Hi Florian, > Are you dual-booting with Windows?
Nope. > Is your hardware clock set to UTC or local time? (If you do not > remember how you configured this when you installed the system, look > at the output of "grep UTC /etc/default/rcS".) When I installed the system I was dual-booting with Windoze, so the clock was set to local time; I have set it to UTC since I got rid of Win. # date && hwclock -r dom nov 16 13:53:50 CET 2008 dom 16 nov 2008 12:50:07 CET -0.432112 seconds # zdump -v /etc/localtime | grep 2008 /etc/localtime Sun Mar 30 00:59:59 2008 UTC = Sun Mar 30 01:59:59 2008 CET isdst=0 gmtoff=3600 /etc/localtime Sun Mar 30 01:00:00 2008 UTC = Sun Mar 30 03:00:00 2008 CEST isdst=1 gmtoff=7200 /etc/localtime Sun Oct 26 00:59:59 2008 UTC = Sun Oct 26 02:59:59 2008 CEST isdst=1 gmtoff=7200 /etc/localtime Sun Oct 26 01:00:00 2008 UTC = Sun Oct 26 02:00:00 2008 CET isdst=0 gmtoff=3600 chronyd was holding /dev/rtc, so I had to kill it before running hwclock. Thanks for the interest, Davide -- Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana. -- If anything can go wrong it wSegmentation fault core dumped -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]