Your message dated Sat, 3 Mar 2018 15:37:39 -0500
with message-id <[email protected]>
and subject line Re: who -b returns wrong date and time of last boot
has caused the Debian Bug report #891967,
regarding who -b returns wrong date and time of last boot if clock was not 
initialized
to be marked as done.

This means that you claim that the problem has been dealt with.
If this is not the case it is now your responsibility to reopen the
Bug report if necessary, and/or fix the problem forthwith.

(NB: If you are a system administrator and have no idea what this
message is talking about, this may indicate a serious mail system
misconfiguration somewhere. Please contact [email protected]
immediately.)


-- 
891967: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=891967
Debian Bug Tracking System
Contact [email protected] with problems
--- Begin Message ---
Package: bugs.debian.org
Severity: normal

Dear Maintainer,

*** Reporter, please consider answering these questions, where appropriate ***

   * What led up to the situation?
        It has been there from the start
   * What exactly did you do (or not do) that was effective (or
     ineffective)?
        have used uptime -s instead
   * What was the outcome of this action?
        work around
   * What outcome did you expect instead?
        that "who -b" returns correct date and time of last reboot
        instead of: system boot  1970-01-01 01:00 as it does now.

*** End of the template - remove these template lines ***


-- System Information:
Distributor ID: Raspbian
Description:    Raspbian GNU/Linux 9.3 (stretch)
Release:        9.3
Codename:       stretch
Architecture: armv7l

Kernel: Linux 4.14.18-v7+ (SMP w/4 CPU cores)
Locale: LANG=en_GB.UTF-8, LC_CTYPE=en_GB.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8), 
LANGUAGE=en_GB.UTF-8 (charmap=UTF-8)
Shell: /bin/sh linked to /bin/dash
Init: systemd (via /run/systemd/system)

--- End Message ---
--- Begin Message --- who just formats the data found in /var/run/utmp. If the clock was wrong when the boot entry was written, you'll see the wrong time. If you run who -a you may see an entry for time change (depending on how the clock was set), which may help identify the actual boot time.

Mike Stone

--- End Message ---

Reply via email to