On (11/10/05 11:04), Antony Gelberg wrote: > Clive Menzies wrote: > > However, what the OP needed to do was 'not' set the system clock to the > > hardware clock; it seems to avoid time conflicts on multi-boot systems. > > During the install you're asked whether to set the system clock to the > > hardware clock. If you answer 'yes' it seems to screw around with the > > time between Windows (or MacOSX) and Debian. > > > > I was trying to suggest ways to reverse the 'yes' answer post install. > > If it's not in base-config, what's the easiest/most elegant way to do > > this? > > Edit the line in /etc/default/rcS: > # Set UTC=yes if your system clock is set to UTC (GMT), and UTC=no if not. > UTC=yes > > I arrived at this conclusion by reading the comments at the top of > /etc/init.d/hwclock(first).sh.
Thanks, another gap filled :) Regards Clive -- www.clivemenzies.co.uk ... ...strategies for business -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]