Hello,
I have this one system that continues to bug me. I can not get the system
time to stay correct. It's always 5 hour behind the correct EST time. I've
tried Drakconf, linuxconf, timetool, and I've even set up xntp, but after a
reboot it returns itself 5 hour behind. Any ideas???
On Mon Feb 26 2001 09:34, You wrote:
Hello,
I have this one system that continues to bug me. I can not get the system
time to stay correct. It's always 5 hour behind the correct EST time. I've
tried Drakconf, linuxconf, timetool, and I've even set up xntp, but after
a reboot it returns
t;Lou Baccari" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 1:34 PM
Subject: [expert] timezone
Hello,
I have this one system that continues to bug me. I can not get the
system
time to stay correct. It's always 5 hour behind the correct EST time.
I've
trie
Try going into your bios and checking what the time is there. If it is not correct,
correct it.
Probably your operating system is setting its clock by the hardware clock (bios).
If you don't know how to do that, just ask again :-)
Cheers,
j
--- Lou Baccari [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
. This problem is a pain, any
other ideas???
Thanks,
-Original Message-
From: Pedro Del Medico [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 11:08 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [expert] timezone
On Mon Feb 26 2001 09:34, You wrote:
Hello,
I have this one system
On Mon Feb 26 2001 12:24, you Wrote:
Sorry Pedro I should have mention that the hwclock has always held the
correct EST time.
I changed the time this morning at 8:16 AM EST, and when I just check the
time the date was 5 hours behind and hwclock command showed the correct EST
time. The xntp
Lou Baccari wrote:
Sorry Pedro I should have mention that the hwclock has always held the
correct EST time.
Doesn't this mean that Linux is assuming your hw clock is GST...? Hence, the
double timezone shift...? If nothing else works, why not set the hw clock to
GST?
I changed the time
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
look at /etc/sysconfig/clock
try setting "UTC=false" and then doing something like...
# rdate -s clock-1.cs.cmu.edu hwclock --systohc
DP
On Monday 26 February 2001 05:34, Lou Baccari wrote:
Hello,
I have this one system that continues to bug
ebruary 26, 2001 9:24 PM
Subject: RE: [expert] timezone
Sorry Pedro I should have mention that the hwclock has always held the
correct EST time.
I changed the time this morning at 8:16 AM EST, and when I just check the
time the date was 5 hours behind and hwclock command showed the correct
Try timeconfig
AMG
On Thu, 3 Aug 2000, Vincent Danen wrote:
How the heck do I change my timezone? I just noticed I've got EDT on
here and I tried changing it in linuxconf but all it does is call
hwclock. I kinda want to have an accurate timezone on this
machine... =) Thanks.
tzselect?
Stew Benedict
On Thu, 3 Aug 2000, Vincent Danen wrote:
How the heck do I change my timezone? I just noticed I've got EDT on
here and I tried changing it in linuxconf but all it does is call
hwclock. I kinda want to have an accurate timezone on this
machine... =) Thanks.
--
How the heck do I change my timezone? I just noticed I've got EDT on
here and I tried changing it in linuxconf but all it does is call
hwclock. I kinda want to have an accurate timezone on this
machine... =) Thanks.
--
[EMAIL PROTECTED], OpenPGP key available on www.keyserver.net
// Danen
Submitted 03-Aug-00 by Vincent Danen:
How the heck do I change my timezone? I just noticed I've got EDT on
here and I tried changing it in linuxconf but all it does is call
hwclock. I kinda want to have an accurate timezone on this
machine... =) Thanks.
Your timezone is defined in
On Thu, Aug 03, 2000 at 08:55:15PM -0700, Anton Graham wrote:
How the heck do I change my timezone? I just noticed I've got EDT on
here and I tried changing it in linuxconf but all it does is call
hwclock. I kinda want to have an accurate timezone on this
machine... =) Thanks.
Your
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