silly question - what is the rawhide/9beta+ way to set my timezone
Michal Jaegermann
michal at harddata.com
Tue Apr 8 19:13:46 UTC 2008
On Tue, Apr 08, 2008 at 11:30:16PM +1000, David Timms wrote:
> OK, got that in the menu {Date & Time}. timezone is set correctly, and
> UTC is not checked. adding a ntp server {that works from ntpdate
> au.pool.ntp.org}, doesn't get the clock set.
In rawhide this is split now in two services - ntp and ntpdate.
What 'chkconfig ntpdate --list' says? How about
'chkconfig ntpd --list'?
'hwclock' which reads and writes your hardware clock in rawhide
scripts is used in /etc/init.d/ntpdate and /etc/init.d/halt.
Hmm..., I do not see in the current startup anything which would
set an initial system clock - save ntpdate which may not run or
may be unable to do the job. That used to be done in
/etc/rc.d/rc.sysinit but not anymore. Is this intentional?
> Actually, this may have never worked eg: I think I may have previously
> needed to service ntpd stop, let the applet fix time, then service ntpd
> start.
If you do not have configured any servers in /etc/ntp/step-tickers
(you can add those through GUI) then ntpdate will not attempt to
correct your time on a start and a discrepancy may be too much for
ntpd.
> Machine hw clock has always been in local time.
If you are not running on that machine some other OS which is
unable to handle UTC then this is only a recipe for headaches.
Michal
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