I have killed all process/, and below are the process remained in the
system. But the problem still exist. Have you any idea which process are
causing it?
Thank you!

    1 ?        S      0:20 init
    2 ?        SW     0:00 [migration_CPU0]
    3 ?        SW     0:00 [migration_CPU1]
    4 ?        SW     0:00 [keventd]
    5 ?        SWN    3:09 [ksoftirqd_CPU0]
    6 ?        SWN    3:03 [ksoftirqd_CPU1]
    7 ?        SW     2:30 [kswapd]
    8 ?        SW     0:00 [bdflush]
    9 ?        SW     0:18 [kupdated]
   10 ?        SW     0:00 [mdrecoveryd]
   14 ?        SW     5:17 [kjournald]
  107 ?        SW     0:00 [kjournald]
  108 ?        SW     0:00 [kjournald]
  433 ?        SW     0:00 [eth1]
  596 ?        S      0:09 /usr/sbin/sshd
  732 tty1     S      0:00 /sbin/mingetty tty1
  733 tty2     S      0:00 /sbin/mingetty tty2
  734 tty3     S      0:00 /sbin/mingetty tty3
  735 tty4     S      0:00 /sbin/mingetty tty4
  736 tty5     S      0:00 /sbin/mingetty tty5
  737 tty6     S      0:00 /sbin/mingetty tty6
14872 pts/1    S      0:00 -bash
15073 pts/1    R      0:00 ps -ax


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Leonard den Ottolander
Sent: Friday, July 11, 2003 10:36 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: /bin/date time is jumping backward, please help

Hi Horace,

> I think you are misunderstanding what I mean.
> 
> The ntp will update the system clock hourly only.
> But I have used /bin/date and perl script to check the system at anytime,
> the reported system clock will 1-4 seconds less than previous report(just
1
> second interval between 2 report) at any instant, sometime. 
> 
> That mean the system clock will decrease is not related to ntpd. 
> Below is the perl script I wrote to check system time, you will found the
> output sometime will be negative or 0, or greater than 1. On a problem
less
> Linux system, all output should be 1. So do you have any idea what problem

is
> going on?

 Could it be you are running both ntpdate in an hourly cron job and also 
running ntpd (service ntpd status)? Otherwise I really have no idea what
could 
be setting your system clock. Did you check /var/log/messages for clues
about 
what is updating your system clock?

Bye,
Leonard.

--
How clean is a war when you shoot around nukelar waste?
Stop the use of depleted uranium ammo!
End all weapons of mass destruction.


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