http://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=353516
User diego.ercolani@gmail.com added comment
http://bugzilla.novell.com/show_bug.cgi?id=353516#c7
Diego Ercolani changed:
What |Removed |Added
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CC| |diego.ercolani@gmail.com
--- Comment #7 from Diego Ercolani 2009-05-09 09:03:51 MDT ---
I think this is not the same issue but, as you are talking about syncronization
during startup I would like to point another issue.
Since I installed opensuse 11.1 on my home system I have a problem with clock
sync:
My BIOS is set to localtime (CET or CEST), when system starts up, system clock
is set to local time (CEST) +2 hours. The problem seems to be that system
thinks that BIOS is set to GMT and so system time is set to +2 hours.
I checked my configuration:
cmp /etc/localtime /usr/share/zoneinfo/posix/Europe/San_Marino
returns no differences
and in /etc/sysconfig/clock:
HWCLOCK="--localtime"
SYSTOHC="yes"
TIMEZONE="Europe/Rome"
DEFAULT_TIMEZONE="Europe/San_Marino"
Another 2¢:
from root console, after startup I can do:
system:~ # date
Sat May 9 19:01:46 CEST 2009
system:~ # hwclock --show
Sat May 9 17:01:53 2009 -0.088829 seconds
system:~ # hwclock --hctosys
system:~ # date
Sat May 9 17:02:06 CEST 2009
As you see... "hwclock --hctosys" seems to work after startup
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