On Tue, 18 Feb 1997, Richard Heller wrote: > Hi, > > This is my third try. The first time I wrote the wrong address to send to, > the second time I got blocked by the "spam filter" because I've never posted > anything before, so third time's a charm,right? Ok, I have Debian Linux 1.1 > and the clock displays the wrong time. The time's ok under dos, but not under > Linux. I think maybe I answered one of the questions wrong when installing, > but that was a while ago and by now I have too much stuff set up to reinstall. > How do I reconfigure the clock without reinstalling? > > Thanks, > Rich
It sounds like you either have your system clock set to GMT time but not your linux system, or the other way around. Look in /etc/init.d/boot for a line at the top that defines the variable GMT. If this is set to "" (a null string), then linux thinks your system clock is not set to GMT time. If it is, you need to change this definition to be "-u". That should fix it on the next boot up. To fix it ASAP, run the "clock -a" command with the correct flag (e.g. if GMT should be defined as -u, run clock -a -u -- if its already defined as -u and you changed it to a null string, run clock -a). I hope that solves it for you. If it doesn't, I don't know what's wrong. Good luck. Richard G. Roberto [EMAIL PROTECTED] 011-81-3-3437-7967 - Tokyo, Japan -- ******************************************************************************* Bear Stearns is not responsible for any recommendation, solicitation, offer or agreement or any information about any transaction, customer account or account activity contained in this communication. ******************************************************************************* -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED]