>export TZ=<your time zone) ex: export TZ=EDT (eastern daylight time) and
>all will be well. you can add it to /etc/bashrc or root's .bashrc so you
>don't have to enter it all the time.
I've tried that workaround myself... but it screws up my time, so there
must be something else wrong with my configuration.
I have timeconfig set to:
SystemV/PST8PDT
with hardware set to GMT checked.
the date command gives me this:
[root@beast /root]# date
Fri May 1 09:38:59 PDT 1998 <-- correct time
[root@beast /root]# date -u
Fri May 1 16:39:04 UTC 1998 <-- not sure if this is right...
now for the clock command:
[root@beast /root]# clock -r
Fri May 1 16:41:05 1998 -0.753123 seconds <---- again, not sure if this
is good
[root@beast /root]# clock -ru
Fri May 1 09:41:10 1998 -0.107941 seconds <----- this is correct, for
local time.
Does anyone see anything wrong with this picture?
- Paul
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