PTP Over Wide Area Networks With Offset Measurement Outlier Filtering
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Vázquez Rodríguez, Víctor; Megías, Carlos; Vélez, Carmen; Esteban, Héctor; Díaz, Javier; Ros, EduardoEditorial
IEEE
Materia
Clock synchronization Network emulation Outlier filtering
Fecha
2025-09-29Referencia bibliográfica
V. Vázquez, C. Megías, C. Vélez, H. Esteban, J. Díaz and E. Ros, "PTP Over Wide Area Networks With Offset Measurement Outlier Filtering," in IEEE Access, vol. 13, pp. 170410-170423, 2025, doi: 10.1109/ACCESS.2025.3615674
Patrocinador
CHIPS Joint Undertaking / European Union Horizon Europe – (PROACTIF project, Grant 101194239); MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 – (PCI2025-163223, PID2021-123930OB-C22); Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities – (FPU20/05842, FPU20/01857)Resumen
The IEEE 1588 Precision Time Protocol (PTP) is capable of achieving nanosecond-level
accuracy over standard Ethernet, making it widely used in industrial and scientific facilities. However, its
time offset measurement process is highly sensitive to asymmetries and dynamic variation in the packet
delays, hindering its applicability in wide-area use cases. In this paper, we demonstrate that PTP can
be enhanced and used for Internet point-to-point time transfer with equal or better performance than
the traditional Network Time Protocol (NTP). For this purpose, we propose a technique called offset
measurement outlier filtering (OMOF), which leverages the short-term stability of the local clock to discard
offset measurements affected by packet delay variation. We implemented OMOF in an open-source PTP
client and validated it on a production network connection between two sites located more than 300 km
apart. Both sites were fitted with high-performance reference clocks synchronized to less than a nanosecond
of error using the GNSS-based common-view technique, enabling accurate measurement of our solution’s
performance with state-of-the-art metrology techniques. Results show that our approach achieves a 95%
improvement in peak-to-peak time error over the most popular open-source PTP implementation and 71%
over NTP synchronization.





