Zhiliang Hu <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Thanks for the replies from Martin Gignac and Timothy Mayo --
Did you not get my reply? I already answered your next question:
>I see how now. But for mails sent for local it does not make
>sense to use GMT time stamp. Any way to let it use local time?
TED]>
> Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: time error on qmail
>
> qmail ALWAYS uses UTC when recording dates in the mail headers it
> generates. That is what the '-' means. The difference between UTC
> and CDT is '-0500'. The time stamps are correct you are just misreading
> them. :)
qmail ALWAYS uses UTC when recording dates in the mail headers it
generates. That is what the '-' means. The difference between UTC
and CDT is '-0500'. The time stamps are correct you are just misreading
them. :)
On Thu, 18 May 2000, Zhiliang Hu wrote:
>
> qmail has been working on my si
"Martin Gignac" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>I believe qmail headers use GMT, unlike sendmail which seems to use the
>local TZ.
>
>I don't how and if it's possible to change this, though.
You're right: it uses GMT. One fix is to use "datemail" instead of
"sendmail".
-Dave
IL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, May 18, 2000 1:09 PM
Subject: time error on qmail
>
> qmail has been working on my site for a while. Everything has been
> fine except -
>
> when a mail is trigerred by a CGI program, which is using the "sendmail"
qmail has been working on my site for a while. Everything has been
fine except -
when a mail is trigerred by a CGI program, which is using the "sendmail"
replacement provided by qmail, the time stamp on the qmail delivery lines
are 5 hours ahead of actual time, ALTHOUGH the time generated by th