"Michael Doerner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

> BUT, after the next rebooting the time is gone back an hour again and I will
> have to start the whole story again which I can't believe to be the proper
> way.

Sounds like your CMOS clock has gotten set back an hour.  You are resetting 
the system clock in linux, but the CMOS clock is still an hour off.  The
clock command checks and sets the CMOS clock.  Man clock for details.

#clock -r       to read the CMOS clock.  I'll bet it's an hour off.

Get your system clock set right, as you have been doing, then as root,

#clock -w       to write correct system time to the CMOS clock.  

You might want to do clock -r again just to be sure it worked.  Then next
time you reboot, your time should be right.


-- 

Bud Rogers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   http://www.sirinet.net/~budr/zamm.html
--
To get out of this list, please send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with
this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e
Check out the SuSE-FAQ at http://www.suse.com/Support/Doku/FAQ/ and the
archive at http://www.suse.com/Mailinglists/suse-linux-e/index.html

Reply via email to