Control: tags -1 + moreinfo Hi Marc
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 11:29:32 +0200 Marc Haber <mh+debian-packa...@zugschlus.de> wrote:
Package: systemd Version: 252.6-1 Severity: minor Hi, aide-common ships the following timer: [Unit] Description=Daily AIDE check [Timer] OnCalendar=*-*-* 02:00:00 RandomizedDelaySec=2h Persistent=true [Install] WantedBy=timers.target This didn't run in DST transition night. I think this might be caused by the clock jumping from 01:59 to 03:00, with 02:00 not existing. Is there a notation to have a systemd timer run even if the exact time the timer is supposed to run doesn't happen? I guess this might also be the case in case of a grossly misticking clock and a timesync daemon stepping the time, for example, from 01:59:50 to 02:02:00? Or would be probably be a better idea to trigger a timer if systemd finds the trigger time in the past without the timer having been triggered? Not running at all came as kind of surprise for me. I might be holding things wrong but I'd like your opinion.
What was/is the output of systemctl list-timers before and after such a (DST) time jump? I.e., is there a way to reproduce this somehow?
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