Measured performance of the Network Time Protocol in the Internet system
RFC 1128, “Measured performance of the Network Time Protocol in the Internet system”, is an Unknown document published in October 1989 by D.L. Mills. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This paper describes a series of experiments involving over 100,000 hosts of the Internet system and located in the U.S., Europe and the Pacific. The experiments are designed to evaluate the availability, accuracy and reliability of international standard time distribution using the DARPA/NSF Internet and the Network Time Protocol (NTP), which is specified in RFC-1119. NTP is designed specifically for use in a large, diverse internet system operating at speeds from mundane to lightwave. In NTP a distributed subnet of time servers operating in a self-organizing, hierarchical, master-slave configuration exchange precision timestamps in order to synchronize subnet clocks to each other and national time standards via wire or radio. The experiments are designed to locate Internet hosts and gateways that provide time by one of three time distribution protocols and evaluate the accuracy of their indications. For those hosts that support NTP, the experiments determine the distribution of errors and other statistics over paths spanning major portions of the globe. Finally, the experiments evaluate the accuracy and reliability of precision timekeeping using NTP and typical Internet paths involving DARPA, NSFNET and other agency networks. The experiments demonstrate that timekeeping accuracy throughout most portions of the Internet can be ordinarily maintained to within a few tens of milliseconds, even in cases of failure or disruption of clocks, time servers or networks. This memo does not specify a standard.
What “Unknown” means
The standards-track status of this early RFC was never formally classified.
The canonical text of RFC 1128 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,PS,PDF,HTML.
- RFC 1127 Perspective on the Host Requirements RFCs
- RFC 1129 Internet Time Synchronization: The Network Time Protocol
- RFC 1126 Goals and functional requirements for inter-autonomous system routing
- RFC 1130 IAB official protocol standards
- RFC 1125 Policy requirements for inter Administrative Domain routing
- RFC 1131 OSPF specification
- RFC 1124 Policy issues in interconnecting networks
- RFC 1132 Standard for the transmission of 802.2 packets over IPX networks