Lines Matching full:network
41 Engineering Computer Network
64 area network.
72 of the various hosts in a local area network.
85 The master computes the \fInetwork time\fP as the average of the
99 When a machine comes up and joins the network,
103 The time daemons are able to maintain a single network time in spite of
112 the network be partitioned.
123 transmission protocols to broadcast a message on a network
125 The submaster appears as a slave on one network, and as a master
128 A submaster classifies each network as one of three types.
129 A \fIslave network\fP is a network on which the submaster acts as a slave.
130 There can only be one slave network.
131 A \fImaster network\fP is a network on which the submaster acts as a master.
132 An \fIignored network\fP is any other network which already has a valid master.
134 network, but gives up immediately if a master already exists.
140 the kind of network on which time daemons can run.
163 with multiple network interfaces, may be told to ignore all
164 but one network or to ignore one network.
165 This is done with the \fI\-n network\fP and \fI\-i network\fP
178 run \fItimed\fP on a larger (inter)network.
189 possible for submaster time daemon A to be a slave on network X
190 and the master on network Y, while submaster time daemon B is a slave on
191 network Y and the master on network X.
195 of network bandwidth and CPU time.
215 In any case, they must appear after the network
226 .IP "-n network" 13
227 to consider the named network.
228 .IP "-i network"
229 to ignore the named network.
253 The \fIdate(1)\fP command can be used to set the network date.
261 \fITEMPO: A Network Time Controller for Distributed Berkeley UNIX System\fP,
264 R. Gusella and S. Zatti, \fIClock Synchronization in a Local Area Network\fP,