"Orn E. Hansen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> That hardwires your machine to run at a different time than the CMOS
> clock... which means you have two different clock versions on your
> system.
>
> The appropriate option, is to control the representation...
I'm not sure what you're saying her
>
> # as root
> unset TZ # just in case you've accidentally set it
> tzconfig # set the time zone
> date 0103143897# set the internal clock
> clock -u -w# write internal->CMOS
> vi /etc/init.d/boot# set the GMT variable to "-u"
>
That hardwir
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Roesch) writes:
> Beyond that, what is the best method for setting up system time? Should
> I set CMOS time to GMT and use some sort of timezone info (which I don't
> know how to setup)? Or??
# as root
unset TZ # just in case you've accidentally set i
>
> The system time on my Debian PC is 1hour ahead of local time. That makes
> me think the timezone was not setup properly.
>
> What is the command for setting the time on a running system?
>
> Beyond that, what is the best method for setting up system time? Should
> I set CMOS time to
The system time on my Debian PC is 1hour ahead of local time. That makes
me think the timezone was not setup properly.
What is the command for setting the time on a running system?
Beyond that, what is the best method for setting up system time? Should
I set CMOS time to GMT and use some
5 matches
Mail list logo