Am Samstag, 1. September 2012, 00:00:07 schrieb Roger Oberholtzer:
On openSUSE 12.1 with KDE 4.9 (same with 4.8 and earlier) when I start my network via NetworkManager (wired or wireless), NTP seems not quite right.
Using openSUSE 12.1 with KDE 4.7 and wireless autoconnection on KDE login, it seems to work fine. At least "ntpdc -p" shows an increasing "reach" state and finally marks the ntp server with an "*".
I is runnuig. [...] # rcntp status [...] Active: inactive (dead) since Fri, 31 Aug 2012 21:13:26 [...]
That does not look like it is running! The line should say " Active: active (running)". What does "ntpdc -p" say?
# date Sat Sep 1 01:52:46 CEST 2012
# rcntp restart redirecting to systemctl
# date Fri Aug 31 23:53:46 CEST 2012
The final date after the restart is correct.
Looks your hardware clock is in local time and Linux does not know about it and thinks it is in UTC and, thus, adds 2h! Maybe you have a dual-boot system and Windows changes the time to local time. Check the HWCLOCK option in /etc/sysconfig/clock.
Have I missed doing something?
Try to use the IP address of the ntp server instead its host name. I use the ntp server of my ISP or the built-in one of my WLAN router. Gruß Jan -- The knowledge that a secret exists is half the secret. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org