signalled by an interrupt, which results in an increment of the Clock
- Register at bit 15 and the propagation of carries as required. The
- time of day is determined by reading the Counter Register, which does
- not disturb its counting process, and adding its value to that of the
- Clock Register with decimal points aligned.
-
- In other interface designs such as the simple LSI-11 event-line
- mechanism, each tick of the clock is signalled by an interrupt at
- intervals of 10, 16-2/3 or 20 ms, depending on interface and clock
- source. When this occurs the appropriate number of milliseconds,
- expressed to 32 bits in precision, is added to the Clock Register
- with decimal points aligned.
-
- It should be noted at this point that great care in operating system
- design is necessary in order to preserve the full accuracy of
- timestamps with respect to the application program, which must be
- protected from pre-emption, excessive device latencies and so forth.
- In addition, the execution times of all sequences operating with the
- interrupt system disabled must be strictly limited. Since the PDP11
- operating system most often used in the DCnet (the "Fuzzball"
- operating system) has been constructed with these considerations
- foremost in mind, it has been especially useful for detailed network
- performance testing and evaluation. Other systems, in particular the
- various Unix systems, have not been found sufficiently accurate for
- this purpose.
-
- Left uncorrected, the host logical clock runs at the rate of its
- intrinsic oscillator, whether derived from a crystal or the power
- frequency. The correction mechanism uses the Clock-Adjust Register,
- which is updated from time to time as raw corrections are received.
- The corrections are computed using roundtrip delays and offsets
- derived from the routing algorithm, described later in this document,
- which are relatively noisy compared to the precision of the logical
- clock. A carefully designed smoothing mechansim insures stability,
- as well as isolation from large transients that occur due to link
- retransmissions, host reboots and similar disruptions.
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- Mills [Page 5]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
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- 2.2. Linear Phase Adjustments
-
- The correction is introduced as a signed 32-bit integer in
- milliseconds. If the magnitude of the correction is less than 128
- ms, the low-order 16 bits replaces bits 0-15 in the Clock-Adjust
- register. At suitable intervals, depending on the jitter of the
- intrinsic oscillator, the value of this register is divided by a
- fixed value, forming a quotient which is first added to the Clock
- Register, then subtracted from the Clock-Adjust Register. This
- technique has several advantages:
-
- 1. The clock never runs backwards; that is, successive
- timestamps always increase monotonically.
-
- 2. In the event of loss of correction information, the clock
- slews to the last correction received.
-
- 3. The rate of slew is proportional to the magnitude of the last
- correction. This allows rapid settling in case of large
- corrections, but provides high stability in case of small
- corrections.
-
- 4. The sequence of computations preserves the highest precision
- and minimizes the propagation of round-off errors.
-
- Experience has indicated the choice of 256 as appropriate for the
- dividend above, which yields a maximum slew-rate magnitude less than
- 0.5 ms per adjustment interval and a granularity of about 2.0
- microseconds, which is of the same order as the intrinsic tolerance
- of the crystal oscillators used in typical clock interfaces. In the
- case of crystal-derived clocks, an adjustment interval of four
- seconds has worked well, which yields a maximum slew-rate magnitude
- of 125 microseconds per second. In the case of power-frequency
- clocks or especially noisy links, the greatly increased jitter
- requires shorter adjustment intervals in the range of 0.5 second,
- which yields a maximum slew-rate magnitude of 1.0 ms per second.
-
- In most cases, independent corrections are generated over each link
- at intervals of 30 seconds or less. Using the above choices a single
- sample error of 128 ms causes an error at the next sample interval no
- greater than about 7.5 ms with the longer adjustment interval and 30
- ms with the shorter. The number of adjustment intervals to reduce
- the residual error by half is about 177, or about 12 minutes with the
- longer interval and about 1.5 minutes with the shorter. This
- completely characterizes the linear dynamics of the mechanism.
-
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- Mills [Page 6]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- 2.3. Nonlinear Phase Adjustments
-
- When the magnitude of the correction exceeds 128 ms, the possiblity
- exists that the clock is so far out of synchronization with the
- reference host that the best action is an immediate and wholesale
- replacement of Clock Register contents, rather than a graduated
- slewing as described above. In practice the necessity to do this is
- rare and occurs when the local host or reference host is rebooted,
- for example. This is fortunate, since step changes in the clock can
- result in the clock apparently running backward, as well as incorrect
- delay and offset measurements of the synchronization mechanism
- itself.
-
- However, it sometimes happens that, due to link retransmissions or
- occasional host glitches, a single correction sample will be computed
- with magnitude exceeding 128 ms. In practice this happens often
- enough that a special procedure has been incorporated into the
- design. If a sample exceeding the limit is received, its value is
- saved temporarily and does not affect the Clock-Adjust Register. In
- addition, a timer is initialized, if not already running, to count
- down to zero in a specified time, currently 30 seconds.
-
- If the timer is already running when a new correction sample with
- magnitude exceeeding 128 ms arrives, its value and the saved sample
- value are averaged with equal weights to form a new saved sample
- value. If a new correction sample arrives with magnitude less than
- 128 ms, the timer is stopped and the saved sample value discarded.
- If the timer counts down to zero, the saved sample value replaces the
- contents of the Clock Register and the Clock-Adjust Register is set
- to zero. This procedure has the effect that occasional spikes in
- correction values are discarded, but legitimate step changes are
- prefiltered and then used to reset the clock after no more than a
- 30-second delay.
-
- 3. Synchronizing Network Clocks
-
- The algorithms described in the previous section are designed to
- achieve a high degree of accuracy and stability of the logical clocks
- in each participating host. In this section algorithms will be
- described which synchronize these logical clocks to each other and to
- standard time derived from NBS broadcasts. These algorithms are
- designed to minimize the cumulative errors using linear synchronizing
- techniques. See [10] for a discussion of algorithms using nonlinear
- techniques.
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- Mills [Page 7]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- 3.1. Reference Clocks and Reference Hosts
-
- The accuracy of the entire network of logical clocks depends on the
- accuracy of the device used as the reference clock. In the DCnet
- clones the reference clock takes the form of a precision crystal
- oscillator which is synchronized via radio or satellite with the NBS
- standard clocks in Boulder, CO. The date and time derived from the
- oscillator can be sent continuously or read upon command via a serial
- asynchronous line. Stand-alone units containing the oscillator,
- synchronizing receiver and controlling microprocessor are available
- from a number of manufacturers.
-
- The device driver responsible for the reference clock uses its
- serial-line protocol to derive both an "on-time" timestamp relative
- to the logical clock of the reference host and an absolute time
- encoded in messages sent by the clock. About once every 30 seconds
- the difference between these two quantities is calculated and used to
- correct the logical clock according to the mechanisms described
- previously. The corrected logical clock is then used to correct all
- other logical clocks in the network. Note the different
- nomenclature: The term "reference clock" applies to the physical
- clock itself, while the term "reference host" applies to the logical
- clock of the host to which it is connected. Each has an individual
- address, delay and offset in synchronizing messages.
-
- There are three different commercial units used as reference clocks
- in DCnet clones. One of these uses the LF radio broadcasts on 60 KHz
- from NBS radio WWVB, another the HF radio broadcasts on 5, 10 and 15
- MHz from NBS radio WWV or WWVH and the third the UHF broadcasts from
- a GOES satellite. The WWVB and GOES clocks claim accuracies in the
- one-millisecond range. The WWV clock claims accuracies in the 100-ms
- range, although actual accuracies have been measured somewhat better
- than that.
-
- All three clocks include some kind of quality indication in their
- messages, although of widely varying detail. At present this
- indication is used only to establish whether the clock is
- synchronized to the NBS clocks and convey this information to the
- network routing algorithm as described later. All clocks include
- some provision to set the local-time offset and propagation delay,
- although for DCnet use all clocks are set at zero offset relative to
- Universal Time (UT). Due to various uncertaincies in propagation
- delay, serial-line speed and interrupt latencies, the absolute
- accuracy of timestamps derived from a reference host equipped with a
- WWVB or GOES reference clock is probably no better than a couple of
- milliseconds.
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- 3.2. Distribution of Timing Information
-
- The timekeeping accuracy at the various hosts in the network depends
- critically on the precision whith which corrections can be
- distributed throughout the network. In the DCnet design a
- distributed routing algorithm is used to determine minimum-delay
- routes between any two hosts in the net. The algorithms used, which
- are described in detail in [5] and only in outline form here, provide
- reachability and delay information, as well as clock offsets, between
- neighboring hosts by means of periodic exchanges of routing packets
- called Hello messages. This information is then incorporated into a
- set of routing tables maintained by each host and spread throughout
- the network by means of the Hello messages.
-
- The detailed mechanisms to accomplish these functions have been
- carefully designed to minimize timing uncertaincies. For instance,
- all timestamping is done in the drivers themselves, which are given
- the highest priority for resource access. The mechanism to measure
- roundtrip delays on the individual links is insensitive to the delays
- inherent in the processing of the Hello message itself, as well as
- the intervals between transmissions. Finally, care is taken to
- isolate and discard transient timing errors that occur when a host is
- rebooted or a link is restarted.
-
- The routing algorithm uses a table called the Host Table, which
- contains for each host in the network the computed roundtrip delay
- and clock offset, in milliseconds. In order to separately identify
- each reference clock, if there is more than one in the network, a
- separate entry is used for each clock, as well as each host. The
- delay and offset fields of the host itself are set to zero, as is the
- delay field of each attached reference clock. The offset field of
- each attached reference clock is recomputed periodically as described
- above.
-
- Hello messages containing a copy of the Host Table are sent
- periodically to each neighbor host via the individual links
- connecting them. In the case of broadcast networks the Hello message
- is broadcast to all hosts sharing the same cable. The Hello message
- also contains a timestamp inserted at the time of transmission, as
- well as information used to accurately compute the roundtrip delay on
- point-to-point links.
-
- A host receiving a Hello message processes the message for each host
- in turn, including those corresponding to the reference clocks. It
- adds the delay field in the message to the previously determined
- roundtrip link delay and compares this with the entry already in its
- Host Table. If the sum is greater than the delay field in the Host
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- Mills [Page 9]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
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- Table, nothing further is done. If the sum is less, an update
- procedure is executed. The update procedure, described in detail in
- [5], causes the new delay to replace the old and the routing to be
- amended accordingly.
-
- The update procedure also causes a new correction sample to be
- computed as the difference between the timestamp in the Hello message
- and the local clock, which is used to correct the local clock as
- described above. In addition, the sum of this correction sample plus
- the offset field in the Hello message replaces the offset field in
- the Hello Table. The effect of these procedures is that the local
- clock is corrected relative to the neighbor clock only if the
- neighbor is on the path of least delay relative to the selected
- reference clock. If there is no route to the reference clock, as
- determined by the routing algorithm, no corrections are computable
- and the local clock free-runs relative to the last received
- correction.
-
- As the result of the operation of the routing algorithm, all local
- clocks in the network will eventually stabilize at a constant offset
- relative to the reference clock, depending upon the drift rates of
- the individual oscillators. For most applications the offset is
- small and can be neglected. For the most precise measurements the
- computed offset in the Host Table entry associated with any host,
- including the reference clock, can be used to adjust the apparent
- time relative to the local clock of that host. However, since the
- computed offsets are relatively noisy, it is necessary to smooth them
- using some algorithm depending upon application. For this reason,
- the computed offsets are provided separately from the local time.
-
- 4. Experimental Validation of the Design
-
- The original DCnet was established as a "port expander" net connected
- to an ARPAnet IMP in 1978. It was and is intended as an experimental
- testbed for the development of protocols and measurement of network
- performance. Since then the DCnet network-layer protocols have
- evolved to include multi-level routing, logical addressing,
- multicasting and time synchronization. Several DCnet clones have
- been established in the US and Europe and connected to the DARPA
- Internet system. The experiments described below were performed
- using the DCnet clone at Linkabit East, near Washington, DC, and
- another at Ford Motor Division, near Detroit, MI. Other clones at
- Ford Aerospace and the Universities of Maryland and Michigan were
- used for calibration and test, while clones at various sites in
- Norway and Germany were used for occasional tests. Additional
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- Mills [Page 10]
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- ARPANET gateways of the WIDEBAND/EISN satellite system were also
- included in the experiments in order to determine the feasability of
- synchronizing clocks across the ARPANET.
-
- There were four principal issues of interest in the experiments:
-
- 1. What are the factors affecting accuracy of a network of clocks
- using the power grid as the basic timing source, together with
- corrections broadcast from a central point?
-
- 2. What are the factors affecting accuracy of a network of clocks
- synchronized via links used also to carry ordinary data.
-
- 3. How does the accuracy of the various radio clocks - WWVB, GOES
- and WWV compare?
-
- 4. What is the best way to handle disruptions, such as a leap
- second?
-
- These issues will be discussed in turn after presentation of the
- experiment design and execution.
-
- 4.1. Experiment Design
-
- Figure 2 shows the configuration used in a series of tests conducted
- during late June and early July of 1985. The tests involved six
- hosts, three reference clocks and several types of communication
- links. The tests were designed to coincide with the insertion of a
- leap second in the standard time broadcast by NBS, providing an
- interesting test of system stability in the face of such disruptions.
- The test was also designed to test the feasability of using the power
- grid as a reference clock, with corrections broadcast as described
- above, but not used to adjust the local clock.
-
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- ARPAnet |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - - - - - - - - - -
- 56K |
- +---------+ +---------+ +----+----+ 1.2 +---------+
- | WWV | 1.2 | | 4.8 | +-----+ WWVB |
- | radio +-----+ DCN6 +-----+ DCN1 |async| radio |
- | clock |async| |DDCMP| +--+ | clock |
- +---------+ +---------+ +----+----+ | +---------+
- Ethernet | |
- DCnet ===o===============o=======o=== | 1822/DH
- | | |
- +----+----+ +----+----+ +----+----+
- power | | | | | | power
- freq <--+ DCN3 | | DCN5 | | DCN7 +--> freq
- 60 Hz | | | | | | 60 Hz
- +---------+ +----+----+ +---------+
- 9.6 |
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
- | DDCMP
- +----+----+ +---------+
- | | 1.2 | GOES |
- FORDnet | FORD1 +-----+satellite|
- | |async| clock |
- +---------+ +---------+
-
- Figure 2. Network Configuration
-
- Only those hosts and links directly participating in the tests are
- shown in Figure 2. All hosts shown operate using the DCnet protocols
- and timekeeping algorithms summarized in this document and detailed
- in [5]. The DCnet hosts operate as one self-contained net of the
- Internet systems, while the FORDnet hosts operate as another with
- distinct net numbers. The gateway functions connecting the two nets
- are distributed in the DCN5 and FORD1 hosts and the link connecting
- them. This means that, although the clock offsets of individual
- DCnet hosts are visible to other DCnet hosts and the clock offsets of
- individual FORDnet hosts are visible to other FORDnet hosts, only the
- clock offset of the gateway host on one net is visible to hosts on
- the other net.
-
- In Figure 2 the links are labelled with both the intrinsic speed, in
- kilobits per second, as well as the link protocol type. The DDCMP
- links use microprocessor-based DMA interfaces that retransmit in case
- of message failure. The 1822/DH link connecting DCN1 and DCN7
- operates at DMA speeds over a short cable. The Ethernet link uses
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- RFC 957 September 1985
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- DMA interfaces that retransmit only in case of collisions. The
- asynchronous links are used only to connect the reference clocks to
- the hosts over a short cable.
-
- While all hosts and links were carrying normal traffic throughout the
- test period, the incidence of retransmissions was very low, perhaps
- no more than a few times per day on any link. However, the DDCMP
- link protocol includes the use of short control messages exhanged
- between the microprocessors about once per second in the absence of
- link traffic. These messages, together with retransmissions when they
- occur, cause small uncertaincies in Hello message delays that
- contribute to the total measurement error. An additional uncertaincy
- (less than 0.5 per-cent on average) in Hello message length can be
- introduced when the link protocol makes use of character-stuffing or
- bit-stuffing techniques to achieve code transparency, such as with
- the LAPB link-level protocol of X.25. However, the particular links
- used in the tests use a count field in the header, so that no
- stuffing is required.
-
- Although the timekeeping algorithms have been carefully designed to
- be insensitive to traffic levels, it sometimes happens that an
- intense burst of traffic results in a shortage of memory buffers in
- the various hosts. In the case of the Ethernet interfaces, which
- have internal buffers, this can result in additional delays while the
- message is held in the interface pending delivery to the host.
- Conditions where these delays become significant occur perhaps once
- or twice a day in the present system and were observed occasionally
- during the tests. As described above, the correction-sample
- processing incorporates a filtering procedure that discards the vast
- majority of glitches due to this and other causes.
-
- 4.2. Experiment Execution
-
- The series of experiments conducted in late June and early July of
- 1985 involved collecting data on the delays and offsets of the six
- hosts and three reference clocks shown in Figure 2. In order to
- accomplish this, a special program was installed in a Unix 4.2bsd
- system connected to the Ethernet link but not shown in Figure 2. The
- program collected each 128-octet Hello message broadcast from DCN1
- every 16 seconds and appended it bit-for-bit to the data base. The
- total volume of raw data collected amounted to almost 0.7 megabyte
- per day.
-
- The raw Hello-message data were processed to extract only the
- timestamp and measured clock offsets for the hosts shown in Table 1
- and then reformatted as an ASCII file, one line per Hello message.
-
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- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- Host Clock Drift Experiment Use
- Name ID (ppm)
- ------------------------------------------------------
- DCN1 WWVB -2.5 WWVB reference host
- DCN3 - 60-Hz power-grid (unlocked)
- DCN5 DCN1 6.8 Ethernet host
- DCN6 DCN1 -1.7 DDCMP host, WWV reference host
- DCN7 DCN1 60-Hz power-grid (locked)
- FORD1 GOES 17.9 GOES reference host
- WWV - - WWV reference clock
- WWVB - - WWVB reference clock
-
- Table 1. Experiment Hosts
-
- In Table 1 the Clock ID column shows the reference host selected as
- the master clock for each host shown. In this particular
- configuration host DCN1 was locked to host WWVB, while hosts DCN5,
- DCN6 and DCN7 were locked to DCN1. Although the offset of GOES can
- not be directly determined from the Hello messages exchanged between
- DCnet and FORDnet hosts, the offset of FORD1 relative to GOES was
- determined by observation to be in the order of a millisecond, so for
- all practical purposes the offset of FORD1 represents the offset of
- GOES. In addition, since the WWVB clock was considered by experience
- the most accurate and reliable and the offset of DCN1 relative to
- WWVB was negligible, DCN1 was considered the reference clock with
- offset zero relative to the NBS clocks.
-
- During the setup phase of the experiments the intrinsic drift rates
- of the crystal oscillators in the four hosts DCN1, DCN5, DCN6 and
- FORD1 equipped with them was measured as shown in the "Drift" column
- in Table 1. The two hosts DCN3 and DCN7 are equipped with
- line-frequency clocks. For experimental purposes DCN3 was unlocked
- and allowed to free-run at the line-frequency rate, while DCN7
- remained locked.
-
- An ASCII file consisting of about 0.2 megabyte of reformatted data,
- was collected for each Universal-Time (UT) day of observation
- beginning on 28 June and continuing through 8 July. Each file was
- processed by a program that produces an eight-color display of
- measured offsets as a function of time of observation. Since the
- display technique uses a bit-map display and each observation
- overwrites the bit-map in an inclusive-OR fashion, the sample
- dispersion is immediately apparent. Over eight samples per pixel on
- the time axis are available in a 24-hour collection period. On the
- other hand, the fine granularity of almost four samples per minute
- allows zooming the display to focus on interesting short-term
- fluctuations, such as in the case of the WWV clock.
-
-
- Mills [Page 14]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- 4.3. Discussion of Results
-
- Each of the four previously mentioned issues of interest will be
- discussed in following subsections.
-
- 4.3.1. On Power-Grid Clocks
-
- Telephone interviews with operators and supervisors of the Potomac
- Electric Power Company (PEPCO), the electric utility serving the
- Washington, DC, area, indicate that there are three major operating
- regions or grids, one east of the Rockies, a second west of the
- Rockies and a third in parts of Texas. The member electric utilities
- in each grid operate on a synchronous basis, so that clocks anywhere
- within the grid should keep identical time. However, in the rare
- case when a utility drops off the grid, no attempt is made to
- re-establish correct time upon rejoining the grrd. In the much more
- common case when areas within the grid are isolated due to local
- thunderstorms, for example, clock synchronization is also disrupted.
-
- The experiments provided an opportunity to measure with exquisite
- precision the offset between a clock connected to the eastern grid
- (DCN3) and the NBS clocks. The results, confirmed by the telephone
- interviews, show a gradual gain in time of between four and six
- seconds during the interval from about 1700 local time to 0800 the
- next morning, followed by a more rapid loss in time between 0800 and
- 1700. If the time was slewed uniformly throughout these extremes,
- the rate would be about 100 ppm.
-
- The actual slewing rates depend on the demand, which itself is a
- function of weather, day of the week and season of the year. Similar
- effects occur in the western and Texas grids, with more extreme
- variations in the Texas grid due to the smaller inertia of the
- system, and less extreme variations in the western grid, due to
- smaller extremes in temperature, less total industrial demand and a
- larger fraction of hydro-electric generation.
-
- The uilities consider timekeeping a non-tariffed service provided as
- a convenience to the customer. In the eastern grid a control station
- in Ohio manually establishes the baseline system output, which
- indirectly affects the clock offset and slewing rate. The local time
- is determined at the control station with respect to a WWVB radio
- clock. The maximum slewing rate is specified as .025 Hz (about 400
- ppm), which is consistent with the maximum rates observed. In the
- western grid the baseline system output is adjusted automatically
- using a servomechanism driven by measured offsets from the NBS
- clocks.
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 15]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- Given the considerations above, it would seem feasable for hosts to
- synchronize logical clocks to a particular power grid, but only if
- corrections were transmitted often enough to maintain the required
- accuracy and these corrections were delivered to the hosts
- essentially at the same time. Assuming a worst-case 400-ppm slewing
- rate and one minute between correction broadcasts, for example, it
- would in principle be possible to achieve accuracies in the 20-ms
- range. There are a number of prediction and smoothing techniques
- that could be used to inhance accuracy and reduce the overhead of the
- broadcasts.
-
- Host DCN3, which uses a line-frequency clock interface, was unlocked
- during the experiment period so that the offset between the PEPCO
- clock, which is locked to the eastern power grid, could be measured
- with respect to the reference host DCN1. Host DCN7, which uses the
- same interface, remained locked to DCN1. In spite of the previously
- noted instability of the power grid, DCN7 remained typically within
- 30 ms of DCN1 and only infrequently exceeded 100 ms in the vicinity
- of large changes in system load that occured near 0800 and 1700 local
- time. Over the seven-day period from 2 July through 8 July the mean
- offset was less than a millisecond with standard deviation about 24
- ms, while the maximum was 79 ms and minimum -116 ms.
-
- Experiments were also carried out using ICMP Timestamp messages with
- hosts known to use line-frequency clock interfaces in California,
- Norway and Germany. The results indicated that the western power
- grid is rather more stable than the eastern grid and that the
- overseas grids are rather less stable. In the Oslo, Munich and
- Stuttgart areas, for example, the diurnal variation was observed to
- exceed ten seconds.
-
- 4.3.2. On Clocks Synchronized via Network Links
-
- As mentioned previously, all network links used to synchronize the
- clocks were carrying normal data traffic throughout the experiment
- period. It would therefore be of interest to investigate how this
- affects the accuracy of the individual clocks.
-
- Table 2 summarizes the mean and standard deviation of the measured
- offsets between the WWVB radio clock and various hosts as shown in
- Figure 2. Measurements were made over the 24-hour period for each of
- several days during the experimental period. Each entry shown in
- Table 2 includes the mean of the statistic over these days, together
- with the maximum variation.
-
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 16]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- Host Mean Deviation Link Type and Speed
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- DCN1 .08/.02 0.53/.02 WWVB radio clock (1200 bps)
- DCN5 -13.61/.04 1.1/0.4 Ethernet (10 Mbps)
- DCN6 0.27/.18 5.8/1.0 DDCMP (4800 bps)
- FORD1 38.5/1.6 2.5/0.5 DDCMP (9600 bps)
-
- Table 2. Link Measurements
-
- The departure of the mean shown in Table 2 from zero is related to
- the drift of the crystal oscillator used in the hardware interface
- (see Table 1). As described previously, FORD1 was synchonized to the
- GOES radio clock with neglible offset, so that the mean and standard
- deviation shown can be accurately interpreted to apply to the GOES
- radio clock as well.
-
- The results show that the uncertaincies inherent in the
- synchronization algorithm and protocols is in the same order as that
- of the reference clocks and is related to the speed of the links
- connected the reference hosts to the other hosts in the network.
- Further discussion on the FORD1/GOES statistics can be found in the
- next section.
-
- Further insight into the error process can be seen in Table 3, which
- shows the first derivative of delay.
-
- Host Dev Max Min Error
- -------------------------------------
- DCN3 2.3 12 -17 10
- DCN5 1.5 45 -45 5
- DCN6 9 94 -54 40
- DCN7 1.4 6 -7 5
- FORD1 3.4 68 -51 15
-
- Table 3. First Derivative of Delay
-
- The mean and standard deviation of delay were computed for all hosts
- on a typical day during the experimental period. In all cases the
- magnitude of the mean was less than one. The standard deviation,
- maximum and minimum for each link is summarized by host in Table 3.
- A common characteristic of the distribution in most cases was that
- only a handful of samples approached the maximum or minimum extrema,
- while the vast majority of samples were much less than this. The
- "Error" colum in Table 3 indicates the magnitude of the estimated
- error when these extrema are discarded.
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 17]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- A very interesting feature of the observations was the unexpectedly
- low standard deviation of DCN3, which was locked to the power grid
- and thus would be expected to show wide variations. Upon analysis,
- this turned out to be a natural consequence of the fact that the
- Hello messages are generated as the result of interrupts based on the
- line frequency when the local clock had just been incremented by
- 1/60th of a second.
-
- The synchronizing protocol and implementation were carefully
- constructed to minimize the loss of accuracy due to sharing of the
- network links between data and control traffic, as long as sufficient
- resources (in particular, packet buffers) are available. Since the
- various network links shown in Figure 2 operate over a wide range of
- rates, it is possible that undisciplined bursts of traffic can swamp
- a host or gateway and precipitate a condition of buffer starvation.
-
- While most hosts using paths through the experimental configuration
- were relatively well-disciplined in their packetization and
- retransmission policies, some Unix 4.2bsd systems were notorious
- exceptions. On occasion these hosts were observed sending floods of
- packets, with only a small amount of data per packet, together with
- excessive retransmissions. As expected, this caused massive
- congestion, unpredictable link delays and occasional clock
- synchronizing errors.
-
- The synchronizing algorithms described above successfully cope with
- almost all instances of congestion as described, since delay-induced
- errors tend to be isolated, while inherent anti-spike and smoothing
- properties of the synchronizing algorithm help to preserve accuracies
- in any case. Only one case was found during the ten-day experiment
- period where a host was mistakenly synchronized outside the
- linear-tracking window due to congestion. Even in this case the host
- was quickly resynchronized to the correct time when the congestion
- was cleared.
-
- 4.3.3. On the Accuracy of Radio Clocks
-
- One of the more potent motivations for the experiments was to assess
- the accuracy of the various radio clocks and to determine whether the
- WWV radio clock was an appropriate replacement for the expensive WWVB
- or GOES clocks. A secondary consideration, discussed further in the
- next section, was how the various clocks handled disruptions due to
- power interruptions, leap seconds and so forth.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 18]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- 4.3.3.1. The Spectracom 8170 WWVB Radio Clock
-
- As the result of several years of experience with the WWVB radio
- clock, which is manufactured by Spectracom Corporation as Model 8170,
- it was chosen as the reference for comparison for the GOES and WWV
- radio clocks. Washington, DC, is near the 100-microvolt/meter
- countour of the WWVB transmitter at Boulder, CO, well in excess of
- the 25-microvolt/meter sensitivity of the receiver. The antenna is
- located in a favorable location on the roof of a four-storey building
- in an urban area.
-
- Using the data from the instruction manual, the propagation delay for
- the path from Boulder to Washington is about 8 ms, while the
- intrinsic receiver delay is about 17 ms. The clock is read via a
- 1200-bps asynchronous line, which introduces an additional delay of
- about 7 ms between the on-time transition of the first character and
- the interrupt at the middle of the first stop bit. Thus, the WWVB
- radio clock indications should be late by 8 + 17 + 7 = 32 ms relative
- to NBS standard time. While it is possible to include this delay
- directly in the clock indication, this was not done in the
- experiments. In order to account for this, 32 ms should be
- subtracted from all indications derived from this clock. The
- uncertaincy in the indication due to all causes is estimated to be a
- couple of milliseconds.
-
- 4.3.3.2. The True Time 468-DC GOES Radio Clock
-
- The GOES radio clock is manufactured by True Time Division of
- Kinemetrics, Incorporated, as Model 468-DC. It uses the
- Geosynchronous Orbiting Environmental Satellite (GOES), which
- includes an NBS-derived clock channel. Early in the experiment
- period there was some ambiguity as to the exact longitude of the
- satellite and also whether the antenna was correctly positioned.
- This was reflected in the rather low quality-of-signal indications
- and occasional signal loss reported by the clock and also its
- apparent offset compared with the other radio clocks.
-
- Table 4 shows a summary of offset statistics for the GOES radio clock
- by day (all day numbers refer to July, 1985).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 19]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- Day Mean Dev Max Min
- ------------------------------------
- 2 31.6 9.4 53 -76
- 3 19.8 22.1 53 -64
- 4 42.8 17.1 >150 19
- 5 39.3 2.2 54 -45
- 6 37.8 2.7 53 19
- 7 62.2 13.0 89 22
- 8 38.2 2.8 90 -7
-
- Table 4. GOES Radio Clock Offsets
-
- On all days except days 5, 6 and 8 long periods of poor-quality
- signal reception were evident. Since the antenna and satellite
- configuration are known to be marginal, these conditions are not
- considered representative of the capabilities of the clock. When the
- data from these days are discarded, the mean offset is 38.4 ms with
- standard deviation in the range 2.2 to 2.8. The maximum offset is 90
- ms and the minimum is -45 ms; however, only a very small number of
- samples are this large - most excursions are limited to 10 ms of the
- mean.
-
- In order to compute the discrepancy between the GOES and WWVB clocks,
- it is necessary to subtract the WWVB clock delay from the mean
- offsets computed above. Thus, the GOES clock indications are 38.4 -
- 32 = 6.4 ms late with respect to the WWVB clock indications. which
- is probably within the bounds of experiment error.
-
- 4.3.3.3. The Heath GC-1000 WWV Radio Clock
-
- The WWV radio clock is manufactured by Heath Company as Model
- GC-1000. It uses a three-channel scanning WWV/WWVH receiver on 5, 10
- and 15 MHz together with a microprocessor-based controller. The
- receiver is connected to an 80-meter dipole up about 15 meters and
- located in a quiet suburban location. Signal reception from the Fort
- Collins transmitters was average to poor during the experiment period
- due to low sunspot activity together with a moderate level of
- geomagnetic disturbances, but was best during periods of darkness
- over the path. The clock locked at one of the frequencies for
- varying periods up to an hour from two to several times a day.
-
- The propagation delay on the path between Fort Collins and Washington
- is estimated at about 10 ms and can vary up to a couple of
- milliseconds over the day and night. While it is possible to include
- this delay in the clock indications, which are already corrected for
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 20]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- the intrinsic receiver delay, this was not done in the experiments.
- During periods of lock, the clock indications are claimed to be
- accurate to within 100 ms.
-
- Table 5 shows a summary of offset statistics for the WWV radio clock
- by day (all day numbers refer to July, 1985).
-
- Day Mean Dev Max Min
- ------------------------------------
- 2 -31 36 110 -119
- 3 -42 38 184 -141
- 4 -21 38 61 -133
- 5 -31 37 114 -136
- 6 -48 42 53 -160
- 7 -100 80 86 -315
- 8 -71 70 115 -339
-
- Table 5. WWV Radio Clock Offsets
-
- On inspection of the detailed plots of offsets versus time the data
- reveal an interesting sawtooth variation with period about 25 cycles
- per hour and amplitude about 90 ms. Once the clock has locked for
- some time the variation decreases in frequency and sometimes
- disappears. This behavior is precisely what would be expected of a
- phase-locked oscillator and accounts for the rather large standard
- deviations in Table 5.
-
- On inspection of the plots of offsets versus time, it is apparent
- that by far the best accuracies are obtained at or in the periods of
- lock, which is most frequent during periods of darkness over the
- propagation path, which occured roughly between 0800 UT and 1100 UT
- during the experiment period. Excluding all data except that
- collected during this period, the mean offset is -21.3 ms with
- standard deviation in the range 29-31. The maximum offset is 59 ms
- and the minimum is -118 ms.
-
- In order to compute the discrepancy between the WWV and WWVB clocks,
- it is necessary to subtract the total of the propagation delay plus
- WWVB clock delay from the mean offsets computed above. Thus, the WWV
- clock indications are -21.3 - 10 - 32 = -72.3 ms late (72.3 ms early)
- with respect to the WWVB clock indications. Considering the large
- standard deviations noted above, it is probably not worthwhile to
- include this correction in the WWV clock indications.
-
- On exceptional occasions excursions in offset over 300 ms relative to
- the WWVB clock were observed. Close inspection of the data showed
- that this was due to an extended period (a day or more) in which lock
-
-
- Mills [Page 21]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- was not achieved on any frequency. The master oscillator uses a
- 3.6-MHz crystal oscillator trimmed by a digital/analog converter and
- register which is loaded by the microprocessor. The occasional
- excursions in offset were apparently due to incorrect register values
- as the result of noisy reception conditions and excessive intervals
- between lock. On occasion the oscillator frequency was observed in
- error over 4 ppm due to this cause, which could result in a
- cumulative error of almost 400 ms per day if uncorrected.
-
- 4.3.4. On Handling Disruptions
-
- The experiment period was intentionally selected to coincide with the
- insertion of a leap second in the worldwide time broadcasts. The
- intent was to examine the resulting behavior of the various radio
- clocks and the synchronization algorithm when an additional second
- was introduced at 2400 UT on 30 June.
-
- As it turned out, radio reception conditions at the time of insertion
- were quite poor on all WWV frequencies, the WWVB frequency and the
- GOES frequency. Thus, all three clocks took varying periods up to
- several hours to resynchonize and correct the indicated time. In
- fact, the only time signals heard around the time of interest were
- those from Canadian radio CHU, but the time code of the Canadian
- broadcasts is incompatible with the of the US broadcasts.
-
- As mentioned above, the WWVB clock was used as the master during the
- experiment period. About two hours after insertion of the leap
- second the clock resynchronized and all hosts in the experimental
- network were corrected shortly afterwards. Since the magnitude of
- the correction exceeded 128 ms, the correction was of a step nature,
- but was not performed simultaneously in all hosts due to the
- individual timing of the Hello messages. Thus, if timing-critical
- network operations happened to take place during the correction
- process, inconsistent timestamps could result.
-
- The lesson drawn from this experience is quite clear. Accurate time
- synchronization requires by its very nature long integration times,
- so that epochal events which disrupt the process must be predicted in
- advance and applied in all hosts independently. In principle, this
- would not be hard to do and could even be integrated into the
- operation of the step-correction procedure described earlier, perhaps
- in the form of bits included in Hello messages which trigger a
- one-second correction at the next rollover from 2400 to 0000 hours.
-
- In order for such an out-of-band correction to be effective, advance
- notice of the leap second must be available. At present, this
- information is not available in the broadcast format and must be
-
-
- Mills [Page 22]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- obtained via the news media. In fact, there are spare bits in the
- broadcast format that could be adapted for this purpose, but this
- would require reprogramming both the transmitting and receiving
- equipment. Nevertheless, this feature should be considered for future
- systems.
-
- 4.4. Additional Experiments
-
- A set of experiments was performed using two WIDEBAND/EISN gateways
- equipped with WWVB radio clocks and connected to the ARPANET. These
- experiments were designed to determine the limits of accuracy when
- comparing these clocks via ARPANET paths. One of the gateways
- (ISI-MCON-GW) is located at the Information Sciences Institute near
- Los Angeles, while the other (LL-GW) is located at Lincoln
- Laboratories near Boston. Both gateways consist of PDP11/44
- computers running the EPOS operating system and clock-interface
- boards with oscillators phase-locked to the WWVB clock.
-
- The clock indications of the WIDEBAND/EISN gateways were compared
- with the DCNet WWVB reference clock using ICMP Timestamp messages
- [6], which record the individual timestamps with a precision of a
- millisecond. This technique is not as accurate as the one described
- in Section 3, since the protocol implementation involves the
- user-process level, which can be subject to minor delays due to
- process scheduling and interprocess-message queueing. However,
- calibration measurements made over several of the links shown in
- Figure 2 indicate that the measurement errors are dominated by the
- individual link variations and not by the characteristics of the
- measurement technique itself.
-
- Measurements were made separately with each gateway by sending an
- ICMP Timestamp Request message from the ARPANET address of DCN1 to
- the ARPANET address of the gateway and computing the round-trip delay
- and clock offset from the ICMP Timestamp Reply message. This process
- was continued for 1000 message exchanges, which took about seven
- minutes. Table 6 shows the statistics obtained with ISI-MCON-GW and
- Table 7 those with LL-GW (all numbers are milliseconds).
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 23]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- ISI-MCON-GW Mean Dev Max Min
- --------------------------------------------
- Offset -16 40 126 -908
- Delay 347 59 902 264
-
- Table 6. ISI-MCON-GW Clock Statistics
-
- LL-GW (a) Mean Dev Max Min
- --------------------------------------------
- Offset -23 15 32 -143
- Delay 310 25 536 252
-
- Table 7. LL-GW Clock Statistics
-
- The smaller values of standard deviation and extreme for LL-GW are
- probably due to the shorter ARPANET path involved. The confidence in
- the mean offset can be estimated by dividing the standard deviation
- by the square root of the number of samples (1000), which suggests
- that the mean offsets are accurate to within a couple of miliseconds.
- The mean offsets of the WIDEBAND/EISN clocks as a group relative to
- the DCN1 clock may thus indicate a minor discrepancy in the setting
- of the delay-compensation switches.
-
- It is well known that ARPANET paths exhibit wide variations in
- delays, with occasional delays reaching surprising values up to many
- seconds. In order to improve the estimates a few samples were
- removed from both the offset and delay data, including all those with
- magnitude greater than one second.
-
- The above experiments involve a burst of activity over a relatively
- short time during which the ratio of the measurement traffic to other
- network traffic may be nontrivial. Another experiment with LL-GW was
- designed with intervals of ten seconds between ICMP messages and
- operated over a period of about three hours. The results are shown
- in Table 8.
-
- LL-GW (b) Mean Dev Max Min
- --------------------------------------------
- Offset -16 93 990 -874
- Delay 371 108 977 240
-
- Table 8. LL-GW Clock Statistics
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Mills [Page 24]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- Note that the standard deviations and extrema are higher than in the
- previous experiments, but the mean offset is about the same.
-
- The results of these experiments suggest that time synchronization
- via ARPANET paths can yield accuracies to the order of a few
- milliseconds, but only if relatively large numbers of samples are
- available. The number of samples can be reduced and the accuracy
- improved by using the techniques of Section 3 modified for ICMP
- Timestamp messages and the longer, more noisy paths involved.
-
- 5. Summary and Conclusions
-
- The experiments described above were designed to verify the correct
- operation of the DCnet time-synchronization algorithms and protocols
- under a variety of scenarios, including the use of line-frequency
- clocks, three types of radio clocks and various types of
- interprocessor links. They involved the collection and processing of
- many megabytes of data collected over a ten-day period that included
- the insertion of a leap second in the standard NBS time scale. Among
- the lessons learned were the following:
-
- 1. The algorithms and protocols operate as designed, yielding
- accuracies throughout the experimental net in the order of a
- few milliseconds to a few tens of milliseconds, depending on
- the topology and link type.
-
- 2. Glitches due to congestion, rebooted hosts and link failures
- are acceptably low, even in the face of massive congestion
- resulting from inappropriate host implementations elsewhere in
- the Internet.
-
- 3. A synchronization scenario where the clocks in all hosts are
- locked to the line frequency and corrections are broadcast
- from a central time standard will work only if all hosts are
- on the same power grid, which is unlikely in the present
- Internet configuration, but may be appropriate for some
- applications.
-
- 4. In spite of the eastern power grid wandering over as much as
- six seconds in a day, it is possible to achieve accuracies in
- the 30-ms range using line-frequency interface clocks and
- corrections broadcast on the local net.
-
- 5. Radio clocks can vary widely in accuracy depending on signal
- reception conditions. Absolute time can be determined to
- within a couple of milliseconds using WWVB and GOES radio
- clocks, but only if they are calibrated using an independent
-
-
- Mills [Page 25]
-
-
-
- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
-
-
- standard such as a portable clock. The inexpensive WWV clocks
- perform surprisingly well most of the time, but can be in
- error up to a significant fraction of a second under some
- conditions.
-
- 6. Adjustments in the time scale due to leap seconds must be
- anticipated before they occur. The synchronization protocol
- must include a mechanism to broadcast an adjustment in advance
- of its occurance, so that it can be incorporated in each host
- simultaneously. There is a need to incorporate advance notice
- of leap seconds in the broadcast time code.
-
- 7. Time synchronization via ARPANET paths can yield accuracies in
- the order of a few milliseconds, but only if relatively large
- numbers of samples are available. Further work is needed to
- develop efficient protocols capable of similar accuracies but
- using smaller numbers of samples.
-
- 6. References
-
- 1. Lindsay, W.C., and A.V. Kantak. Network Synchronization of
- Random Signals. IEEE Trans. Comm. COM-28, 8 (August 1980),
- 1260-1266.
-
- 2. Mills, D.L. Time Synchronization in DCNET Hosts. DARPA Internet
- Project Report IEN-173, COMSAT Laboratories, February 1981.
-
- 3. Mills, D.L. DCNET Internet Clock Service. DARPA Network Working
- Group Report RFC-778, COMSAT Laboratories, April 1981.
-
- 4. Mills, D.L. Internet Delay Experiments. DARPA Network Working
- Group Report RFC-889, M/A-COM Linkabit, December 1983.
-
- 5. Mills, D.L. DCN Local-Network Protocols. DARPA Network Working
- Group Report RFC-891, M/A-COM Linkabit, December 1983.
-
- 6. Postel, J. Internet Control Message Protocol. DARPA Network
- Working Group Report RFC-792, USC Information Sciences Institute,
- September 1981.
-
- 7. Postel, J. Time Protocol. DARPA Network Working Group Report
- RFC-868, USC Information Sciences Institute, May 1983.
-
- 8. Postel, J. Daytime Protocol. DARPA Network Working Group Report
- RFC-867, USC Information Sciences Institute, May 1983.
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- RFC 957 September 1985
- Experiments in Network Clock Synchronization
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- 9. Su, Z. A Specification of the Internet Protocol (IP) Timestamp
- Option. DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-781. SRI
- International, May 1981.
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- 10. Marzullo, K., and S. Owicki. Maintaining the Time in a
- Distributed System. ACM Operating Systems Review 19, 3 (July
- 1985), 44-54.
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- 11. Mills, D.L. Algorithms for Synchronizing Network Clocks. DARPA
- Network Working Group Report RFC-956, M/A-COM Linkabit, September
- 1985.
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- 12. Mills, D.L. Network Time Protocol (NTP). DARPA Network Working
- Group Report RFC-958, M/A-COM Linkabit, September 1985.
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