At 06:01 AM 8/7/97 +0000, Edan Idzerda wrote:>
>"Roeland M.J. Meyer" <rmeyer@mhsc.com> wrote:
>> should never request a time-set through the SMB protocols. However,
Samba
>> should support a "net time \\win95 /set /yes" from the
client. But, a
>
>Err, I have:
>
>net time \\server /set /yes
>
>in my Win 95 netlogon scripts and they synchronize their time this way
>with the Samba server every time someone logs in--good enough for
>government work.
Seeing as I already own a copy of OnNet32, my issue was not with the
absence of a "net time" command, which Samba *does* support from the
Windows client.
However, I'm not sure that you can do it from the Unix end. However, my
submittal was "Why?!?". You don't need it from Unix.
>I think this is what you meant; I'm just pointing out that Samba
>already does it.
That's what the other guy wanted, it is not what I was looking for. However
Scott Armstrong sent me the reference for Tardis and I downloaded it. It is
exactly what I wanted. It basically, give WinNT the same level of SNTP
support that Unix enjoys.
This is soooo much bettter than "net set time" XNTP is freeware and
Tardis
is only $20, $40 for site license.
>>>>
At 10:00 AM 8/6/97 -0400, Scott Armstrong wrote:>I just saw a follow-up to your message in a Samba Digest. You should
>give Tardis for Windows NT a try! The URL for the Home Page is
>http://www.kaska.demon.co.uk/
>It runs as a Windows NT service and can be configured to automatically
>switch between time servers.
>armstron@NVL.ARMY.MIL
<<<<
_________________________________________________
Roeland M.J. Meyer (RM993)
e-mail: rmeyer@mhsc.com
web pages: http://www.mhsc.com/~rmeyer
_________________________________________________