It's time :-) to understand why my DEBIAN/GNU/LINUX system
thinks that the "BIOS time" is set up as the GMT time and
shift it to the "local" time.

1- what part of the system controls this behavior ? is
there only a flag somewhere whose value could be only GMT
or LOCAL ?

2- how can i change this behavior ?

When Linux starts it reads a time from the Real-Time Clock (aka BIOS clock). 
This time is used to set the initial system time; the system time is always UTC 
and whatever timezone you have is easily calculated from that (provided you 
have the timezone files which describe the often ridiculous political rules for 
local time). By default, the user is always presented with a local time despite 
the fact that the system is maintaining UTC.

Under UNIX it has always been possible for every single process to set its own 
local time - so people in New York and Sydney can log into the same machine and 
see their own time.  WinDos is vastly inferior and after 30 years M$ still have 
not learned how to manage time.

To instruct your system tools to interpret the RTC time as UTC or localtime, 
first set the system-wide timezone in /etc/timezone (you can use the tzselect 
tool for this). Then edit the /etc/default/rcS file and make sure you have an 
entry like:
UTC=no  (if you want the RTC to store local time)
UTC=yes (if you want a sensible time)
Note that when the systems shut down (WinDos and Linux alike), the scripts will 
usually update the RTC.  If you don't use UTC only (UTC makes life difficult 
with WinDos), very stupid things happen in timezones with Daylight Savings Time 
when the time is altered by a step of 1 hour.

Now, just to make sure the RTC (aka hardware clock) is correctly set (whatever that 
means), you need to first issue a "date" command to change to your current 
local time/date:
date -s "07 Sep 2007 18:00:46.25"
(you can add  '-u' to parameters if you want to specify a UTC date) That will 
reset your system clock - now to reset the RTC:

hwclock --localtime --systohc  (to write a political time into the RTC)

hwclock -u --systohc (to write UTC to the RTC)

By the way, the astronomical community has been trying to eradicate the use of 
"GMT" for over 60 years now. As of 1986 (consult the Royal Astronomical Almanac 
of that year), GMT was officially abolished.


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