One of my hats is to design/manufacture/sell GPS third party timing receivers for Cambium Radios. It seems like something happened around 2PM MST today which caused (at a minimum) certain Globaltop/Sierra Wireless GPS modules to quit receiving signals from the GPS constellations. Because these modules are pretty well respected as far as the quality of the timing signal (normally) and relative low cost, they tend to be integrated in a lot of devices, including my products, the official Cambium Products, and I understand the gear from other manufacturers. So far, a power cycle/reset of the GPS module seems to solve the problem. I haven't had enough time to process all of the data I have to know more details yet, but I can confirm the widespread nature of this event. On Tue, Dec 31, 2019 at 5:39 PM Jared Mauch <jared@puck.nether.net> wrote:
On Dec 31, 2019, at 5:32 PM, Andreas Ott <andreas@naund.org> wrote:
On Tue, Dec 31, 2019 at 05:08:17PM -0500, Matt Hoppes wrote:
Is anyone else seeing GPS timing source outages across the U. S. In the last two hours?
On what hardware/firmware are you seeing this?
Nothing unusual in the Bay Area so far, in other words "All Quiet on the Western Front". I am seeing receivers synced to at least 6 or 7 sats. Two different locations; one Garmin 18LVC, one uBlox 6M hardware. There is also no chatter about it on the time-nuts list where I would suspect to see it first.
There’s a fair amount of hardware that uses GPS sync for wireless and I’m guessing this is likely a vendor bug w/ UBNT hardware, but it’s also good to know if it’s broader than that.
I know there’s some interesting java bugs related to the switchover for 2020 as well, eg:
https://twitter.com/NmVAson/status/1207820284268597249
I know of at least once place that was hit by this.
- Jared
-- - Forrest