Hi, I have a friend whose time is being reported incorrectly with the date command and the hwclock command. Both commands are reporting the commands in UTC instead of the eastern timezone. He just installed ntp on his box.
His /etc/timezone is America/New_York The output of the date and hwclock commands: sh-3.1# date Wed Dec 12 21:52:41 UTC 2007 sh-3.1# date -u Wed Dec 12 21:52:46 UTC 2007 sh-3.1# hwclock Wed 12 Dec 2007 04:22:58 PM UTC -0.780500 seconds On my debian boxes, the hwclock reports the time using my timezone. I am guessing that the problem was the use of UTC instead of EST. I tried to have him adjust the hwclock, but couldn't get the right syntax. So the questions are: 1. Would manually setting the time via the date command to something close to the correct time fix things so that ntp would eventually sync things up, since the time difference is too big for ntp to work? 2. Do I have to set the time via the hwclock? If so, how do I do that? I didn't have him check the bios to see what the time is reporting there. Thanks, John Schmidt -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]