Hi, On Fri, May 22, Johannes Kastl wrote:
Hi all,
not sure if this is a regression, if I am missing some configuration or if this is normal behaviour:
I installed openSUSE microOS on a Raspberry Pi 4 (4GB RAM), which works very nice, apart from the fact that the wrong time on boot messes up lots of things.
I checked that chronyd is enabled and has valid upstream servers, and now the time gets set right on each boot.
But for some reason postfix does not like my dependency on chronyd (/etc/systemd/system/postfix.service.d/after_chronyd.conf with Requires= and After=) and always states that the service files have changed and I should trigger a "systemctl daemon-reload". Also, it states that the system is running for 4 weeks, which seems to be from the time before fixing until the correct time. Not really nice.
Sounds like you need to fix the time stamps manual.
I thought there was a "time is set correctly" systemd target, but had no time yet to dig if that is in use on MicroOS.
Yes, there is such a target and I requested that this get activated by default. But it got disabled again, since Tumbleweed Notebook users don't like to configure their system the correct way and all the hacks they are using are breaking boot for them :(
Is this normal behaviour? Or a regression in the latest microOS snapshots?
I don't see any problems with MicroOS and chrony/correct time. But I'm also not using postfix yet (building a container for this use case currently). It just works on my 5 Raspberry Pis. But the images should have chrony configured and enabled by default. Thorsten -- Thorsten Kukuk, Distinguished Engineer, Senior Architect SLES & MicroOS SUSE Software Solutions Germany GmbH, Maxfeldstr. 5, 90409 Nuernberg, Germany Managing Director: Felix Imendoerffer (HRB 36809, AG Nürnberg) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-arm+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-arm+owner@opensuse.org