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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-1366?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13194251#comment-13194251
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Ted Dunning commented on ZOOKEEPER-1366:
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I can put another method in Time that is the same as currentTimeMillis, but 
which does the time skew thing (sounds like Rocky Horror to me)
                
> Zookeeper should be tolerant of clock adjustments
> -------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: ZOOKEEPER-1366
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/ZOOKEEPER-1366
>             Project: ZooKeeper
>          Issue Type: Bug
>            Reporter: Ted Dunning
>            Assignee: Ted Dunning
>             Fix For: 3.4.3
>
>         Attachments: ZOOKEEPER-1366-3.3.3.patch, ZOOKEEPER-1366.patch, 
> ZOOKEEPER-1366.patch, ZOOKEEPER-1366.patch, ZOOKEEPER-1366.patch
>
>
> If you want to wreak havoc on a ZK based system just do [date -s "+1hour"] 
> and watch the mayhem as all sessions expire at once.
> This shouldn't happen.  Zookeeper could easily know handle elapsed times as 
> elapsed times rather than as differences between absolute times.  The 
> absolute times are subject to adjustment when the clock is set while a timer 
> is not subject to this problem.  In Java, System.currentTimeMillis() gives 
> you absolute time while System.nanoTime() gives you time based on a timer 
> from an arbitrary epoch.
> I have done this and have been running tests now for some tens of minutes 
> with no failures.  I will set up a test machine to redo the build again on 
> Ubuntu and post a patch here for discussion.

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