-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 The Wednesday 2006-12-20 at 18:55 -0000, Jim McKean wrote:
FYI I am in US Eastern time, same as New York.
I have my system clock set with ntpdate in cron (this is a laptop that spends a lot of time off net). This has been set up this way for a long time and has worked smoothly.
Right now, it is actually 1:36 pm local time.
the system clock is
date Wed Dec 20 18:36:43 UTC 2006
That means that the locale setting for that user (or system wide) is UTC. The system setting would be stored in "/etc/localtime", a binary file copied by Yast from somewhere else (doesn't matter). It may be wrong/bad. The user setting would be the variable TZ: cer@nimrodel:~> date ; TZ=EST date ; TZ=UTC date Wed Dec 20 21:52:20 CET 2006 Wed Dec 20 15:52:20 EST 2006 Wed Dec 20 20:52:20 UTC 2006
The clock applet shows 6:36 pm
Matches.
starting YAST and looking at the time admin panel, I see that the region is set to USA, the Time Zone is set to Eastern, Hardware clock is set to "UTC" and actual time and date is set to 13:36.
13:36 local time, I assume.
I save (without changing anything) and now the applet correctly reads 1:36 (well, 1:41 now). All is well until ---
-- ntpdate runs and the clock applet rolls back to 6:56 pm (I am a slow writer, ignore the minutes)
I guess it does that because your clock shows local time but says it is UTC time. Check settings in "/etc/sysconfig/clock". Or do the procedure in Yast you did, but do change something, then enter again and change back. Having the HW clock in UTC is the recommended thing in linux, unless you double boot to windows, by the way. - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.2 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76 iD8DBQFFiaKntTMYHG2NR9URAmc3AJ4hULTPelBUDRmeyfV5snDH4oIPwgCeMI3d tn2ugYYBPmTjaNNYhFeZ+SQ= =qZMS -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org