On 06/23/2015 08:25 PM, Johnny Hughes wrote:
<<>>
> Edit the file:
>
> /etc/sysconfig/clock
>
> make sure to set:
>
> ZONE="America/Chicago"
it was;
ZONE="Etc/UTC"
it is now.
ZONE="America/Chicago"
> then copy /usr/share/zoneinfo/America/Chicago to /etc/localtime
done.
> Run the time
On Wednesday, 24 June 2015 at @01:25 zulu, Johnny Hughes
wrote:
> Run the time tool and make sure that "System clock uses UTC" is NOT checked
THAT's the option Anaconda also presents, that I was thinking of. :)
___
CentOS mailing list
CentOS@centos.
On 06/23/2015 04:47 PM, g wrote:
>
> Richard, thank you for your response.
>
>
> On 06/23/2015 02:51 PM, Richard wrote:
> <<>>
>
>> I agree, so my questions are:
>>
>>- what is your TZ?
>
> u.s.a. 'central time zone' - currently on 'daylight savings time'.
>
>>- what does "[/bin/]date
On 06/23/2015 02:48 PM, Jonathan Billings wrote:
<<>>
> Hmmm, that's a really strange problem.
if there were no strange problems, i would have no problems. ;-)
> yum really doesn't have anything to do with your system clock. It
> just installs, updates and removes packages. I've never used '
On 06/23/2015 02:53 PM, Jonathan Billings wrote:
<<>>
> To add to this list of questions:
>
> - What are you doing to fix the clock each time you discover it
>is incorrect?
cussing and using "System Settings > Date & Time" to make change
after i enter root user password. :-\
than
Richard, thank you for your response.
On 06/23/2015 02:51 PM, Richard wrote:
<<>>
> I agree, so my questions are:
>
>- what is your TZ?
u.s.a. 'central time zone' - currently on 'daylight savings time'.
>- what does "[/bin/]date" show?
[geo@boxen ~]$ date
Tue Jun 23 14:54:42 CDT
On Tue, Jun 23, 2015 at 07:51:39PM +, Richard wrote:
> I agree, so my questions are:
>
>- what is your TZ?
>
>- what does "[/bin/]date" show?
>
>- what does your hardware clock: "/sbin/hwclock --show" report?
> [need to be root to use that command]
>
>- is your /etc/l
> Date: Tuesday, June 23, 2015 03:48:36 PM -0400
> From: Jonathan Billings
>
> On Tue, Jun 23, 2015 at 01:56:13PM -0500, g wrote:
>> each and every time i run yum or yumex, system time is advanced
>> by 5 hours.
>>
>> this has gone on thru several updates, maybe even upgrades.
>>
>> centos = 6
On Tue, Jun 23, 2015 at 01:56:13PM -0500, g wrote:
> each and every time i run yum or yumex, system time is advanced
> by 5 hours.
>
> this has gone on thru several updates, maybe even upgrades.
>
> centos = 6.6 current
> yum= 3.2.29
> yumex = 3.0.5
>
> for awhile, i did not mind resetting
9 matches
Mail list logo