Thanks all,
    It was the /etc/adjtime as Tim Hockin had stated, that seems to have fixed the
problem.

> > Maybe I was not clear in my first email or maybe I am confused.  The only time
> > the clock gets skewed is when I reboot or shutdown and then have to restart.
>
> if you have a file /etc/adjtime, you may have a drift value that is based
> on erroneous data.  If there is a file /etc/adjtime, delete it.  Set the
> time (clock -w), delete it again, set the time again.  This will establish
> a drift of almost nothing. Now reboot.  On reboot most systems that use
> hwclock do --adjust - which looks at your drift value.  From here out it
> should work.
>
> Of course, you may just have a bad clock, but I ran into this just
> recently.

--
Joe Acosta ........
home: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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