On Tue, Sep 05, 2006 at 08:02:23PM -0400, Scott Plumlee wrote: > Mark Zimmerman wrote: > >On Tue, Sep 05, 2006 at 04:27:42PM -0400, Scott Plumlee wrote: > >>The FAQ seems to reference UTC (at least in section 8), which would > >>translate at Universal Time, Coordinated, from what I understand. Are > >>these two the same? > >> > > > >Yes, UTC is Coordinated Universal Time. The acronym is a compromise > >between english and french. > > > > I appreciate all the answers, both on and off list. Wikipedia was the > first place I looked, so I understand the UTC is the official US > abbreviation of Universal Coordinated Time. But I still don't see a > reason why, if UTC==UCT, there are two files when it would seem that a > link would remove the need for two separate files. > > # pwd > /usr/share/zoneinfo/Etc > # ls -lai UCT > 87585 -r--r--r-- 2 root bin 56 Mar 2 2006 UCT > # ls -lai UTC > 87589 -r--r--r-- 6 root bin 56 Mar 2 2006 UTC > > So one has 6 links, one has 2 links. My guess is that somewhere in the > system, there are other files that need both of these, perhaps for > historical reasons. That's what I'm trying to figure out, but I don't > know if there is a simple method for finding the files that reference a > particular inode. > > Anyway, back to the original questions, if UTC==UCT, what is the reason > the a symbolic link from UCT to UTC would not work? > > Please pardon the stupidity if the answer is blatantly obvious. Clue > stick received with a smile, at least the first hundred times.
A quick (binary) diff will tell you that the only difference is the name, apparently. This might be because of some standard... or just being neat. Anyway, I can't see a real downside to this. Joachim