Is GMT checked in one of the setup options? If so...uncheck it.
HTH
Jaguar

Tom Brinkman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> > > ... but bios, or hardware clock is still wrong
> > > so (as root) run  'hwclock --systohc'
> > 
> > I did this, and then hwclock --show shows the right time.
> > 
> > But When I reboot it still resets itself back -7 hours.
> > 
> > Anybody have any ideas where I would look for something that does this at
> > startup? (or shutdown)
> > 
> > Right not I made a crontab to run every 1/2 hour with Tom's previous
trick.
> > And that seems to keep mrtg happy, but this really bugs me :)
> > 
> > 
> > -Aaron
> 
>   I can't imagine what's wrong Aaron. Anything like Linuxconf or
> 'timetool', is just gonna use 'hwclock' to set the system/bios
> time.  Anyhow, try  again
>    connect, then run the rdate command to a time server. Now, if
> the system time is correct, run  hwclock --systohc  (as root)  which
> should set your hardware clock in bios to the time you just
> corrected in software (system).  If this doesn't work, you've got
> somethin amiss in hardware/bios.
> 
>    Last resort: reboot the system and enter bios, set the correct
> time there.  If this still doesn't work, the next thing would be to
> replace the battery on the motherboard. If this doesn't work, and
> you can't live with the wrong time... replace the motherboard.
> 
>   Always buy the best motherboard you can find, break the piggy
> bank.  Nothing in your system will work better than the motherboard
> will let it or help it to.
> 
>  -- 
> ~~   Tom Brinkman    [EMAIL PROTECTED]


The Dogma chased the Stigma, and was hit by the Karma.

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