Javier Kohen wrote:
El lun, 30-05-2005 a las 12:38 -0400, John Baab escribi:
Every time I try to use hwclock I get this error:
hwclock: Open of /dev/rtc failed, errno=2: No such file or directory.
No usable clock interface found.
Cannot access the Hardware Clock via any known method.
Since i don't use the package udev for my 2.6 kernel, all works great on my
debian amd64 system the rtc modules load great, the time see by hwclock is
the same that in the bios.
That's not only that udev cause don't work great the system :
- my swap can't be umounted correctly on the
On Monday 30 May 2005 03:53 pm, John Baab wrote:
apt-get install ntp ntpdate
also fixed the problem, but I would rather not have the extra service
if its not needed.
-Thanks for all the help, John
John,
Ntpdate, unlike ntp or ntp-simple, is not a service, per se, but just a
program that
El lun, 30-05-2005 a las 12:38 -0400, John Baab escribi:
Every time I try to use hwclock I get this error:
hwclock: Open of /dev/rtc failed, errno=2: No such file or directory.
No usable clock interface found.
Cannot access the Hardware Clock via any known method.
Make sure the rtc module is
On Mon, May 30, 2005 at 12:38:59PM -0400, John Baab wrote:
Every time I try to use hwclock I get this error:
hwclock: Open of /dev/rtc failed, errno=2: No such file or directory.
No usable clock interface found.
Cannot access the Hardware Clock via any known method.
cd /dev; ./MAKEDEV rtc
I had a similar problem, hwclock failing with the stated message.
Adding rtc to /etc/modules solved it for me. I do not believe it is
necessary to manually add the device to /dev (at least it wasn't for
me).
You can check this by running modprobe rtc manually, and then trying
hwclock again.
El lun, 30-05-2005 a las 19:31 +0200, K. Gysin escribi:
I had a similar problem, hwclock failing with the stated message.
Adding rtc to /etc/modules solved it for me. I do not believe it is
necessary to manually add the device to /dev (at least it wasn't for
me).
Not if you're using udev,
Adding rtc to /etc/modules solved it for me. I do not believe it is
necessary to manually add the device to /dev (at least it wasn't for
me).
You can check this by running modprobe rtc manually, and then trying
hwclock again.
Worked for me, once hwclock was working I was able to fix my
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