Aargh!  Nevermind, I just realized why I did set a hardvalue in the
kernel config.  I did this so that qmail would show the time as GMT and
not MET  ie. qmail used the MET time which is GMT+1 but it still wrote
it as -0000.  When setting a hard value of -60 in the kernel the error
was fixed.

Sorry about confusing things a bit...

/M

On Thu, Mar 01, 2001 at 11:44:50PM +0100, Martin Akesson mumbled:
> On Thu, Mar 01, 2001 at 03:57:32PM -0600, David Dyer-Bennet mumbled:
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Kari Suomela) writes:
> > 
> > > How do I get Qmail to include the proper time zone info in the 
> > > messages? My sendmail machines have it, but anything coming from Qmail 
> > > has -0000. The machines are otherwise identical RH 7.0 boxes.
> > 
> > Basically, you won't.  Qmail is putting in the time correctly, but
> > it's stating it in GMT.  This is actually more useful; mail often
> 
> Actually that's not quit true.  On my OpenBSD system I set my timezone
> in the kernel configuration.  If you look in the headers of this mail
> you will see I have GMT+1 (MET).
> 
> Not sure how, if possible, you set the timezone with a "hard" value on a
> Linux system.
> 
> /Martin

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