I tested on my debian (lenny) machine and have the same problem. A CentOS 5.2 machine with version 3.1.8 of 'at' and GMT as the timezone did not have this problem.
Chaim On Wed, Dec 31, 2008 at 8:16 PM, Avraham Rosenberg <for.avra...@gmail.com>wrote: > Hi, > Here is the output of atq: > avraham6e32:/tmp$ atq > 48 Wed Dec 31 21:40:00 2008 a avraham > 52 Fri Jan 1 06:00:00 2010 a avraham > 49 Fri Jan 1 05:00:00 2010 a avraham > 51 Fri Jan 1 06:45:00 2010 a avraham > > The command, corresponding to the last line was: > at -m -f fvivaceRec-2 06:45 tomorrow > > Apparently Thursday/the year 2009 bring bad luck, so it avoids them... > > Date, on the other hand is less superstitious: > avraham6e32:/tmp$ date -d 'tomorrow' > Thu Jan 1 19:22:38 IST 2009 > > Version: > at -V > at version 3.1.9 > Bug reports to: rmur...@debian.org (Ryan Murray) > Garbled time > > System: > uname -a > Linux debian 2.6.24-1-486 #1 Mon Feb 11 13:52:45 UTC 2008 i686 GNU/Linux > > I guess I should file a bug report. Never did such a thing before. Where > can I find guidlines/examples ? Or, maybe, I blundered ? > > Cheers, Avraham > And a good year 2009, despite what my at may think ! > > -- > Please avoid sending to this address Excell or Powerpoint attachments. > > ================================================================= > To unsubscribe, send mail to linux-il-requ...@cs.huji.ac.il with > the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command > echo unsubscribe | mail linux-il-requ...@cs.huji.ac.il > >