On 10/16/24 21:59, William Torrez Corea wrote:
What happened with my CMOS battery?

I buy a new CMOS battery, replace the old battery and configure the
date/hour through the BIOS, save the configuration and restart the machine.

Start the operating system, the system loads but then restart and the
date/hour is disconfigured.

My system admit the following Coin-Cell battery:

    1. CR-2032

I install the following Coin-Cell battery in my machine:

Panasonic CR2032 3V


On 10/17/24 19:24, William Torrez Corea wrote:
> I have the laptop Dell Inspiron 14R 5437
>
> Linux 6.1.0-26-amd64 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Debian 6.1.112-1 (2024-09-30)
> x86_64 GNU/Linux


When you installed Debian, was the CMOS clock set to UTC?


When you installed Debian, did you select your time zone? Have you modified you time zone since installation?


Have you entered the Setup utility, loaded factory default settings, set the date and time, saved the settings, exited the Setup utility, booted Debian, and checked the time with a terminal and date(1)?

2024-10-18 17:18:09 dpchrist@laalaa ~
$ cat /etc/debian_version ; uname -a
11.11
Linux laalaa 5.10.0-32-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.10.223-1 (2024-08-10) x86_64 GNU/Linux

2024-10-18 17:18:17 dpchrist@laalaa ~
$ man date

2024-10-18 17:18:21 dpchrist@laalaa ~
$ date
Fri Oct 18 17:18:23 PDT 2024

2024-10-18 17:18:23 dpchrist@laalaa ~
$


David

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