On Thursday, April 12, 2007 at 23:21:28 -0500, Matthew R. Dempsky wrote:
>On Thu, Apr 12, 2007 at 10:34:25PM +0200, Maurice Janssen wrote:
>> The manpage for rdate(8) uses the -c option in the examples at the
>> bottom (leap second correction), but the given host (ptbtime1.ptb.de)
>> doesn't need this.
>
>SNTP gives time in UTC, but some sysadmins would prefer to synchronize
>their system time to TAI rather than UTC (e.g., so time values
>returned by gettimeofday(2) progresses normally during leap seconds).
>The -c argument for rdate is intended for their use.

Yes, that's clear.

>Basic rule of thumb is use -c if and only if you're using a timezone
>file under /usr/share/zoneinfo/right/ (i.e., one that includes leap
>second info).  Otherwise your clock will most likely be off by 23
>seconds.

I missed the word 'right' in the timezone in the example, thanks for
pointing it out.

Maurice

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