[ale] Reverting from ntpd
Geoffrey
esoteric at 3times25.net
Mon Jan 27 10:32:03 EST 2003
If it's off that much, you're likely running into a problem with a
difference in timezones. You can tell your OS that your bios is set to
gmt and it will adjust accordingly. This might be the case. Unless
this is a dual boot (Linux and some variation of Windows), it's a better
idea to set your bios to gmt and then adjust your time accordingly.
Since I can never remember the difference between gmt and est, I tell
the OS the bios is set to gmt, check the time on my box when it boots,
then make the appropriate adjustments.
John Wells wrote:
> I'm still trying to observe, but it seems to be consistently off by around
> six hours. Another weird thing is that I can set the date using "date"
> from the command line, or using the Red Hat clock applet, but if I restart
> the X server the time is screwed again.
>
> This leads me to believe it's got to be a setting that's screwed
> somewhere. I'll take a look at adjtime tonight when I get my hands back
> on the laptop.
>
> Thanks,
> John
>
> Calvin Harrigan said:
>
>>Is the time being set, off by a few seconds/minutes or way off by days?
>>If it's slightly off you might be running into the drift compensation
>>mechanism built into most linux boxes. The amount of time a
>>(hardware)clock drifts is calculated by the system and is compensated
>>for every time the machine boots up. The quick way is to just delete
>>the '/etc/adjtime ' file. Read the man file on hwclock for details.
>>
>>
>>Calvin...
>
>
>
>
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>
--
Until later: Geoffrey esoteric at 3times25.net
The latest, most widespread virus? Microsoft end user agreement.
Think about it...
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