On Wed, Jul 09, 2014 at 08:02:53PM -0400, Jon LaBadie wrote: > Emperical test, I'm in the Eastern US (EDT -4:00) > I sent myself a message on another system using an > altered TZ variable. > > TZ=PST8PDT mutt j...@mums.jgcomp.com > > I'm old fashioned, so I used the old style TZ settings > for Western US. > > The header "Date:" showed the PDT date/time. > The first "Received:" header showed the local system > received it using the actual local time (EDT).
Thank you for testing and reporting. I would say that that is just as it should be. It *may* be possible to have your local timezone forwarded automatically with your remote connection. For example: if you set TZ in your local environment, OpenSSH will try to set it in the remote shell process. The remote sshd would have to be configured to permit this. (See SendEnv in ssh_config(5) and AcceptEnv in sshd_config(5), as well as ssh(1), for more details, IF you use OpenSSH.) No matter what you use to connect, this will likely require cooperation from the remote sysadmin. -- Mark H. Wood, Lead System Programmer mw...@iupui.edu Machines should not be friendly. Machines should be obedient.
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