).
Best regards,
André
Am 10.12.2016 um 18:01 schrieb Martin Pitt:
Hello André,
André Hartmann [2016-12-09 10:46 +0100]:
To sum up again what I actually want to achive:
I want to use NTP after bootup by default, but in case no NTP is available,
the user should be able to set the date and time by
Hi Michael,
Am 09.12.2016 um 12:43 schrieb Michael Chapman:
On Fri, 9 Dec 2016, Michael Chapman wrote:
[...]
You will need to use the .service extension on at least the first of
those links. systemd will only consider links in that directory that
have valid unit names. (I'm pretty sure the inte
Hi Michael,
Am 09.12.2016 um 10:25 schrieb Michael Chapman:
On Thu, 8 Dec 2016, André Hartmann wrote:
[...]
Which confuses me is the inconsistency between
"systemctl status systemd.timesyncd" and "timedatectl status":
# systemctl status systemd.timesyncd
* systemd.timesyn
Hi Martin,
thanks for keeping our dialog alive :)
To sum up again what I actually want to achive:
I want to use NTP after bootup by default, but in case no NTP is
available, the user should be able to set the date and time by hand
with timedatectl. But timedatectl refuses to do so, if "NTP is
Hi Martin,
Am 04.12.2016 um 17:48 schrieb Martin Pitt:
Hello André,
André Hartmann [2016-12-01 11:20 +0100]:
In other words: once this symlink is valid, you cannot invalidate it by
make it a dangling symlink, you have to remove it. Can somebody confirm this
observation?
Not a dangling one
Hi Martin,
Am 01.12.2016 um 10:20 schrieb Martin Pitt:
Hello André,
André Hartmann [2016-12-01 9:50 +0100]:
So I naively created the following link structure (which works):
/etc/systemd/system/sysinit.target.wants/systemd-timesyncd.service ->
/mnt/writeable/systemd-timesyncd ->
/lib/s
Hi, I'm running systemd [1] on an embbeded Linux with
read-only filesystem. Due to missing realtime clock,
I'd like to set the clock by either NTP or by hand.
To set the time by hand with 'timedatectl set-time "time"',
NTP has to be disabled, but I cannot run 'timedatectl set-ntp false'
due to th