First of all, hello everybody,
I am having some problems generating timestamps.
I have a simple application, the user selects a month, a day and a year
and submits
it's data.
Now, I want that date to be stransformed into a unixtimestamp. To do
that
I use strtotime('m/d/y')  for 01 January 2011 it would be:
strtotime('01/01/2011')
Now, a fiew days ago, the timestamp generated by this was: 1293840000
After a hardware failure, I reinstalled my linux with the same
settings...
now, a timestap of 01/01/2011 is returned as: 1293832800
What am I doing wrong?

# ls -al /etc/localtime 
lrwxrwxrwx  1 root root 36 Feb  7 19:54 /etc/localtime ->
/usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Bucharest
# date
Tue Feb  8 13:29:15 EET 2005
# echo $TZ 
Europe/Bucharest
#

Also mktime generates the second timestamp ...damn, I really don't know
why there are two different
timestamps for the same date.
-- 
Stefan, a simple CRUX Linux user.
Linux registered user: #272012
[Linux is Friendly. It's just selective about who his friends are.]


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