> The file /etc/adjtime has the following two lines:
>
> cambados:~# cat /etc/adjtime
> -115.758041 945099084 0.00
> 945097761
>
> Is it important the fact that it has two lines?
>
> Another question: What command do I have to use in order to set the clock up?
>
hwclock ?
> Thanks in ad
Manuel Arenaz Silva [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The file /etc/adjtime has the following two lines:
>
> cambados:~# cat /etc/adjtime
> -115.758041 945099084 0.00
> 945097761
>
> Is it important the fact that it has two lines?
It depends. If you want your system clock(the time you see i
The file /etc/adjtime has the following two lines:
cambados:~# cat /etc/adjtime
-115.758041 945099084 0.00
945097761
Is it important the fact that it has two lines?
Another question: What command do I have to use in order to set the clock up?
Thanks in advance and apologies for having repli
Try modifying /etc/adjtime so that it has one line:
0.0 0 0.0
Those are zeros, not the letter O.
Then set the time.
then reboot.
/etc/adjtime is ment to keep track of the "drift" on your HW clock
(since no clock is perfect). However, the drift isn't always the same.
If /etc/adjtime was made d
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