On Montag, 20. März 2017 16:11:10 CET Eric Curtin wrote:
Yeah "iburst" was all that this needed. It's perfect for my needs at least. Haven't seen anything like that in my dracut scripts either. Similar to Per, I may not be looking for the right thing.
On 17 March 2017 at 12:14, Per Jessen <per@computer.org> wrote:
Alexander Graf wrote:
The way this usually gets handled in openSUSE is by reading the unmount time of your root file system. There should be a script in dracut that finds out when your rootfs was last unmounted and sets the system time to that if the system time is bogus.
I'm not quite sure why that doesn't kick in for you. Maybe it only works on ext4?
I looked through the dracut scripts (usr/lib/dracut), I can't find anything like that. Maybe I'm not looking for the right thing.
While ext filesystems have a mount time stamp in the superblock, at least btrfs has none, so the filesystems as time source is not always available. You may use systemd-timesyncd instead. It touches /var/lib/systemd/clock each NTP poll interval (i.e. starting with 32 seconds, exponential backoff up to 34 minutes), and uses the file timestamp on startup. Kind regards, Stefan-- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-arm+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-arm+owner@opensuse.org