> Omer Musaev wrote:
>
> > :) That is nice, never would think about it:)
> > However, the machine seems to reset its time every night.
>
> You probably have some type of cron job that resyncs the system clock
> with the hardware clock. Redhat does it, I don't know about anyone else.
>
Isn't
Omer Musaev wrote:
> :) That is nice, never would think about it:)
> However, the machine seems to reset its time every night.
You probably have some type of cron job that resyncs the system clock
with the hardware clock. Redhat does it, I don't know about anyone else.
Geoff.
--
Geoffrey S.
>
>
> Shaul Karl wrote:
>
> > As someone else has implied, 1 hour is the difference between the winter and
> > the summer clocks. Therefore, it might be that the system tries to get back to
> > winter clock (no day light saving time). The cause might be that you have not
> > updated the Israel
Shaul Karl wrote:
> As someone else has implied, 1 hour is the difference between the winter and
> the summer clocks. Therefore, it might be that the system tries to get back to
> winter clock (no day light saving time). The cause might be that you have not
> updated the Israel zoneinfo file.
>
On Wed, 20 Sep 2000, Jonathan Ben-Avraham wrote:
> > 2. write a cron job that will write the time into a file, once a minute.
>
> Been there done that...
> Took me a long time to realize that cron can't be used to diagnose clock
> troubles. IMHO cron is a victim of the problem, no
As someone else has implied, 1 hour is the difference between the winter and
the summer clocks. Therefore, it might be that the system tries to get back to
winter clock (no day light saving time). The cause might be that you have not
updated the Israel zoneinfo file.
Here is the relevant part
Afer you find out the hour it happened in
Check NASA logs for UFO acitivity around your house
I heard missing time usually happens then
Ely Levy
System group
Hebrew University
Jerusalem Israel
On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, guy keren wrote:
|
| On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, Omer Musaev wrote:
|
| > Syste
Jonathan Ben-Avraham wrote:
> On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, guy keren wrote:
>
> >
> > On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, Omer Musaev wrote:
> >
> > > System time jumps one hour backwords once a day (a night).
> > > There is no rdate, ntpdate, or similar on cron.
> > > There is no apmd running.
> > > There is no ntpd
On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, guy keren wrote:
>
> On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, Omer Musaev wrote:
>
> > System time jumps one hour backwords once a day (a night).
> > There is no rdate, ntpdate, or similar on cron.
> > There is no apmd running.
> > There is no ntpd or xntpd running.
> > There is no timezone, s
On Tue, 19 Sep 2000, Omer Musaev wrote:
> System time jumps one hour backwords once a day (a night).
> There is no rdate, ntpdate, or similar on cron.
> There is no apmd running.
> There is no ntpd or xntpd running.
> There is no timezone, since system time is stored in RTC.
i would suggest the
ssage -
From: "Omer Musaev" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2000 8:05 PM
Subject: (Not so) Stupid question
> I have a strange problem on one of my machines:
>
> System time jumps one hour backwords once a day (a night).
> Th
I have a strange problem on one of my machines:
System time jumps one hour backwords once a day (a night).
There is no rdate, ntpdate, or similar on cron.
There is no apmd running.
There is no ntpd or xntpd running.
There is no timezone, since system time is stored in RTC.
I want to set that mac
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