On 3/12/07, Albert Hopkins <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Mark,

First, I too have a host named "dragonfly"... did you happen to root my
box? ;-)

No, my wife watches 'Gilmore Girls' and there is a business on that
show called the Dragonfly Inn' so she chose dragonfly. I like the name
though.


On Mon, 2007-03-12 at 08:30 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
> Yes, I saw Roger's post in another thread which I copied here. I did
> all that and ran zdump. It looks similar to Rogers. I'm in California:
>
> <QUOTE>
> 1) Sync.
>
> (2) emerge timezone-data (should be >= 2006p)
>
> (3) set TIMEZONE="Canada/Newfoundland" in /etc/conf.d/clock (adjust
>    for your local time zone).
>
Not sure, if you are living in California, that you set your timezone to
Canada/Newfoundland... though admittedly, I don't know the TZ rules in
Canada.  Did they too change their DST dates?

No, I should have said that I set TIMEZONE="America/Los_Angeles" even
though I'm north in the SF Bay Area.

<SNIP>
>
> And here is mine:
>
> dragonfly ~ # zdump -v /etc/localtime | grep 2007
> /etc/localtime  Sun Mar 11 09:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Mar 11 01:59:59
> 2007 PST isdst=0
> /etc/localtime  Sun Mar 11 10:00:00 2007 UTC = Sun Mar 11 03:00:00
> 2007 PDT isdst=1
> /etc/localtime  Sun Nov  4 08:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Nov  4 01:59:59
> 2007 PDT isdst=1
> /etc/localtime  Sun Nov  4 09:00:00 2007 UTC = Sun Nov  4 01:00:00
> 2007 PST isdst=0
> dragonfly ~ #
>
> dragonfly ~ # date
> Mon Mar 12 08:29:08 PDT 2007
> dragonfly ~ #
>
>
> The problem I'm having is that I don't know how to figure out if the
> machine would have the correct date when I reboot.

You don't need to reboot.  Well, maybe if you made this change recently
(e.g. after DST changed) you do.

I did, and I have rebooted. I *think* things are right but I'm trying
to be careful. There seem to have MythTV problems all over the place
yesterday with Zap2It labs possibly having shows at the wrong times,
etc., so it's unclear where all the problems might be.

But basically what you are seeing
(from zdump) looks ok to me, meaning at 11 Mar 10:00:00 UTC your local
time is 3:00 AM and DST switches on. and on 4 Nov 9:00:00 UTC your local
time is 1:00 AM and DST switches off.


Humm...........humm.......humm.......<crash>

OK, I need to go read somewhere. Actually, that part you wrote is very
clear, but isn't UTC time the same as Greenwich Mean Time? Maybe GMT
isn't effected by DST?

I normally think of California being 8 hours behind GMT. 3AM seems to
be 7 hours behind UTC and not 8 hours. Since we got DST 3 weeks early
maybe GMT didn't shift yet? Or maybe GMT never shifts?

Leave it to the American government to create world wide problems.
(Not the first time, obviously and unfortunately not the last.)

Thanks,
Mark
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