New Milestone in Network Time Security As Internet Draft Approved
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Option 33: Dual Internal NTP Server Setup and Operation Guidelines
-DISCONTINUED PRODUCT- Option 33: Dual Internal NTP Server Setup and Operation Guidelines Document No. PD0042100D – April 2009 Arbiter Systems, Inc. 1324 Vendels Circle, Suite 121 Paso Robles, CA 93446 U.S.A. (805) 237-3831, (800) 321-3831 http://www.arbiter.com mailto: [email protected] 1 Option 33: Dual Internal NTP Server 1.1 General Description Option 33, Dual Internal Network Time Protocol (NTP) Server, is used in the Arbiter Systems line of 19-inch, rack mount Satellite-Controlled Clocks. This option comes with a six-foot phone cable and RJ-11 to DB-9F adapter for connecting to the RS-232, or NTP Setup, port. 1.1.1 Option 33 Option 33 allows the clock to act as time server over an Ethernet network using the network time protocol operating in server mode - symmetric operation modes are not supported. Time is distributed over the network interface to computers, controllers and other equipment needing the correct time. Option 33 understands NTP Version 1, Version 2, and Version 3 frames, and optionally supports authentication via DES and MD5 cryptographic checksums. If authentication is not used, the controller can typically be used for hundreds of clients without overloading it. Authentication requires typically 40 ms for checking and generating the cryptograms, which is covered and averaged out by the protocol. Option 33 supports full SNTP and all NTP functions required for reliable server operation. Functions not required for server operation are not implemented. 1.1.2 Hardware Configuration. Option 33 consists of two building blocks; two OEM NTP modules and an interface to the GPS clock. -
Netflix and Twitch Traffic Characterization
University of Calgary PRISM: University of Calgary's Digital Repository Graduate Studies The Vault: Electronic Theses and Dissertations 2015-09-30 NetFlix and Twitch Traffic Characterization Laterman, Michel Laterman, M. (2015). NetFlix and Twitch Traffic Characterization (Unpublished master's thesis). University of Calgary, Calgary, AB. doi:10.11575/PRISM/27074 http://hdl.handle.net/11023/2562 master thesis University of Calgary graduate students retain copyright ownership and moral rights for their thesis. You may use this material in any way that is permitted by the Copyright Act or through licensing that has been assigned to the document. For uses that are not allowable under copyright legislation or licensing, you are required to seek permission. Downloaded from PRISM: https://prism.ucalgary.ca UNIVERSITY OF CALGARY NetFlix and Twitch Traffic Characterization by Michel Laterman A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF GRADUATE STUDIES IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF SCIENCE GRADUATE PROGRAM IN COMPUTER SCIENCE CALGARY, ALBERTA SEPTEMBER, 2015 c Michel Laterman 2015 Abstract Streaming video content is the largest contributor to inbound network traffic at the University of Calgary. Over five months, from December 2014 { April 2015, over 2.7 petabytes of traffic on 49 billion connections was observed. This thesis presents traffic characterizations for two large video streaming services, namely NetFlix and Twitch. These two services contribute a significant portion of inbound bytes. NetFlix provides TV series and movies on demand. Twitch offers live streaming of video game play. These services share many characteristics, including asymmetric connections, content delivery mechanisms, and content popularity patterns. -
Network Time Protocol (NTP) General Overview
Network Time Protocol (NTP) General Overview David L. Mills University of Delaware http://www.eecis.udel.edu/~mills mailto:[email protected] alautun, Maya glyph 2-Aug-04 1 Introduction z Network Time Protocol (NTP) synchronizes clocks of hosts and routers in the Internet. z NIST estimates 10-20 million NTP servers and clients deployed in the Internet and its tributaries all over the world. Every Windows/XP has an NTP client. z NTP provides nominal accuracies of low tens of milliseconds on WANs, submilliseconds on LANs, and submicroseconds using a precision time source such as a cesium oscillator or GPS receiver. z NTP software has been ported to almost every workstation and server platform available today - from PCs to Crays - Unix, Windows, VMS and embedded systems, even home routers. z The NTP architecture, protocol and algorithms have been evolved over the last two decades to the latest NTP Version 4 described in this and related briefings. 2-Aug-04 2 The Sun never sets on NTP z NTP is argueably the longest running, continuously operating, ubiquitously available protocol in the Internet – USNO and NIST, as well as equivalents in other countries, provide multiple NTP primary servers directly synchronized to national standard cesium clock ensembles and GPS – Over 230 Internet primary serversare in Australia, Canada, Chile, France, Germany, Isreal, Italy, Holland, Japan, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, and US. z Well over a million Internet servers and clients all over the world – National and regional service providers BBN, MCI, Sprint, Alternet, etc. – Agencies and organizations: US Weather Service, US Treasury Service, IRS, PBS, Merrill Lynch, Citicorp, GTE, Sun, DEC, HP, etc. -
Which Time Server Option Is Best for Synchronizing Your Clocks
WHICH TIME SERVER OPTION IS BEST FOR SYNCHRONIZING YOUR CLOCKS? Any electronic device that automatically displays REGARDING MASTER the current local time – your clocks, phone, tablet, TIME CONTROLLERS computer and even most TVs – has to pull that time from a time server. AND The time server acts as a messenger of sorts; IP NETWORK CLOCKS it reads the time from a reference clock and distributes that information via a computer network (ETHERNET OR WI-FI) to your device when the device requests it. The time server could be a local network time server or an internet time server. SNTP, or Simple Network Time Protocol, is an internet standard protocol that allows a clock or device to contact a server and get the current time. It’s a simplification of the more robustNTP (Network Time Protocol) and is used in most embedded devices and computers. Once the device receives the current Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), the device applies offsets such as time zone or daylight saving time considerations, as well as the time spent on the network retrieving the time, before displaying the accurate local time. January 2018 AMERICAN TIME WHITE PAPER BY: MAX BLOM When it comes to syncing time for your organization’s clocks, you have 3 options: Let’s take a look at how each of these options work, their pros and cons, and our recommendation. Port 123 is reserved specifically for External Server IP Address NTP/SNTP communication 1 The NIST – the U.S. Department of Commerce’s National Institute of Standards and Technology – is the primary source for synchronizing time systems in the U.S. -
Networkingsimple Network Time Protocol
IBM i Version 7.2 Networking Simple Network Time Protocol IBM Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page 11. This document may contain references to Licensed Internal Code. Licensed Internal Code is Machine Code and is licensed to you under the terms of the IBM License Agreement for Machine Code. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 1998, 2013. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Simple Network Time Protocol...............................................................................1 PDF file for Simple Network Time Protocol.................................................................................................1 SNTP concepts............................................................................................................................................. 1 SNTP client............................................................................................................................................. 2 SNTP server............................................................................................................................................ 2 Scenario: Synchronizing clocks with IBM i..................................................................................................3 Configuring System A as an SNTP client and server..............................................................................5 Configuring -
NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0
NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 Americas Headquarters Cisco Systems, Inc. 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA http://www.cisco.com Tel: 408 526-4000 800 553-NETS (6387) Fax: 408 527-0883 © 2013 Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved. CONTENTS CHAPTER 1 Release Notes for NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 1 CHAPTER 2 BGP 3 BITTORRENT 6 CITRIX 7 DHCP 8 DIRECTCONNECT 9 DNS 10 EDONKEY 11 EGP 12 EIGRP 13 EXCHANGE 14 FASTTRACK 15 FINGER 16 FTP 17 GNUTELLA 18 GOPHER 19 GRE 20 H323 21 HTTP 22 ICMP 23 IMAP 24 IPINIP 25 IPV6-ICMP 26 IRC 27 KAZAA2 28 KERBEROS 29 L2TP 30 NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 iii Contents LDAP 31 MGCP 32 NETBIOS 33 NETSHOW 34 NFS 35 NNTP 36 NOTES 37 NTP 38 OSPF 39 POP3 40 PPTP 41 PRINTER 42 RIP 43 RTCP 44 RTP 45 RTSP 46 SAP 47 SECURE-FTP 48 SECURE-HTTP 49 SECURE-IMAP 50 SECURE-IRC 51 SECURE-LDAP 52 SECURE-NNTP 53 SECURE-POP3 54 SECURE-TELNET 55 SIP 56 SKINNY 57 SKYPE 58 SMTP 59 SNMP 60 SOCKS 61 SQLNET 62 SQLSERVER 63 SSH 64 STREAMWORK 65 NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 iv Contents SUNRPC 66 SYSLOG 67 TELNET 68 TFTP 69 VDOLIVE 70 WINMX 71 NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 v Contents NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 vi CHAPTER 1 Release Notes for NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 NBAR2 Standard Protocol Pack Overview The Network Based Application Recognition (NBAR2) Standard Protocol Pack 1.0 is provided as the base protocol pack with an unlicensed Cisco image on a device. -
Simple Network Time Protocol
IBM i 7.3 Networking Simple Network Time Protocol IBM Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page 15. This document may contain references to Licensed Internal Code. Licensed Internal Code is Machine Code and is licensed to you under the terms of the IBM License Agreement for Machine Code. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 1998, 2013. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Simple Network Time Protocol...............................................................................1 What's new for IBM i 7.3..............................................................................................................................1 PDF file for Simple Network Time Protocol.................................................................................................1 SNTP and NTP concepts.............................................................................................................................. 2 SNTP client............................................................................................................................................. 2 SNTP server............................................................................................................................................ 3 NTP client................................................................................................................................................4 -
Emerging Solutions in Time Synchronization Security
Emerging Solutions in Time Synchronization Security Karen O’Donoghue, [email protected] IEEE/NIST Challenges in the Smart Grid Workshop, 7 September 2014 www.internetsociety.org Agenda • Why Security Now? • Requirements • What currently exists? • IEEE 1588 • IETF NTP NTS • Next steps and parting thoughts… IEEE/NIST Time Challenges in Smart Grid Workshop – 26 Oct 2016 Why Security Now? • Increasing interconnection and decentralization • Increasing evidence of the impact of inadequate security • Interdependency between security and time • Legal and Compliance requirements 3 IEEE/NIST Time Challenges in Smart Grid Workshop – 26 Oct 2016 Requirements for Time Synchronization Security § RFC 7384: Security Requirements of Time Protocols in Packet Switched Networks, Oct 2014 – Threat model § Internal versus external attacker § Man-in-the-middle versus injection § Threats § Requirements analysis § IEEE 1588 requirements analysis – https://ieee-sa.centraldesktop.com/1588/file/27229936/ – (contact me for access to this document if necessary) 4 IEEE/NIST Time Challenges in Smart Grid Workshop – 26 Oct 2016 RFC 7384: Threats • Manipulation of time synchronization packets, • Masquerading as a legitimate participant in the time synchronization protocol, • Replay of legitimate packets, • Tricking nodes into believing time from the wrong master, • Intercepting and removing valid synchronization packets, • Delaying legitimate time synchronization packets on the network, • Denial of service attacks on the network at layer 2 and layer 3, • Denial of service by overloading the cryptographic processing components, • Denial of service by overloading the time synchronization protocol, • Corruption of the time source used by the grand master, • Protocol design and implementation vulnerabilities, and • Using the time synchronization protocol for broader network surveillance and fingerprinting types of activities. -
Network Time Protocol (Version 2) Specification and Implementation
Network Working Group David L. Mills Request for Comments: 1119 University of Delaware Obsoletes: RFC-1059, RFC-958 September 1989 Network Time Protocol (Version 2) Specification and Implementation Status of this Memo This document describes the Network Time Protocol (NTP), specifies its formal structure and summarizes information useful for its implementation. NTP provides the mechanisms to synchronize time and coordinate time distribution in a large, diverse internet operating at rates from mundane to lightwave. It uses a returnable-time design in which a distributed subnet of time servers operating in a self-organizing, hierarchical-master-slave configuration synchronizes local clocks within the subnet and to national time standards via wire or radio. The servers can also redistribute reference time via local routing algorithms and time daemons. This is an Internet Standard Recommended Protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Keywords: network clock synchronization, standard time distribution, fault-tolerant architecture, maximum-likelihood estimation, disciplined oscillator, internet protocol, formal specification. Mills Page i RFC-1119 Network Time Protocol September 1989 Table of Contents 1. Introduction . 1 1.1. Related Technology . 2 2. System Architecture . 3 2.1. Implementation Model . 4 2.2. Network Configurations . 5 2.3. The NTP Timescale . 7 2.4. The NTP Calendar . 8 2.5. Time and Frequency Dissemination . 10 3. Network Time Protocol . 11 3.1. Data Formats . 11 3.2. State Variables and Parameters . 12 3.2.1. Common Variables . 12 3.2.2. System Variables . 14 3.2.3. Peer Variables . 16 3.2.4. Packet Variables . 17 3.2.5. Clock Filter Variables . 17 3.2.6. -
Authenticated Network Time Synchronization
Authenticated Network Time Synchronization Benjamin Dowling, Queensland University of Technology; Douglas Stebila, McMaster University; Greg Zaverucha, Microsoft Research https://www.usenix.org/conference/usenixsecurity16/technical-sessions/presentation/dowling This paper is included in the Proceedings of the 25th USENIX Security Symposium August 10–12, 2016 • Austin, TX ISBN 978-1-931971-32-4 Open access to the Proceedings of the 25th USENIX Security Symposium is sponsored by USENIX Authenticated Network Time Synchronization Benjamin Dowling Douglas Stebila Queensland University of Technology McMaster University [email protected] [email protected] Greg Zaverucha Microsoft Research [email protected] Abstract sends a single UDP packet to a server (the request), who responds with a single packet containing the time (the The Network Time Protocol (NTP) is used by many response). The response contains the time the request was network-connected devices to synchronize device time received by the server, as well as the time the response with remote servers. Many security features depend on the was sent, allowing the client to estimate the network delay device knowing the current time, for example in deciding and set their clock. If the network delay is symmetric, i.e., whether a certificate is still valid. Currently, most services the travel time of the request and response are equal, then implement NTP without authentication, and the authen- the protocol is perfectly accurate. Accuracy means that tication mechanisms available in the standard have not the client correctly synchronizes its clock with the server been formally analyzed, require a pre-shared key, or are (regardless of whether the server clock is accurate in the known to have cryptographic weaknesses. -
NTP Release 4.2.8P3
NTP Release 4.2.8p3 September 07, 2015 CONTENTS 1 The Network Time Protocol (NTP) Distribution1 1.1 The Handbook..............................................1 1.2 Building and Installing NTP.......................................2 1.3 Resolving Problems...........................................2 1.4 Further Information...........................................2 2 Build and Install 3 2.1 Quick Start................................................3 2.2 Building and Installing the Distribution.................................4 2.3 Build Options...............................................5 2.4 Debugging Reference Clock Drivers...................................5 2.5 NTP Debugging Techniques.......................................6 2.6 Hints and Kinks............................................. 10 2.7 NTP Bug Reporting Procedures..................................... 10 3 Program Manual Pages 11 3.1 ntpd - Network Time Protocol (NTP) Daemon............................. 11 3.2 ntpq - standard NTP query program.................................. 14 3.3 ntpdc - special NTP query program.................................. 22 3.4 ntpdate - set the date and time via NTP................................ 28 3.5 ntp-wait - waits until ntpd is in synchronized state......................... 30 3.6 sntp - Simple Network Time Protocol (SNTP) Client......................... 30 3.7 ntptrace - trace a chain of NTP servers back to the primary source................. 33 3.8 tickadj - set time-related kernel variables.............................. 33 3.9 ntptime -
User's Manual
1-Port COMBO KVM Over IP User Manual Version 1.00 -1- 1-Port Combo KVM Over IP User Manual Index INTRODUCTION ......................................................................................................................................................... 4 1.1 FEATURES ..........................................................................................................................5 1.2 SPECIFICATION ...................................................................................................................6 2 INSTALLATION ................................................................................................................................................. 7 2.1 SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS ..................................................................................................7 2.2 HARDWARE INSTALLATION ................................................................................................9 2.3 CONNECT WITH MULTI-PORT KVM SWITCH .................................................................... 10 2.4 WHEN THE SERVER IS UP AND RUNNING ........................................................................... 10 2.5 WHEN THE SERVER IS DEAD ........................................................................................... 10 3 CONFIGURATION ........................................................................................................................................... 12 3.1 NETWORK CONFIGURATION USING PSETUP UTILITY ........................................................