Ben Cottrell wrote:
On Mar 10, 2013, at 10:37, Fbsd8 <fb...@a1poweruser.com> wrote:
day light saving time happened early sunday morning and the time shown by the 
date command is still one hour behind. I just did a clean 9.1 install from 
cdrom and selected the correct time zone for my location.

The DST change worked fine for me...!

I'm curious what it prints if you run the command:

find /usr/share/zoneinfo -type f -print | xargs md5 | grep `md5 -q 
/etc/localtime`

It used to be that /etc/localtime was, by convention if
nothing else, a symlink so you could easily see what it pointed
to, but not anymore... the above is the easiest way I can think
of to figure out what time zone your system is *really* set to.

Yes, it should have happened automatically. There's no special
setting you have to enable. It should have "just worked". So
my suspicion is that your /etc/localtime isn't pointing to
what you think it's pointing to...

        ~Ben


This is what that find produced

# /root >find /usr/share/zoneinfo -type f -print | xargs md5 | grep `md5 -q /etc /localtime` MD5 (/usr/share/zoneinfo/America/New_York) = e4ca381035a34b7a852184cc0dd89baa MD5 (/usr/share/zoneinfo/posixrules) = e4ca381035a34b7a852184cc0dd89baa

echo $TZ undefined variable



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