Am Samstag, 1. September 2012, 09:26:10 schrieb Ken Schneider - openSUSE:
[...] No you haven't. The problem is that ntp tries to run during bootup but without a running network it fails. I have this same problem on my laptop even though I have the wireless set to start at boot time, ntp startup is before (network manager) network startup.
I do not think so: I have the wireless set to start at KDE login time and configured ntp to start at boot time. Thus, ntp will always fail at boot time. Nonetheless, it perfectly synchronizes later. So, try to give it the IP address of your local caching/proxy ntp in your wireless router or the one(s) of your ISP. This works for me. Please note: I am not sure that this still needed but it was a workaround I found some years ago. Nowadays ntp notices when an interface goes up or down. HTH Jan -- A penny saved is ridiculous. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org