> Does anyone know a program that will get a time from some source on > the net and set the system clock based on EST? I could add it to my > ip-up script and the computer would never fall far behind.
Firstly, I would recommend that you use universal coordinated time (Greenwich Meantime or however you spell it) on your system clock. Then you can set the timezone in software so that time shows up properly. Secondly, I think there is some way of getting your machine to automatically adjust for time drift, but I don't know what it is. Thirdly, here is how you can set your time from the net: netdate is the command I used to get the time on the net. Eg you could do: netdate -v tick.usno.navy.mil Sometimes a particular time server may be down, in which case you should try another one. To write the time to your hardware clock, you use the command hwclock. For example, with your hardware clock on universal time: hwclock --systohc --utc I think will do the trick. Feel free to correct me anyone if I've made a mistake. Cheers, Mark. _/~~~~~~~~\___/~~~~~~\____________________________________________________ ____/~~\_____/~~\__/~~\__________________________Mark_Phillips____________ ____/~~\_____/[EMAIL PROTECTED] ____/~~\HE___/~~\__/~~\APTAIN_____________________________________________ ____/~~\______/~~~~~~\____________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________ "They told me I was gullible ... and I believed them!"