[gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Randy Barlow
Ever since the new daylight savings change, my clock hasn't done the Spring Forward. I use ntp and the like, and it seems happy being behind by an hour. I can use the date command to set it correctly, but after the next reboot it's back to its old games. Pointers? R -- [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Rostislav
On Thu, 19 Apr 2007, Randy Barlow wrote: Ever since the new daylight savings change, my clock hasn't done the Spring Forward. I use ntp and the like, and it seems happy being behind by an hour. I can use the date command to set it correctly, but after the next reboot it's back to its

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Elias Probst
On Thursday 19 April 2007 09:36:07 Rostislav wrote: Seems like it wasn't changed with daylight savings change. Use hwclock --systohc to set hardware clock to the current system time. If you don't use a dualboot system, just the this option in /etc/conf.d/clock: # If you want to set the

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
On Thursday 19 April 2007 04:10:58 Randy Barlow wrote: Ever since the new daylight savings change, my clock hasn't done the Spring Forward. I use ntp and the like, and it seems happy being behind by an hour. ntp (and the like) use UTC, which does not Spring Forward or Fall Back, as

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Dan Cowsill
I dual boot windows on my system, and for some reason, windows can't keep the time straight after the change. What used to happen is I'd have openntp sync my clock, then restart to play some games. After booting back into Gentoo, ntpd would see such a large difference in what the time is

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
On Thursday 19 April 2007, Dan Cowsill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings': I dual boot windows on my system, and for some reason, windows can't keep the time straight after the change. Windows expects the hardware clock to be in local time. (Open)NTPd

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Neil Walker
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote: Windows expects the hardware clock to be in local time. (Open)NTPd uses UTC for all it's time values. You have to do some magic that I don't know to get Linux/BSD ntp daemons to play well with windows *and* properly correct for time. Well, CLOCK=local in

Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings

2007-04-19 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Thursday 19 April 2007, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote: On Thursday 19 April 2007, Dan Cowsill [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Clock/Daylight Savings': I dual boot windows on my system, and for some reason, windows can't keep the time straight after the change. Windows