On 2013-05-07 11:43 AM, J. Roeleveld <[email protected]> wrote:
Tanstaafl<[email protected]> wrote:
Ok, I've googled and can't figure this out...
/etc/timezone is set to the correct timezone (EST5EDT)
Date command says the server time is correct.
Cron jobs run at the correct times.
EMails generated by cron have a time one hour in the past.
Looking at the email header shows the correct date/time stamps, but
since Thunderbird by default uses the date/time header set by the
client, it shows up as arriving an hour earlier than it actually did.
Anyone?
Check the time in the headers of the email from the cronjob. It might
be that this is caused by a different time (zone) of the mailserver
or machine you are checking mail with.
Nope. It is our mail server, here in our office...
Also, I have rkhunter running on the same machine (job is in
/etc/cron.daily, instead of the root crontab), which generates its own
emails, and those have the correct time on them (header time matches
what is in the log).