Yes, many radio platforms have GPS for timing. Some expose it for external time and timing purposes, some do not. Naturally, they do have a pretty good view of the sky.
From: "Mel Beckman" <mel@beckman.org>
To: "Mike Hammett" <nanog@ics-il.net>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org, "Mark Tinka" <mark@tinka.africa>
Sent: Tuesday, August 8, 2023 10:05:55 AM
Subject: Re: NTP Sync Issue Across Tata (Europe)
It works fine, and is an industry standard. you have to mount the GPS antenna near a window with sky visibility, or on the roof. Many point-to-point microwave radios have GPS built in to obtain accurate timing for transmission multiplexing.
-mel
On Aug 8, 2023, at 7:16 AM, Mike Hammett <nanog@ics-il.net> wrote:
"We use these exclusively in data centers"
How well does GPS work inside the datacenter?
From: "Mel Beckman" <mel@beckman.org>
To: "Mark Tinka" <mark@tinka.africa>
Cc: nanog@nanog.org
Sent: Saturday, August 5, 2023 2:26:37 PM
Subject: Re: NTP Sync Issue Across Tata (Europe)
Mark,
You might consider setting up your own GPS-based NTP network. Commercial Ethernet GPS-sourced NTP servers, such as the Time Machines, TM1000A, are as little as $400. Or you can roll your own using a Raspberry Pi or similar nano computer with a GPS module and
antenna. We use these exclusively in data centers now rather than depending on Internet NTP servers, primarily for security, because financial transactions in e-commerce can be sensitive to false time information. There are also a variety of NTP-based Internet
attacks, so if you can block NTP at your border you’ve eliminated another attack surface.
-mel via cell
> On Aug 5, 2023, at 11:22 AM, Mark Tinka <mark@tinka.africa> wrote:
>
>
>
>> On 8/5/23 20:17, Chris Adams wrote:
>>
>> It's the NTP pool people you need to talk to - the .freebsd. bit is just
>> a vendored entry into the pool (more for load tracking and management).
>
> Yes, Andreas clarified in unicast. Will do. Thanks.
>
> Mark.