On Sun, Feb 25, 2007 at 09:53:32PM +0100, Brice Goglin wrote:
> 
> There's probably another problem apart from X freezing when the time is
> changed. Maybe the system clock is not stored correctly in the hardware
> clock before shutdown. I remember having problems like this on a core
> duo processor because hwclock needed the --directisa command line option.
> 
> You could try without a X server at all, check the time from a virtual
> text console, change it, shutdown, restart and see what time you get.
> Anyway, that would be a bug in another package.
> 
> Brice
> 
I was able to change the time using the date-command. This worked from within 
KDE
using a text console as well as in single-user-mode without a X server running 
using
the virtual console.

The new time was stored in the hw clock in both cases and displayed when using 
'$
date' after restarting the laptop. The time displayed using '$ date' was still 
one
hour behind the time displayed by the KDE clock.

To look after the one hour difference between the two clock-displays I used '#
tzconfig'.
It said "Your current time zone is set to Unknown
Do you want to change that? [n]: y
...
Your default time zone is set to 'Europe/Berlin'.
Local time is now:      Mo 26. Feb 10:48:17 CET 2007.
Universal Time is now:  Mo 26. Feb 09:48:17 UTC 2007.". After that the time 
show in the
'Adjust Date & Time...'-dialogue was the same as the time show in the
KDE clock.

When I then open the 'Adjust Date & Time...'-dialogue again and change the time,
clicking OK still makes the screen dark and freezes the system.

Ralph



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