Le mardi 29 mars 2005 à 15:34 +0200, Hans-Werner Hilse a écrit : > > > Otherwise, what is in /etc/adjtime? > > > > 3019.632059 1112090516 0.000000 > > 1112090516 > > LOCAL > > OK, that means that the clock is supposed to drift for 3020sek per day... > [...]. You should replace the first number in /etc/adjtime to "0.0" > to reset the drift. Otherwise your hardware time will be reset on next > boot with the calculated drift. It's off again, then. That's because > time is read only at boot time and may be written to the hwclock at > shutdown (depends on boot scripts, but i think it's done this way). On > next bootup the hw clock is supposed to be off depending on the drift > and is "corrected" then. > > So it seems to me that your problem is not yet solved... But it's easy > to do as you see.
I guess it should solve my problem too : I had 800 s/day, consistent with the 5-10 min/night drifts I've observed. However, I rarely boot my PC, but I guess /etc/adjtime is also used when the computer "sleeps". I'll tell tomorrow if the problem is solved. Thanks for the help, Fred -- Frédéric Grosshans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list