You can use the timing source command to configure three timing sources for the system. These sources are known as the primary, secondary, and tertiary sources. The system periodically polls the status of the current timing source. If the system discovers that the current source has become unavailable, it polls the timing source you specified as next in line. If this source is available, it switches to this source; if not, it then polls the next source in line. If the lowest source is unavailable, the system maintains the SRP clock as the source.
If you enable auto-upgrade, in the event of a source failure, the system—after switching to a lower source—polls all higher configured sources and automatically switches back to the highest timing source when that source becomes available.
The timing select command enables you to specify which source (primary, secondary, or tertiary) the system is to use by default. The system will never attempt to upgrade to a source higher than the selected source.
timing disable-auto-upgrade
- host1(config)#timing disable-auto-upgrade
timing select
- host1(config)#timing select secondary
timing source
- host1#timing source secondary sonet 3/0
Use the show timing command to view the timing settings for the system.
show timing
host1#show timing
timing: tertiary (failover from primary) primary: external SC E1 (A) (ERROR) secondary: ds3 3/0 (ERROR) tertiary: internal SC oscillator (ok) auto-upgrade enabled