24 P0P?QP5P;Q 2012B P3. 16:35 P?P>P;QP7P>P2P0QP5P;Q Stuart Henderson
<[email protected]> P=P0P?P8QP0P;:
> On 2012/04/24 16:27, Vadim Zhukov wrote:
>> 23 P0P?QP5P;Q B 2012B P3. 21:37 P?P>P;Q P7P>P2P0Q P5P;Q Matthew Dempsky
>> <[email protected]> P=P0P?P8Q P0P;:
>> > There's no reason for the kernel to track the system's timezone
>> > anymore. B This is handled in userspace by the TZ environment variable,
>> > and POSIX doesn't even define what happens if you pass a non-NULL
>> > pointer as the 'struct timezone *' argument to gettimeofday() (and
>> > settimeofday() has never been in POSIX).
>> >
>> > The diff below:
>> > B - eliminates tz
>> > B - adds a compile-time check to detect configs with non-0 timezone
>> > B - changes settimeofday() to return EINVAL when given a non-0 timezone
>> > B - eliminates the userconf code for changing/printing the timezone
>> > B - removes clock and msdosfs code that looks at the kernel timezone
>> >
>> > After this, we'll be able to move gettimeofday() and settimeofday()
>> > into libc as user-space wrappers around clock_gettime() and
>> > clock_settime(), respectively.
>> >
>> > Any objections?
>>
>> This will somewhat break dual-booting machines with Windblows as
>> second OS. :( But I'm not a developer and do not have any vote, of
>> course. :)
>
> It seems simpler to use NTP to fetch a correct time, than to build a custom
kernel.

Yes, if your laptop is always online when you boot in OpenBSD. :-\

And this was not about building custom kernel, single config(8) call
at the end of OS upgrade process works just fine ATM.

Oh, and I don't want to attack or stop anyone hacking OpenBSD. :)
--
  WBR,
  Vadim Zhukov

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