On 21 Jan 2003 12:04:38 +0100
Mertens Bram <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hi,
> 
> I reinstalled glibc-common again, created a backup op
> /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Brussels, logged out and logged back in.
> At this point date -R displays:
> Tue, 21 Jan 2003 11:56:20 +0100
> Whil it is in fact 10 AM
> 
> Then I 'su -'d to root and ran setup, but the timezone settings
> seemed ok (unless I must activate the option "Hardware clock set to
> GMT"). Is there any other way to set the time correctly? That is
> without dateconfig?  Because is looking more and more the cause of
> all this mess...
> 
> By now I realised that on January 14 (the first date the Brussels
> file got corrupted) I also used dateconfig to alter the clock. (I
> had unplugged my pc off for a while)
> 
> But according to rc dateconfig is fine:
> [root@localhost root]# rc wp dateconfig
> 
> S | Channel           | Package    | Version   | dateconfig Version
> --+-------------------+------------+-----------+-------------------
> i | Red Hat Linux 7.3 | dateconfig | 0:0.7.5-7 | 0.7.5-7           
> i | Unknown           | dateconfig | 0.7.5-7   | 0.7.5-7           
> 
> [root@localhost root]# rpm -V dateconfig
> [root@localhost root]# 
> 
> Any ideas what might be causing this?
> 
  Sorry, but I don't seem to have dateconfig even on my 7.0.
  If you need some other way to change the time or date, try the
'control panel' utility in Gnome. My KDE Desktop also has it under the
RedHat => System menu.


                            Regards,


                             Tom



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