Date And Time; Configuring Date And Time Manually; Configuring Automatic Date And Time Using Sntp - AudioCodes Mediant 800B User Manual

Analog & digital voip media gateway
Hide thumbs Also See for Mediant 800B:
Table of Contents

Advertisement

User's Manual
11

Date and Time

The date and time of the device can be configured manually or it can be obtained
automatically from a Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) server.
11.1

Configuring Date and Time Manually

The date and time of the device can be configured manually.
To manually configure the device's date and time, using the Web interface:
1.
Open the Regional Settings page (Configuration tab > System menu > Regional
Settings).
2.
Enter the current date and time of the geographical location in which the device is
installed.
3.
Click Submit.
Notes:
If the device is configured to obtain the date and time from an SNTP server, the
fields on this page are read-only, displaying the received date and time.
After performing a hardware reset, the date and time are returned to their defaults
and thus, should be updated.
11.2

Configuring Automatic Date and Time using SNTP

The Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) client functionality generates requests and
reacts to the resulting responses using the NTP version 3 protocol definitions (according to
RFC 1305). Through these requests and responses, the NTP client synchronizes the
system time to a time source within the network, thereby eliminating any potential issues
should the local system clock 'drift' during operation. By synchronizing time to a network
time source, traffic handling, maintenance, and debugging become simplified for the
network administrator.
The NTP client follows a simple process in managing system time: the NTP client requests
an NTP update, receives an NTP response, and then updates the local system clock based
on a configured NTP server within the network.
The client requests a time update from a specified NTP server at a specified update
interval. In most situations, this update interval is every 24 hours based on when the
system was restarted. The NTP server identity (as an IP address or FQDN) and the update
interval are user-defined, or an SNMP MIB object.
When the client receives a response to its request from the identified NTP server, it must
be interpreted based on time zone or location offset that the system is to a standard point
of reference called the Universal Time Coordinate (UTC). The time offset that the NTP
client uses is configurable.
If required, the clock update is performed by the client as the final step of the update
process. The update is performed in such a way as to be transparent to the end users. For
instance, the response of the server may indicate that the clock is running too fast on the
client. The client slowly robs bits from the clock counter to update the clock to the correct
Version 6.8
Figure 11-1: Regional Settings Page
101
11. Date and Time
Mediant 800B Gateway and E-SBC

Hide quick links:

Advertisement

Table of Contents
loading

Table of Contents