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Addresses wording confusion with PTP ordinary and boundary clocks (#81)
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Signed-off-by: Alberto Losada <[email protected]>
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alosadagrande authored Jan 12, 2024
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4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions documentation/modules/ROOT/pages/5g-ran-context.adoc
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Expand Up @@ -90,7 +90,7 @@ Precision Time Protocol (PTP) is used to synchronize clocks in a network. When u
PTP can work in three modes:

* `GrandMaster`: A PTP daemon connected to a hardware with PTP support to synchronize its clock. Other PTP daemons will connect to this PTP GrandMaster in order to sync their clocks.
* `Ordinary Clock`: A PTP daemon connected to a GrandMaster to synchronize its clock.
* `Boundary Clock`: A PTP daemon connected to a GrandMaster to synchronize its clock and being master for other PTP daemons on the network.
* `Ordinary Clock`: A PTP daemon connected to a GrandMaster to synchronize its clock or also to a Boundary Clock behaving as a GrandMaster.
* `Boundary Clock`: A PTP daemon connected to a GrandMaster to synchronize its clock and being a GrandMaster for other PTP daemons that needs to synchronize their time on the network.
image::ptp_diagram.png[PTP Diagram]

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