Am 04.02.2017 um 17:43 schrieb Jude DaShiell:
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017, Matthias Bodenbinder wrote:
Date: Sat, 4 Feb 2017 09:07:00
From: Matthias Bodenbinder <matth...@bodenbinder.de>
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: can not set time
Resent-Date: Sat, 4 Feb 2017 14:07:22 +0000 (UTC)
Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Am 04.02.2017 um 14:36 schrieb Jude DaShiell:
please check that other box and see if it has
systemd-timesyncd.service on it.
You can probably start that service up and solve that problem.
Then try timedatectl set-ntp true.
That should make timesync happen on boot.
On Sat, 4 Feb 2017, Matthias Bodenbinder wrote:
timedatectl set-ntp true
did not help. It is not changing the time.
My reference PC has debian testing running with systemd-timesyncd. But
the broken PC is MINT LMDE which is still on init.d.
Matthias
Okay, since you have ntp, ntpd -qg and then hwclock --systohc --utc may
get this working for you. We probably don't need to do anything with
your timezone setting link to /etc/localtime by now.
Hello Jude,
I tried it all. I googled almost every command related to time setting
and tried it out. But it did not work. I am still not sure why.
But now, after switching to systemd and systemd-timesyncd it works. See
my other post.
Thank you for help anyways.
Matthias