Additionally, I know there is a package called "fake-hwclock" which
simulates an rtc for those systems that do not have. One, so was going to
suggest perhaps looking over the code. But seems largely  moot now.

On Sun, Jan 10, 2016 at 4:05 PM, William Hermans <[email protected]> wrote:

> *HI WIlliam,*
>>
>> *Thank you for getting back to my post, really appreciate your time.*
>> *However, your solution is the same approach as I mentioned my initial
>> post (**hwclock -r -f /dev/rtc1).*
>>
>
> Yeah, I did not realize until after I posted. I figured it would require
> "hacking" the kernel(otherwise), but looks like you've found something that
> will work better for you.
>
> On Sun, Jan 10, 2016 at 12:32 PM, Robert Hurd <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> Actually, on reflection there's another file that should be edited and
>> not the one I posted above.
>>
>> *root:# *nano /etc/default/hwclock
>>
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>

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