On Wed, 2002-10-16 at 21:19, leeyang wrote: > > With 'date -s' command it returned time had been changed. > However after a reset,the time go back to 1970's again :-( > > I try with 'hwclock' and it says below: > > bash-2.04# hwclock --debug > hwclock 2.4c/util-linux-2.11f > Using /dev/rtc interface to clock. > Last drift adjustment done at 0 seconds after 1969 > Last calibration done at 0 seconds after 1969 > Hardware clock is on unknown time > Assuming hardware clock is kept in local time. > Waiting for clock tick... > /dev/rtc does not have interrupt functions. Waiting in loop for time from > /dev/rtc to change > ...got clock tick > Time read from Hardware Clock: 1970/01/09 21:28:28 > Hw clock time : 1970/01/09 21:28:28 = 786508 seconds since 1969 > Fri Jan 9 21:28:28 1970 -0.188839 seconds
`hwclock` with no arguments seems to be the same as `hwclock --show`. I would recommend `hwclock -w`. -Hollis ** Sent via the linuxppc-embedded mail list. See http://lists.linuxppc.org/