On Thursday 15 March 2007 10:52 pm, Matt Kettler wrote:
Is there something such as /var/spool/postfix/etc/localtime that has to
be changed somewhere in spamassassin? Never had an issue like this in
previous years with DST. I've stopped and started spamassassin several
times with no
Matt Kettler wrote:
Chris wrote:
I'm running Mandrake 10.1, in order to make sure my system switched to DST on
March 11th I downloaded and installed an upgrade to the timezone file. After
running it I ran
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# zdump -v /etc/localtime | grep 2007
/etc/localtime Sun Mar 11
On Fri, 16 Mar 2007, Jim Maul wrote:
I found that while the OS itself did change over, most of the
programs running at the time did not. I had to restart sendmail,
syslog, apache, crond, mysql, etc. From what i understand, some
programs read the timzone info when they start up and do not
On Friday 16 March 2007 9:43 am, Chris St. Pierre wrote:
On Fri, 16 Mar 2007, Jim Maul wrote:
I found that while the OS itself did change over, most of the
programs running at the time did not. I had to restart sendmail,
syslog, apache, crond, mysql, etc. From what i understand, some
I'm running Mandrake 10.1, in order to make sure my system switched to DST on
March 11th I downloaded and installed an upgrade to the timezone file. After
running it I ran
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# zdump -v /etc/localtime | grep 2007
/etc/localtime Sun Mar 11 07:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Mar 11
Chris wrote:
I'm running Mandrake 10.1, in order to make sure my system switched to DST on
March 11th I downloaded and installed an upgrade to the timezone file. After
running it I ran
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~]# zdump -v /etc/localtime | grep 2007
/etc/localtime Sun Mar 11 07:59:59 2007 UTC =