That's a funny coincidence. I've been dealing with gummed up timestamps today. Turned out to be isolated to the office365 web interface since every other application that interacts with that inbox seems fine, even the native Outlook client.

Nothing is broken since it's just an error in the way office365 displays the internal timestamp. We have a network service running that skims through those messages and if the times jumped around like that then it could doing strange things.

-Ben


On 6/24/20 11:18 AM, Michael Rasmussen wrote:
I was. In my case, it was the web-based email RoundCube.



On 2020-06-24 10:22, Smith, Cathy wrote:
Michael

Are you referring to services?  For example, nfs behaves weirdly when
time isn't sync'd.

--
Cathy L. Smith
IT Engineer

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Operated by Battelle for the
U.S. Department of Energy

Phone: 509.375.2687
Fax:       509.375.4399
Email: [email protected]

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf
Of Michael Rasmussen
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2020 10:04 AM
To: Portland Linux/Unix Group <[email protected]>
Subject: [PLUG] Would you suspect time as being off?

After my "fun" last week (the wandering time) I've added checking time
consistancy to my list of thing to make sure are OK after a big
upgrade.


My question is: would you suspect time being off as a suspect when
other things aren't working?

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