Deirdre Saoirse wrote:
On Wed, 1 Dec 1999, Pierre Rochefort wrote:
You might want to look into the command clock. (Especially the -w option. I believe it's the one that writes the time back to the BIOS clock)
hwclock --systohc
Thanks to both Pierre and Deirdre. The clock and hwclock commands appear to be identical. I used 'hwclock --set --date="..."' first to set the hardware clock, and then 'hwclock --hwtosys' to update the system clock (the system clock was out by an hour too). I reckon this mess was caused by NT (I had to boot into NT for five minutes to get rid of an NTFS partition, but other than that I haven't used NT for months ;-) ). It's fixed now, thanks again, Chris -- __ _ -o)/ / (_)__ __ ____ __ Chris Reeves /\\ /__/ / _ \/ // /\ \/ / ICQ# 22219005 _\_v __/_/_//_/\_,_/ /_/\_\ -- To unsubscribe send e-mail to suse-linux-e-unsubscribe@suse.com For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the FAQ at http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/