9288 Ethernet Time Server
NTP Ethernet Time Server - Model 9288 v3.3

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Product Features
- IPv6
- NTP capabilities – Peering, Stratum 2, Autokey
- Supports centralized user authentication (LDAP, RADIUS)
- Supports centralized logging – Syslog
- Stratum 1 NTP v2, v3, v4 Time Server via RS-485 from a NetClock
- Stratum 2 (up to 15) via NTP servers
- High bandwidth NTP performance
- Ideal for synchronizing a separate LAN segment
- Meets regulatory compliance standards including Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, Gramm-Leach-Bliley and OATS
- Supports internal audits, including: audit trails, time stamping records, log files and data archiving
- Automatic adjustment for local time, daylight saving time and leap second
- Standard Security Features
- Web-based user interface with Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) protection, SNMP v3 Secure remote login and file transfer with Secure Shell (SSH) and Secure Copy Protocol (SCP), Secure File Transfer Protocol (SFTP)
- Ethernet 10/100 Base-T Web-based user interface
- Remote diagnostics, flash upgrades, configuration, and control
- Solid State
- Free software updates
- 5-Year Limited Warranty
Product Overview
Share accurate time from a Spectracom NetClock throughout your network using the new NTP Ethernet Time Server Model 9288. The Model 9288 provides Network Time Protocol (NTP), allowing to allow you to share time in the same way you share other networked resources. The Model 9288 uses an embedded Linux v2.6 operating system and a high-speed processor. It is synchronized from a NetClock via RS-485 once-per-second over twisted pair, or via NTP from a NetClock (or other NTP device). Each RS-485 port on a NetClock can support up to 32 Ethernet Time Servers to synchronize physically seperate networks. The Ethernet Time Server offers multiple standard security features, including host restriction on SNMP to ensure operational integrity. The combination of a NetClock and one or more Ethernet Time Servers is ideal for delivering system-wide, split-second timing information to computer network devices, network log files, and databases. Such a combination enables computer networks to synchronize all elements of network hardware and software (including system logs) to the millisecond over LANs or WANs—anywhere on the planet
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