Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-24 Thread Marianne Taylor
On November 25, 2003 08:03, Marianne Taylor wrote: > On November 24, 2003 03:46, Lucas Sallovitz wrote: > > Sorry, I don't know how to solve your problem, but you sure didn't solve > > it as your mail has a tiemstamp of 11/25 1:37 am being 11/24 8:46 here :) > > Well the e-mail that left here had t

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-24 Thread Marianne Taylor
On November 24, 2003 03:46, Lucas Sallovitz wrote: > Sorry, I don't know how to solve your problem, but you sure didn't solve > it as your mail has a tiemstamp of 11/25 1:37 am being 11/24 8:46 here :) Well the e-mail that left here had the proper time on it, which was 20:37 last evening. I don'

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-24 Thread Lucas Sallovitz
Sorry, I don't know how to solve your problem, but you sure didn't solve it as your mail has a tiemstamp of 11/25 1:37 am being 11/24 8:46 here :) Marianne Taylor wrote: On November 19, 2003 18:12, David Friggens wrote: * Thomas T. Veldhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-11-19 09:39]: Marian

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-23 Thread Marianne Taylor
On November 19, 2003 18:12, David Friggens wrote: > * Thomas T. Veldhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-11-19 09:39]: > > Marianne Taylor wrote: > > > Does anyone know the answer to my original question. Up until about > > > a month ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo > > > with

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread David Friggens
* Thomas T. Veldhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2003-11-19 09:39]: > Marianne Taylor wrote: > > Does anyone know the answer to my original question. Up until about > > a month ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo > > with my hwclock set to local. Now for some reason everytime I b

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread gnu4u
>On November 18, 2003, Marianne Taylor wrote: >Does anyone know the answer to my original question. Up until about a month >ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo with my hwclock set >to local. Now for some reason everytime I boot gentoo it thinks that the >hwclock is s

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread mathieu perrenoud
> >> Does anyone know the answer to my original question. Up until about > >> a month ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo > >> with my hwclock set to local. Now for some reason everytime I boot > >> gentoo it thinks that the hwclock is set to UTC and corrects for that > >> ie

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread Thomas T. Veldhouse
Peter Ruskin wrote: > On Wednesday 19 Nov 2003 07:20, Marianne Taylor wrote: >> Now that we are done the debate on M$ vs. linux I hope? >> >> Does anyone know the answer to my original question. Up until about >> a month ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo >> with my hwclock s

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread Peter Ruskin
On Wednesday 19 Nov 2003 07:20, Marianne Taylor wrote: > Now that we are done the debate on M$ vs. linux I hope? > > Does anyone know the answer to my original question.  Up until about > a month ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo > with my hwclock set to local.  Now for some

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread Thomas T. Veldhouse
Marianne Taylor wrote: > > Does anyone know the answer to my original question. Up until about > a month ago I was keeping good time both in windows and in gentoo > with my hwclock set to local. Now for some reason everytime I boot > gentoo it thinks that the hwclock is set to UTC and corrects fo

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread brett holcomb
It wasn't a debate on MS vs Linux - someone gave wrong advice so several corrected that so you didn't go barking up the wrong tree. You might try man hwclock (if I remember correctly as my Gentoo machine is not available) allows you to update the system clock with what you have set. I had to

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-19 Thread Marianne Taylor
On November 18, 2003 09:43, A. Craig West wrote: > On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Javier Gostling wrote: > > Actually, Windows assumes the hw clock to be set to local time, so if you > > set Linux to UTC, then Linux will mess your time. I had this happen some > > time ago, and instructing Linux that the hw c

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Peter Ruskin
On Tuesday 18 Nov 2003 15:51, Donnie Berkholz wrote: > It means that in my experience, if you don't have time set to UTC in > Linux, every time you boot Windows it will mess your time up. That's strange Donnie, my experience is the reverse of that. I used to think it was the "right thing" to set

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread brett holcomb
Windows doesn't use UTC for the hw clock. You set the BIOS to local time and windows works from there. Where things get messed up is when you set your hardware clock to UTC, tell Linux that and then dual boot. The time get's messed up by Windows. You might check the archives as there have

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Senectus -
ion Age in which we live."   - Peter Cochrane From: Donnie Berkholz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock Date: Tue, 18 Nov 2003 00:57:23 -0500 MIME-Version: 1.0 Received: from gentoo.org ([204.126.2.42])

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread A. Craig West
On Tue, 18 Nov 2003, Javier Gostling wrote: > Actually, Windows assumes the hw clock to be set to local time, so if you > set Linux to UTC, then Linux will mess your time. I had this happen some > time ago, and instructing Linux that the hw clock is in local time solved > the issue. I've never rea

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Javier Gostling
On Tue, Nov 18, 2003 at 12:08:51PM -0500, Ric Messier wrote: > On 2003.11.18 10:51, Donnie Berkholz wrote: > > > >It means that in my experience, if you don't have time set to UTC in > >Linux, every time you boot Windows it will mess your time up. > > > > I've never set my time to UTC under linux

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Ric Messier
On 2003.11.18 10:51, Donnie Berkholz wrote: It means that in my experience, if you don't have time set to UTC in Linux, every time you boot Windows it will mess your time up. I've never set my time to UTC under linux and Windows never messes my time up. Windows NT, Windows 2000 and Windows XP have

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Donnie Berkholz
On Tue, 2003-11-18 at 09:02, Ric Messier wrote: > I've no idea what Windows doesn't treat time correctly means. I've been > dual booting for years and only have problems when I do something dumb > on the UNIX side (like not setting the /etc/localtime link) or > sometimes under OpenBSD but I forg

RE: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Mark Knecht
> -Original Message- > From: Marianne Taylor [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, November 17, 2003 1:10 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock > > > My system ie hwclock is set to the local time. But each time I reboot my

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Ric Messier
I've no idea what Windows doesn't treat time correctly means. I've been dual booting for years and only have problems when I do something dumb on the UNIX side (like not setting the /etc/localtime link) or sometimes under OpenBSD but I forget what the problem there is/was. Ric On 2003.11.17 23

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-18 Thread Marianne Taylor
On November 17, 2003 21:57, Donnie Berkholz wrote: > On Mon, 2003-11-17 at 16:10, Marianne Taylor wrote: > > My system ie hwclock is set to the local time. But each time I reboot my > > system clock is set to 8 hrs before my hwclock. Somewhere my system > > seems to be correcting for Greenwich ti

Re: [gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-17 Thread Donnie Berkholz
On Mon, 2003-11-17 at 16:10, Marianne Taylor wrote: > My system ie hwclock is set to the local time. But each time I reboot my > system clock is set to 8 hrs before my hwclock. Somewhere my system seems to > be correcting for Greenwich time, but I can't figure out where. In rc.conf I > have t

[gentoo-user] system time/hw clock

2003-11-17 Thread Marianne Taylor
My system ie hwclock is set to the local time. But each time I reboot my system clock is set to 8 hrs before my hwclock. Somewhere my system seems to be correcting for Greenwich time, but I can't figure out where. In rc.conf I have the clock set to "local" time. Where else can I look for thi