Mike Gilbert <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Tue, May 27, 2014 at 5:07 AM, <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Neil Bothwick <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >> On Tue, 27 May 2014 01:37:17 -0400, [email protected] wrote:
> >>
> >> > OK, thanks, I have no /etc/adjtime at all, and I have two files,
> >> > /etc/localtime (not a link) and /etc/timezone. Should I delete the
> >> > later and change the former to a link?
> >>
> >> No. Gentoo copies the correct file from /usr/share/zoneinfo rather than
> >> making a symlink, so that it still works if /usr is a separate filesystem
> >> that has not yet been mounted - the clock is set before local filesystems
> >> are mounted. It uses the contents of /etc/timezone to determine which
> >> file to copy.
> >>
> >> Check that /etc/timezone is correct. If not, change it and either copy
> >> the correct file manaually or re-emerge sys-libs/timezone-data.
> >
> > /etc/timezone is correct. I wonder when systemd using dracut sets the
> > time, maybe its confused. I don't see it using hwclock like openrc used
> > to, but I found an hwclock unit somewhere, should I try to use that?
> >
> >
>
> I believe systemd-timedated should take care of it.
>
> Going back to the /etc/adjtime file that jcallen referred to: You can
> create the file and set it to LOCAL by running "timedatectl
> set-local-rtc 1".
OK, I will do and see what happens on the next reboot.
--
Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is:
How do
you spend it?
John Covici
[email protected]