in the redhat instalation procedure. And I did that for all servers, but only this one has this behaviour.
Egor Egorov wrote: >Renato, >Tuesday, July 23, 2002, 9:40:35 PM, you wrote: > >RL> I have several mysql servers installed, all without TZ variable, one of >RL> them, insists in set the "select now()" to 4 hours ahead of my internal >RL> clock, first I touch that I should set TZ to my time time zone in >RL> /etc/init.d/mysql, but when I do that, the "select now()" advances 4 >RL> more hours. > >RL> Below is the information about my system. now the --timezone option in >RL> /etc/init.d/mysql nor in /usr/bin/safe_mysql is not set. > >[skip] > >RL> # date ; echo -e "select now();\nshow variables;\n"|mysql -u root >RL> -pfdrops500 >RL> Tue Jul 23 14:25:39 AMT 2002 > >RL> now() >RL> 2002-07-23 18:25:39 > >Seems, NOW() returns values in GMT. > >RL> timezone America/Manaus > >How did you set up timezone? > > > > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- Before posting, please check: http://www.mysql.com/manual.php (the manual) http://lists.mysql.com/ (the list archive) To request this thread, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, e-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Trouble unsubscribing? Try: http://lists.mysql.com/php/unsubscribe.php