[solved] Re: Stretch changes the time of my laptop
On Wed, Jan 18, 2017 at 11:06:06AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote: > Date: Wed, 18 Jan 2017 11:06:06 -0500 > From: Felix Miata <mrma...@earthlink.net> > To: debian-user@lists.debian.org > Subject: Re: Stretch changes the time of my laptop > Gerard ROBIN composed on 2017-01-18 14:33 (UTC+0100): > > >I installed stretch on a external usb hard drive and when I boot on the > >had drive and I shut down, then I boot again, but on the internal hard > >drive, with jessie, the time is delayed by one hour. > > >I would like to know if this is normal, and if not what can I do to fix > >the problem ? (Without going into the bios or using date ...) > > >It's a old laptop acer aspire 5102 wlmi > > Check to see if /etc/adjtime in both installations is different. One is > probably UTC and the other LOCAL. If one hard drive contains Windows and the > other does not, more than likely the one with Windows says LOCAL and the > other says UTC. Synchronizing both should eliminate the clock changing. Good diagnosis the problem is solved. In stretch it was UTC and in jessie LOCAL Thank you to all those who helped me. -- Gerard ___ *** * Created with "mutt 1.5.23" * * under Debian Linux JESSIE version 8.7 * * Registered Linux User #388243 * * https://Linuxcounter.net * ***
Re: Stretch changes the time of my laptop
Lisi Reisz wrote: > On Wednesday 18 January 2017 13:33:38 Gerard ROBIN wrote: >> Hello, >> I installed stretch on a external usb hard drive and when I boot on the >> had drive and I shut down, then I boot again, but on the internal hard >> drive, with jessie, the time is delayed by one hour. >> >> I would like to know if this is normal, and if not what can I do to fix >> the problem ? (Without going into the bios or using date ...) >> >> It's a old laptop acer aspire 5102 wlmi >> >> tia > > For those not on email clients that volunteer the information, Gerard is > on UTC+1, so his Jessie installation is reverting to UTC. > > Lisi Happend to me last week after installing jessie from scratch ... well I debootstrapped it, but anyway default was UTC, so dpkg-reconfigure tzdata solved it. you can also put the correct timezone in /etc/timezone. Report if it does not help. regards
Re: Stretch changes the time of my laptop
Gerard ROBIN composed on 2017-01-18 14:33 (UTC+0100): I installed stretch on a external usb hard drive and when I boot on the had drive and I shut down, then I boot again, but on the internal hard drive, with jessie, the time is delayed by one hour. I would like to know if this is normal, and if not what can I do to fix the problem ? (Without going into the bios or using date ...) It's a old laptop acer aspire 5102 wlmi Check to see if /etc/adjtime in both installations is different. One is probably UTC and the other LOCAL. If one hard drive contains Windows and the other does not, more than likely the one with Windows says LOCAL and the other says UTC. Synchronizing both should eliminate the clock changing. -- "The wise are known for their understanding, and pleasant words are persuasive." Proverbs 16:21 (New Living Translation) Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata *** http://fm.no-ip.com/
Re: Stretch changes the time of my laptop
On Wednesday 18 January 2017 13:33:38 Gerard ROBIN wrote: > Hello, > I installed stretch on a external usb hard drive and when I boot on the > had drive and I shut down, then I boot again, but on the internal hard > drive, with jessie, the time is delayed by one hour. > > I would like to know if this is normal, and if not what can I do to fix > the problem ? (Without going into the bios or using date ...) > > It's a old laptop acer aspire 5102 wlmi > > tia For those not on email clients that volunteer the information, Gerard is on UTC+1, so his Jessie installation is reverting to UTC. Lisi
Stretch changes the time of my laptop
Hello, I installed stretch on a external usb hard drive and when I boot on the had drive and I shut down, then I boot again, but on the internal hard drive, with jessie, the time is delayed by one hour. I would like to know if this is normal, and if not what can I do to fix the problem ? (Without going into the bios or using date ...) It's a old laptop acer aspire 5102 wlmi tia -- Gerard ___ *** * Created with "mutt 1.5.23" * * under Debian Linux JESSIE version 8.6 * * Registered Linux User #388243 * * https://Linuxcounter.net * ***