[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > I'm in the Newfoundland timezone and exporting the TZ variable to > "Canada/Newfoundland" then restarting the ntpd process keeps my clock > one hour before the actual time.
> Is there a problem since the Day Light Savings came into affect the > other day? My computer's time has been an hour behind ever since. Perhaps your computer's understanding of what 'Canada/Newfoundland' means is not up to date. I believe that you should be 2.5 hours behind UTC at this point. Do a 'date -u' and see if that is accurately reflecting UTC. That's all that NTP will do. If 'date -u' is correct and 'date' is incorrect, then your computer's timezone definitions are out-of-date. Update them with whatever method is correct for your OS. > My TZ variable: > TZ=Canada/Newfoundland Running 'zdump -v Canada/Newfoundland | grep 2007' on your computer may also be illuminating, but has nothing to do with NTP. -- Darren Dunham [EMAIL PROTECTED] Senior Technical Consultant TAOS http://www.taos.com/ Got some Dr Pepper? San Francisco, CA bay area < This line left intentionally blank to confuse you. > _______________________________________________ questions mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ntp.isc.org/mailman/listinfo/questions
