I know it is bad karma to reply to ones own messages, but then I must have eaten
really rotten things before I wrote this
At 00:37 30.12.2003 +0100, Erich Titl wrote:
...
Normally /etc/TZ is read at system boot. You can set TZ manually for your terminal
session or add it to your .profile
: Tuesday, December 30, 2003 12:39 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [leaf-user] Setting time/date clarification
I know it is bad karma to reply to ones own messages, but then I must
have eaten really rotten things before I wrote this
At 00:37 30.12.2003 +0100, Erich Titl wrote:
...
Normally
At 06:24 30.12.2003 -0800, Craig Caughlin wrote:
Hi folks,
Hey, thanks Erich.
I forgot to ask you: I *think* I know what the ntpdate package is for
(updating the firewall itself), what's the ntpsimpl package for?
ntpdate (at least that is my opinion) is a one time shot to initialise the your
Hi folks,
I'm trying to set up Bering-uClibc 2.0.1 to have the most accurate
time/date functionality, and it seems from the docs that to do so is
using the ntpdate.lrp package (which requires the libm.lrp package).
1.) Would using these packages be the most accurate timekeeping method
for
Hi folks,
(Please forgive me if this gets posted twice-the previous message seemed
to bounce back to me for some reason)
I'm trying to set up Bering-uClibc 2.0.1 to have the most accurate
time/date functionality, and it seems from the docs that to do so is
using the ntpdate.lrp package (which
: Re: [leaf-user] Setting time/date clarification
Craig
At 08:35 29.12.2003 -0800, you wrote:
Hi folks,
I'm trying to set up Bering-uClibc 2.0.1 to have the most accurate
time/date functionality, and it seems from the docs that to do so is
using the ntpdate.lrp package (which requires