Corey, EST _is_ Australia/Sydney, it's the same timezone, that's how it's written.
On 16/04/12 2:45 PM, Corey Osman wrote: > Weird, it looks likes java is showing two different time zones. > What version of Java are you using? > > > Are you in EST or Australia/Sydney timezone? > > Check /etc/sysconfig/clock for timezone entry and correct if wrong. > > this is mine: > > ZONE="America/Los_Angeles" > > On Apr 15, 2012, at 9:28 PM, Garth Mollett wrote: > >> Doesn't look like it. >> >> If you look at the original code I posted, the issue appears to be in >> the usage of java.text.DateFormat. However not being a java person I >> don't know if it's being misused in OpenNMS or if the issue is with Java >> itself (or another layer, perhaps the OS timezone data files or something). >> >> Here is the results of running your test though in case I am missing >> something: >> >> >> gmollett@onms:~$ locale >> LANG=en_AU.UTF-8 >> LANGUAGE= >> LC_CTYPE="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_NUMERIC="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_TIME="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_COLLATE="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_MONETARY="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_MESSAGES="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_PAPER="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_NAME="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_ADDRESS="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_TELEPHONE="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_MEASUREMENT="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_IDENTIFICATION="en_AU.UTF-8" >> LC_ALL= >> gmollett@onms:~$ java TimeTest >> Current time in milliseconds = 1334549666188 => Mon Apr 16 14:14:26 EST 2012 >> Current time zone: Australia/Sydney >> gmollett@onms:~$ export LANG=C >> gmollett@onms:~$ locale >> LANG=C >> LANGUAGE= >> LC_CTYPE="C" >> LC_NUMERIC="C" >> LC_TIME="C" >> LC_COLLATE="C" >> LC_MONETARY="C" >> LC_MESSAGES="C" >> LC_PAPER="C" >> LC_NAME="C" >> LC_ADDRESS="C" >> LC_TELEPHONE="C" >> LC_MEASUREMENT="C" >> LC_IDENTIFICATION="C" >> LC_ALL= >> gmollett@onms:~$ java TimeTest >> Current time in milliseconds = 1334549679581 => Mon Apr 16 14:14:39 EST 2012 >> Current time zone: Australia/Sydney >> gmollett@onms:~$ date >> Mon Apr 16 14:14:43 EST 2012 >> >> >> >> On 16/04/12 1:46 PM, Corey Osman wrote: >>> import java.util.Date; >>> import java.util.TimeZone; >>> >>> public class TimeTest { >>> >>> public static void main(String args[]) { >>> long time = System.currentTimeMillis(); >>> String millis = Long.toString(time); >>> Date date = new Date(time); >>> System.out.println("Current time in milliseconds = " + millis + " => " >>> + date.toString()); >>> System.out.println("Current time zone: " + >>> TimeZone.getDefault().getID()); >>> } >>> } >> >> >> ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ >> For Developers, A Lot Can Happen In A Second. >> Boundary is the first to Know...and Tell You. >> Monitor Your Applications in Ultra-Fine Resolution. Try it FREE! >> http://p.sf.net/sfu/Boundary-d2dvs2 >> _______________________________________________ >> Please read the OpenNMS Mailing List FAQ: >> http://www.opennms.org/index.php/Mailing_List_FAQ >> >> opennms-devel mailing list >> >> To *unsubscribe* or change your subscription options, see the bottom of this >> page: >> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/opennms-devel > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Live Security Virtual Conference Exclusive live event will cover all the ways today's security and threat landscape has changed and how IT managers can respond. Discussions will include endpoint security, mobile security and the latest in malware threats. http://www.accelacomm.com/jaw/sfrnl04242012/114/50122263/ _______________________________________________ Please read the OpenNMS Mailing List FAQ: http://www.opennms.org/index.php/Mailing_List_FAQ opennms-devel mailing list To *unsubscribe* or change your subscription options, see the bottom of this page: https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/opennms-devel