Le 05/07/2014 21:38, Nelson Green a écrit : > Good afternoon, > > This morning I had the mis-fortune of creating a dual-boot system with > Debian on > a machine that already had windows installed on. I installed a second hard > drive, installed Debian, and almost everything works. But I apparently > told the > installer that the system clock is set to UTC, when it is not (because > windows > has no real concept of time). > > So when I boot to windows the displayed time is the actual local time, > but when > I boot into Debian the displayed time is four hours behind local time. > If I do a > date -u the time that is displayed is the correct local time. > > I have modified /etc/adjtime and removed the UTC line, but every time > I boot up > Debian the line re-appears, and the displayed time is still four hours > behind. > So how do I tell the Debian system that the hardware clock is set to > local time > in an effort to compensate for the lessor system's inability to > correctly manage > time? > > Thanks, > Nelson
You can tell windows to use UTC internally (while still displaying local time) see http://www.experts-exchange.com/OS/Microsoft_Operating_Systems/Windows/2000/Q_21805674.html -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/53b859a1.6060...@rail.eu.org