On Tue, 13 Jun 2000, Sergio Brandano wrote:
>
> > stage 1 and 3 were done, but I havn't set the timezone
>
> You have to.
done, I'll tell you the result in 2-3 days
Eric
--
Si maintenant on introduit le concept de normalité des bugs, où va
l'informatique ?
Chez Microsoft ? Ah
> stage 1 and 3 were done, but I havn't set the timezone
You have to.
Sergio
On Tue, 13 Jun 2000, Sergio Brandano wrote:
>
> Then
> 1. remove /etc/adjtime
> 2. set the timezone
> 3. reset the clock from MacOS.
>
> Ensure that no linux program modifies the clock.
stage 1 and 3 were done, but I havn't set the timezone
Eric
--
Toute non, seul une petite ban
Then
1. remove /etc/adjtime
2. set the timezone
3. reset the clock from MacOS.
Ensure that no linux program modifies the clock.
Sergio
On Tue, 13 Jun 2000, Sergio Brandano wrote:
>
> 1. Install ntpd and ntpdate. Make sure that are ntp is the only
> program of that kind that you have installed. ntpdate needs the
> name of a server into /etc/init.d/ntpdate.
> 2. delete /etc/adjtime
> 3. set the timezone (tzconfig, tzsel
1. Install ntpd and ntpdate. Make sure that are ntp is the only
program of that kind that you have installed. ntpdate needs the
name of a server into /etc/init.d/ntpdate.
2. delete /etc/adjtime
3. set the timezone (tzconfig, tzselect)
4. run "/etc/init.d/ntpdate start". If succeeds, th
Hello,
I'm in trouble with my date settings on powerbook G3 firewire
(pismo) running debian potato, and MacOs 9.04
currently my date in losing time everydays.
I loose 1 hour evry 4 days. (anoying for compilation an other
things...)
I don't have any idea from where the problem comm
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