That did it... thanks
On Thu, 2002-03-21 at 13:18, Emmanuel Seyman wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 21, 2002 at 05:47:56AM -0500, dbrett wrote:
> >
> > One way is to log in as root and run setup. The second last selection is
> > 'Timezone configuration'
>
> Or type `timeconfig` which does the same thing.
On Thu, Mar 21, 2002 at 05:47:56AM -0500, dbrett wrote:
>
> One way is to log in as root and run setup. The second last selection is
> 'Timezone configuration'
Or type `timeconfig` which does the same thing.
Emmanuel
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One way is to log in as root and run setup. The second last selection is
'Timezone configuration'
david
On 21 Mar 2002, Robert Dege wrote:
> Somehow, when I installed RedHat 7.2, my TimeZone was set to GMT,
> instead of EST (or America/NewYork in /etc/sysconfig/clock). I have
> since correcte
Somehow, when I installed RedHat 7.2, my TimeZone was set to GMT,
instead of EST (or America/NewYork in /etc/sysconfig/clock). I have
since corrected the file, but even upon reboot, `date` still reports it
as GMT-5, and ntp resets my time accordingly.
I see that /sbin/hwclock can be used to alte
that does seem to make sense... and it works! :)
thanks for that - this is my first chroot-ing experience!
thanks again - dan.
At 7:25 AM -0600 30/10/00, Bret Hughes wrote:
>My guess, and it is just a guess is that named cannot find any time zone
>information since it it chrooted. C
t;
> and this entry in /etc/rc.d/init.d/syslog to start syslog paying
> attention to the new log device node thing:
>
> daemon syslogd -m 0 -a /chroothome/bind/dev/log
>
> does anyone know what might be going on here?
My guess, and it is just a guess is that named cannot find any ti
Hi - I set up our named server on one of our test servers in a chroot
jail over the weekend in our ongoing effort to tighten security as
much as possible, and have noticed a strange thing - in that named is
logging all it's info to the syslog at a different time to the rest
of the stuff being
On Tue, 01 Aug 2000, Nitebirdz wrote:
>
> In 5.2 is a symlink to a binary file, so if you run "file localtime" it
> does show that it is a binary file. However, it still is a
> symlink. Just to clarify.
>
They musta changed it sometime between 5.2 and 6.2, 'cause on my
RH 6.2 system here, the
On Tue, 1 Aug 2000, John Aldrich wrote:
> On Tue, 01 Aug 2000, Nitebirdz wrote:
> > Not running 6.2 here, but if I go to /etc and run "ls -l" it shows that
> > the file localtime is actually a symnbolic link that should be pretty much
> > self-explanatory. I have a feeling if you set up a link t
Thanks for the help.
timconfig works great.
Jim Baxter
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On 01 Aug 2000 16:58 Jim Baxter wrote:
>One of our people installed RH 6.2 and set up the wrong timezone. I need
to
>change from CDT to MDT. Could some one please lead me to the correct man
>page, I have tried to find commands undex timezone and date but no luck.
/usr/sbin/timeconfig
--
Anthony
On Tue, 01 Aug 2000, Nitebirdz wrote:
> Not running 6.2 here, but if I go to /etc and run "ls -l" it shows that
> the file localtime is actually a symnbolic link that should be pretty much
> self-explanatory. I have a feeling if you set up a link to the correct
> target according to your timezone
Easist way is to run Linuxconf as root, go down to the
bottom of the list and go into time and date. select the
region from the dropdown.
It is what I do anyway.
BTW mad manners to send html to most mailing lists
(including this one)
Hope this helps,
Bret
Jim Baxter wrote:
> Hi, One of our p
On Tue, Aug 01, 2000 at 04:53:30AM -0500, Nitebirdz wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Aug 2000, Jim Baxter wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > One of our people installed RH 6.2 and set up the wrong timezone.
> > I need to change from CDT to MDT. Could some one please lead me to
> > the correct man page, I have tried to
On Tue, 1 Aug 2000, Jim Baxter wrote:
> Hi,
>
> One of our people installed RH 6.2 and set up the wrong timezone. I need to change
>from CDT to MDT. Could some one please lead me to the correct man page, I have tried
>to find commands undex timezone and date but no luck.
>
Not running 6.2 he
Hi,
One of our people installed RH 6.2 and set up the
wrong timezone. I need to change from CDT to MDT. Could some one please lead me
to the correct man page, I have tried to find commands undex timezone and date
but no luck.
Thanks
Jim Baxter
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
ating OS time. I'd like to leave the BIOS set at GMT (I'm in London,
>UK) but am having problems getting the OS to think about British Summer Time
>(GMT + 1 for 6 months of the year). The best time zone I can find is
>'Europe/London'. IS this BST aware? Is ther
On Wed, 26 Apr 2000, Ounsted, Toby wrote:
> Wow - that was quick. Thanks! Next question - I can use
> 'date' to set the time - but how do I set BIOS time?? (Or view it, for that
> matter). Or is it setting BIOS time? I'd always thought it was just
hwclock
--
t GMT (I'm in London,
UK) but am having problems getting the OS to think about British Summer Time
(GMT + 1 for 6 months of the year). The best time zone I can find is
'Europe/London'. IS this BST aware? Is there a better solution?
Thank
timeconfig
On Wed, 26 Apr 2000, Ounsted, Toby wrote:
> Quick one - where is my time zone information stored??
>
> Toby.
>
>
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Quick one - where is my time zone information stored??
Toby.
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Jonathan Ruano skryf:
>
> On Mon, Nov 22, 1999 at 06:51:46PM +0200, Dirk Laurie wrote:
>
> > hardware clock. I can type "hwclock --hctosys" and then it's OK.
> > So somewhere in the boot-up scripts the GMT must have got hardcoded
> > at installation time. Any idea where?
> /etc/sysconfig/clock
On Mon, Nov 22, 1999 at 06:51:46PM +0200, Dirk Laurie wrote:
> hardware clock. I can type "hwclock --hctosys" and then it's OK.
> So somewhere in the boot-up scripts the GMT must have got hardcoded
> at installation time. Any idea where?
/etc/sysconfig/clock
UTC=no
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Jonathan Ruano Pach
When I installed RH6.0, I thought that keeping the hardware clock
on GMT was the proper thing to do. Unfortunately it does not make
for peaceful coexistence with 98, which also has its little corner
of the box. Now I can't get back to local time. I've run timeconfig
again, deselected the "Clock
On Tue, Nov 16, 1999 at 08:47:31PM -0800, Stephen King wrote:
> This may seem trivial and well, it is, but I cannot seem to set the system
> to the correct zone. It insists on being EST instead of PST. This throws
> the time off and my logs are difficult to read/calculate. I used date -s
> 'PST
This may seem trivial and well, it is, but I cannot seem to set the system
to the correct zone. It insists on being EST instead of PST. This throws
the time off and my logs are difficult to read/calculate. I used date -s
'PST' to no avail and linuxconf to set the zone to the West coast, also to
he kernel keeps track of the local time, which is set bye the
system call settimeofday.
When a fat filesystem date is converted to a unix date minuteswest minutes are added
to the time.
When a unix date is converted to a fat filesystem date minuteswest are subtracted
from the current time.
So
Have you checked "/etc/sysconfig/clock" to insure that "UTC" is "false"?
--
Dave Mielke | Phone: 1-613-726-0014
856 Grenon Avenue | Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Ottawa, Ontario |
Canada K2B 6G3 |
System: i386 RedHat 5.1 (glibc6)
I have not seen this problem myself, but I am passing this on as I am the
linux support person here at USQ. This is what has been described to me,
and I haven't a clue as to why this is happening. However, I suspect that
it could be a glibc issue...
When linux
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