Hi again, this should be my last one for now: Everytime I start SUSE 10.1 the system time is 2 hours ahead of reality. What happens there and what can I do? Thank you and kind regards, Martin Soltau
On 5/22/06, Martin Soltau
Hi again,
this should be my last one for now:
Everytime I start SUSE 10.1 the system time is 2 hours ahead of reality. What happens there and what can I do?
I know this sounds too simple, and if you have already "done that" then excuse me, but it sounds like a simple time zone setting. Have you checked what timezone is configured? In 10.0 one can just right-click on the clock in the panel and choose "adjust date and time" and then pick the correct region and time zone. P
Am Dienstag, 23. Mai 2006 00:33 schrieben Sie:
I know this sounds too simple, and if you have already "done that" then excuse me, but it sounds like a simple time zone setting. Have you checked what timezone is configured?
Been there, done that, and still no solution. Region is Europe, Country is Germany and both is correct... :-( Thank you and regards, Martin Soltau
Martin Soltau wrote:
Am Dienstag, 23. Mai 2006 00:33 schrieben Sie:
I know this sounds too simple, and if you have already "done that" then excuse me, but it sounds like a simple time zone setting. Have you checked what timezone is configured?
Been there, done that, and still no solution. Region is Europe, Country is Germany and both is correct... :-(
This is an issue I have not had time to file a bug report on. After setup runs, even when you set the time and date correctly, time zone, everything for some reason it sets your computers BIOS to GMT. You will notice this if you have a dual boot and boot into windows as well. Even after setting the time correctly in SUSE. The fix is to enter the computers BIOS and reset your time to the proper time. I have not had the time to file a bug report yet, but I can verify this does happen. Regards, Eric Burke
Thank you and regards, Martin Soltau
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 The Monday 2006-05-22 at 16:00 -0700, Eric Burke wrote:
This is an issue I have not had time to file a bug report on. After setup runs, even when you set the time and date correctly, time zone, everything for some reason it sets your computers BIOS to GMT. You will notice this if you have a dual boot and boot into windows as well. Even after setting the time correctly in SUSE. The fix is to enter the computers BIOS and reset your time to the proper time. I have not had the time to file a bug report yet, but I can verify this does happen.
Yast had a setting to configure wether the bios clock stored the time as GMT or local. In the past the default was local, perhaps now it is gmt. You could perhaps check that. - -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76 iD8DBQFEckkctTMYHG2NR9URAqZwAJ9vrk0HsITkrGO8nEz8IBQjSl69ywCfZl0r sUUgfIIPswLO4mL+kKFUFlc= =TjkR -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Carlos E. R. wrote:
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1
The Monday 2006-05-22 at 16:00 -0700, Eric Burke wrote:
This is an issue I have not had time to file a bug report on. After setup runs, even when you set the time and date correctly, time zone, everything for some reason it sets your computers BIOS to GMT. You will notice this if you have a dual boot and boot into windows as well. Even after setting the time correctly in SUSE. The fix is to enter the computers BIOS and reset your time to the proper time. I have not had the time to file a bug report yet, but I can verify this does happen.
Yast had a setting to configure wether the bios clock stored the time as GMT or local. In the past the default was local, perhaps now it is gmt. You could perhaps check that.
I set it to Local when I did the installation. The installer paid no attention to it. It happened with SUSE 10.0 as well, I just never filed the bug report on it. Will try and get that in this week with all system and bios details and such. Regards, Eric Burke
- -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76
iD8DBQFEckkctTMYHG2NR9URAqZwAJ9vrk0HsITkrGO8nEz8IBQjSl69ywCfZl0r sUUgfIIPswLO4mL+kKFUFlc= =TjkR -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Eric Burke wrote:
I set it to Local when I did the installation. The installer paid no attention to it. It happened with SUSE 10.0 as well, I just never filed the bug report on it. Will try and get that in this week with all system and bios details and such.
we are several, so I submitted the bug #177897 (no "GMT" in the search) jdd -- http://www.dodin.net http://dodin.org/galerie_photo_web/expo/index.html http://lucien.dodin.net http://fr.susewiki.org/index.php?title=Gérer_ses_photos
participants (5)
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Carlos E. R.
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Eric Burke
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jdd sur free
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Martin Soltau
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Peter Van Lone