Resetting the system, Setting the system clock, Figure 4-22 renumbering the stack – Asante Technologies 40240/40480-10G User Manual

Page 112: Figure 4-23 resetting the system, Setting the current time, Configuring sntp

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Setting the Current Time

You can manually set the system clock if there is no time server on your network, or
if you have not configured the switch to receive signals from a time server.

Command Attributes

Hours – Hour in 24-hour format. (Range: 0 - 23)

Minutes – Minute. (Range: 0 - 59)

Seconds – Second. (Range: 0 - 59)

Month – Month. (Range: 1 - 12)

Day – Day of month. (Range: 1 - 31)

Year – Year (4-digit). (Range: 2001 - 2100)

Update Time – Click this button to display the time now in use by the system clock.

Web – Select SNTP, Current Time. Set the date and time, and click Apply.

Figure 4-24 Current Time

CLI – This example sets the system clock to 16:15:58, February 1st, 2008.

Console#calendar set 16 15 58 february 1 2008

Console#

Configuring SNTP

You can configure the switch to send time synchronization requests to time servers.

Command Attributes

SNTP Client – Configures the switch to operate as an SNTP client. This requires

at least one time server to be specified in the SNTP Server field. (Default: Disabled)

SNTP Poll Interval – Sets the interval between sending requests for a time update

from a time server. (Range: 16-16384 seconds; Default: 16 seconds)

SNTP Server Sets the IP address for up to three time servers. The switch

attempts to update the time from the first server, if this fails it attempts an update
from the next server in the sequence.

Update Time – Click the Update Time button to send a request to the configured

SNTP servers to immediately update the system time.

4-37

Setting the System Clock

4

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