Do Android Devices use the network time protocol (NTP) to synchronize the time?
In my Device-Settings I see a checkbox with the following text \"synchronize with net
i wanted to ask if Android Devices uses the network time protocol (ntp) to synchronize the time.
For general time synchronization, devices with telephony capability, where the wireless provider provides NITZ information, will use NITZ. My understanding is that NTP is used in other circumstances: NITZ-free wireless providers, WiFi-only, etc.
Your cited blog post suggests another circumstance: on-demand time synchronization in support of GPS. That is certainly conceivable, though I do not know whether it is used or not.
I have a Samsung Galaxy Tab 2 7.0 with Android 4.1.1. Apparently it does NOT sync to ntp. I loaded an app that says my tablet is 20 seconds off of ntp, but it can't set it unless I root the device.
I know about Android ICS that it uses a custom service called: NetworkTimeUpdateService. This service also implements a NTP time synchronization via the NtpTrustedTime singleton.
In NtpTrustedTime
the default NTP server is requested from the Android system string source:
final Resources res = context.getResources();
final String defaultServer = res.getString(
com.android.internal.R.string.config_ntpServer);
If the automatic time sync option in the system settings is checked and no NITZ time service is available then the time will be synchronized with the NTP server from com.android.internal.R.string.config_ntpServer
.
To get the value of com.android.internal.R.string.config_ntpServer
you can use the following method:
final Resources res = this.getResources();
final int id = Resources.getSystem().getIdentifier(
"config_ntpServer", "string","android");
final String defaultServer = res.getString(id);
Not an exact answer to your question, but a bit of information: if your device does use NTP for time (eg. if it is a tablet with no 3G or GPS capabilities), the server can be configured in /system/etc/gps.conf
- obviously this file can only be edited with root access, but is viewable on non-rooted devices.