On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 05:19:39PM -0500, Jeff McClure wrote:
Quoting Francesco Paolo Lovergine [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Would you please run proftpd with -d10
and check what's the TZ used at login?
Short answer: when DefaultRoot is in effect, TZ is being set to CST.
When DefaultRoot is not in
On Wed, Aug 02, 2006 at 08:49:16AM -0500, Jeff McClure wrote:
Quoting Francesco P. Lovergine [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Would you please ls -l /etc/localtime
and see what does it link?
On my system, /etc/localtime is a real file instead of a symlink. The
following command produces no output, so
Quoting Francesco Paolo Lovergine [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
uhm
TZ=US/Central date
gives me
Wed Aug 2 09:43:49 CDT 2006
which is different from
TZ=CST date
Wed Aug 2 14:44:54 CST 2006
which indeed is the same as GMT. Would you please re-tzconfig with your TZ?
I think we're getting close to
Quoting Francesco P. Lovergine [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Would you please ls -l /etc/localtime
and see what does it link?
On my system, /etc/localtime is a real file instead of a symlink. The
following command produces no output, so the two files are identical.
cmp -l /etc/localtime
reassign 380667 libc6
thanks
CST is returned by tzname[0] so basically it is a broken value set for
some timezones. A nice libc bug, not a proftpd one. There's surely
some mergeable bug around for other programs ...
On Wed, Aug 02, 2006 at 10:21:25AM -0500, Jeff McClure wrote:
Quoting
On Tue, Aug 01, 2006 at 02:08:24PM -0500, Jeff McClure wrote:
I should have copied you on this. See below.
- Forwarded message from [EMAIL PROTECTED] -
Date: Tue, 01 Aug 2006 14:03:03 -0500
From: Jeff McClure [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: Jeff McClure [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:
Quoting Francesco Paolo Lovergine [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Would you please run proftpd with -d10
and check what's the TZ used at login?
Short answer: when DefaultRoot is in effect, TZ is being set to CST.
When DefaultRoot is not in effect, TZ does not appear to be explicity
set at all.
For the
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