On Thu, Dec 21, 2023 at 07:15:12AM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote: [...]
> Again, there isn't any agency here. The RTC is just a resource that > the system can use, once per boot, to get things started. It could > be set correctly, or incorrectly. It could be set to local time, as > was common when dual-booting with Windows, or to UTC. On systems > that run NTP, the RTC is mostly vestigial. Its setting has very > little effect on anything -- perhaps some early logfile timestamps. Anecdote time: I used to work in a shop Back Then (TM) (roughly Windows 3.1). We did C programs for a living and had a mix of Windows boxes and Linux boxes. Windows boxes were "naive" and had local time. We had a time zone with summer and winter time. On time transitions, all hell broke loose with Makefiles, which look at file time stamps :-) We ended up setting the Windows boxes to Monrovia/Liberia: no time jumps *and* (more or less) GMT. No more hassles... Cheers -- t
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