* Robert Moskowitz <r...@htt-consult.com>: > My system does not have a battery for the clock (like most armv7 SOCs), thus > I rely on that at some point in boot time, chronyd sets the time. If a file > is updated prior to chronyd accomplishing its task (or network connectivity > is down), the file ends up with a timestamp of "Dec 31 1969". > > I notice that occasionally, after a reboot, /etc/aliases.db reverts to this > time, and I have to run newaliases to fix it. I suppose I could run touch > as well. > > So is postfix startup rebuilding aliases.db, perhaps? Is there some way to
It isn't. Something else must tamper your data. p@rick -- [*] sys4 AG https://sys4.de, +49 (89) 30 90 46 64 Schleißheimer Straße 26/MG,80333 München Sitz der Gesellschaft: München, Amtsgericht München: HRB 199263 Vorstand: Patrick Ben Koetter, Marc Schiffbauer, Wolfgang Stief Aufsichtsratsvorsitzender: Florian Kirstein