On Thu, 29 Jun 2000, Jeremy Wadsack wrote:

> 
> 
> Michael Packer wrote:
> 
> > I'm running Analog under Redhat 6.2 (new installation) and have got a weird
> > problem i don't understand
> >
> > when i type date i get:
> >
> > thu jun 29 09:45:57 EDT 2000
> >
> > when i run analog right after that the top says the following:
> >
> > Program started at Thu-29-Jun-2000 13:45
> > Analysed requests from Thu-29-Jun-2000 00:00 to Thu-29-Jun-2000 09:46 (0.4
> > days).
> >
> > where in the world is it getting 13:45 from? it's always 4 hours ahead of
> > the system clock.
> 
> Four hours ahead of EDT is GMT/ZT/UMT. When you setup Redhat, did you select
> the 'set clock to UMT' option? Perhaps your hardware clock is at UMT but the
> date command knows enough to read your timezone for you locale.
> 

Analog should pick up the same time as the date command too, I think,
although I can't test this easily as all my computers also run a broken OS
which insists on keeping the hardware clock at local time. But you don't
have a TIMEOFFSET command in your analog.cfg, do you?

-- 
Stephen Turner               http://www.statslab.cam.ac.uk/~sret1/
  Statistical Laboratory, Wilberforce Road, Cambridge, CB3 0WB, England
  "The new operating system will recover more easily from system crashes."
                          (Microsoft, aiming high with Windows Millennium)

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