The binary you want is...
adjkerntz
Just look at the man page for instructions. It adjusts the CMOS clock,
although I have never used it.
Brennan Stehling - web developer and sys admin
projects: www.onmilwaukee.com | www.sncalumni.com
fortune:
Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of tapes.
-- Dr. Warren Jackson, Director, UTCS
On Tue, 4 Apr 2000, Michel TALON wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 03, 2000 at 08:34:37PM -0400, Colin wrote:
> > Had you booted the Win side first, then the FreeBSD side, you would have
> > seen FreeBSD trying to move the clock ahead "2" hours. It knows it hasn't moved
> > the time ahead yet so it adds 1 hour to the current BIOS time, which had
> > already been moved ahead by the previous OS boot.
> > You'll see this behaviour on any dual boot system.
> >
>
> I have observed exactly the opposite. I think i installed my laptop
> saying that the correct time was on the cmos clock. Then when i
> booted freebsd, no time adjustment was done. After that i booted Win
> who adjusted the cmos clock. Rebooting freebsd, the time was correct.
> So all this depends how you have installed freebsd. Unfortunately
> i have not been able to find the command line tool to adjust this.
>
> --
>
> Michel TALON
>
>
>
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