Well, I thought they were Windows servers but
Remote system . . . . . . . . . '10.10.1.1'
+ for more values '10.17.1.1'
These .1.1 servers (at least in our setup) seem to indicate Cisco routers.
So, you could have NTP setup on your routers and use those as both a
client and a server. The router could be an NTP client to NIST and be an
NTP server for the rest of your organization.

I think it's discourgaged to have every device you own going straight to
NIST. Why overload it? If you can't communicate to your router you sure
ain't going to be able to go to NIST anyway.

Rob Berendt

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