
The accuracy tradeoff under PTS is defined by the standard. ITU-T G.8275.2 sets a bounded maximum time error of plus or minus 0.5 milliseconds, accepting the presence of non-PTP-aware segments and uncorrected packet delay variation (PDV). Where NIC-level hardware timestamping is available, StarlingX uses it to reduce PDV. Where it is not, Peters noted that timing accuracy is relaxed but bounded rather than uncontrolled.
Compared to Full Timing Support, PTS trades nanosecond or sub-microsecond precision for deployment flexibility. “Application latency is not materially impacted, but time determinism and phase precision are lower,” Peters said.
StarlingX exposes tunable PTP parameters including servo behavior, thresholds and holdover settings, letting operators optimize timing for specific network topologies and PDV characteristics.
Precision timing demand extends well beyond telecom
The PTS addition matters most in deployments that cannot absorb a full hardware refresh before enabling precision timing. Peters identified where demand for PTP support is strongest outside of telecom.
“Beyond telecom, the earliest and strongest driver of PTP adoption has been industrial automation, where time-based control, robotics, machine vision, and TSN require sub-microsecond coordination across distributed systems,” Peters said. “Power grids and utilities are another major driver, using PTP for synchrophasors, protection relays, and fault analysis where microsecond-accurate, traceable timestamps are critical to grid stability.”
Financial services represent additional demand, particularly for high-frequency trading and regulatory timestamping. Peters also cited autonomous and smart transportation systems, where sensor fusion and coordinated decision-making depend on consistent time across nodes.
