Results From configuration mode, confirm your configuration by entering the show command. If
the output does not display the intended configuration, repeat the configuration
instructions in this example to correct it.
[edit protocols ptp]
user@host# show
clock-mode boundary;
unicast-negotiation;
slave {
interface ge-0/1/0.0 {
unicast-mode {
transport ipv4;
clock-source 10.10.10.50 local-ip-address 10.10.10.53;
}
}
}
master {
interface ge-0/1/3.0 {
unicast-mode {
transport ipv4;
clock-client 117.117.117.117/32 local-ip-address 109.109.109.53;
clock-client 109.109.109.0/24 local-ip-address 109.109.109.53;
}
}
interface ge-0/1/5.0 {
unicast-mode {
transport ipv4;
clock-client 7.7.7.7/32 local-ip-address 7.7.7.53 {
manual;
}
}
}
}
After you have configured the device, enter the commit command from configuration
mode.
Related
Documentation
Precision Time Protocol Overview•
• IEEE 1588v2 PTP Boundary Clock Overview on page 234
• Configuring Precision Time Protocol Clocking on page 243
• Configuring a PTP Master Boundary Clock on page 244
• Configuring a PTP Slave Clock on page 254
• Example: Configuring a PTP Boundary Clock on page 248
Configuring a PTP Slave Clock
The slave port that you configure can be a Precision Time Protocol (PTP) boundary or
ordinary clock, depending on the configuration of the clock-mode statement at the [edit
protocols ptp] hierarchy level. An ordinary or boundary slave clock performs frequency
Copyright © 2017, Juniper Networks, Inc.254
ACX Series Universal Access Router Configuration Guide