Re: Date always wrong after reboot. [SOLVED]

2009-06-04 Thread Nuno Magalhães
Solved it... This wasn't related to the clock at all. I do cut power to the PC when it's off and began wondering if that hat drained the CMOS battery, but that would make BIOS settings reset, not advance the OS clock by one hour. The CMOS time is correct in the BIOS. While checking another issue

Re: Date always wrong after reboot.

2009-06-02 Thread Andrew M.A. Cater
On Tue, Jun 02, 2009 at 03:50:49PM +0100, Nuno Magalhães wrote: > I know it's a silly question with a simple answer, but i can't find > the culprit. I've checked /etc/init.d/ and rc2.d/ and there's nothing > that would change the time. However, every time i boot the system > always defaults to one

Re: Date always wrong after reboot.

2009-06-02 Thread Mark Neyhart
Nuno Magalhães wrote: > I know it's a silly question with a simple answer, but i can't find > the culprit. I've checked /etc/init.d/ and rc2.d/ and there's nothing > that would change the time. However, every time i boot the system > always defaults to one hour ahead. I assume i can dpkg-reconfigur

Re: Date always wrong after reboot.

2009-06-02 Thread Brad Rogers
On Tue, 2 Jun 2009 15:50:49 +0100 Nuno Magalhães wrote: Hello Nuno, > that would change the time. However, every time i boot the system > always defaults to one hour ahead. I assume i can dpkg-reconfigure > something, but i don't know what. I'd rather not depend on ntp. One possibility is that

Date always wrong after reboot.

2009-06-02 Thread Nuno Magalhães
I know it's a silly question with a simple answer, but i can't find the culprit. I've checked /etc/init.d/ and rc2.d/ and there's nothing that would change the time. However, every time i boot the system always defaults to one hour ahead. I assume i can dpkg-reconfigure something, but i don't know