On Sun, 3 Nov 2002, at 17:52 [=GMT-0500], Peter Leftwich wrote:
> But I wonder why there is no unix
> standard command to view and/or set the PC's current timezone!
Perhaps I don't understand your problem? What is wrong with 'date'?
voo:marc {783} date
Mon Nov 4 00:12:38 CET 2002
So I have CET
On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Jacob Rhoden wrote:
> Are you in the right time zone? If you are in australia, you have to set
> preciscely where you are for it to work (for example, here in melbourne our
> time zone just went back an our for summer). Dont know if this may help, but
> i would guess that is wh
On Mon, 28 Oct 2002, Kent Stewart wrote:
> > ntpdate_enable="YES" # Run ntpdate to sync time on boot (or NO).
> > ntpdate_program="/usr/sbin/ntpdate" # path to ntpdate, if you want a different
>one.
> > ntpdate_flags="-b clock.isc.org" # Flags to ntpdate (if enabled).
* Peter Leftwich [Tuesday 29 October 2002 04:11 am]
> I thought I had this in my /etc/rc.conf but didn't, so I added the
> following lines and rebooted:
>
> ntpdate_enable="YES" # Run ntpdate to sync time on boot (or
> NO). ntpdate_program="/usr/sbin/ntpdate" # path to ntpdate, i
# [EMAIL PROTECTED] / 2002-10-28 20:11:41 -0800:
> I thought I had this in my /etc/rc.conf but didn't, so I added the
> following lines and rebooted:
>
> ntpdate_enable="YES" # Run ntpdate to sync time on boot (or NO).
> ntpdate_program="/usr/sbin/ntpdate" # path to ntpdate, if you
Peter Leftwich wrote:
I thought I had this in my /etc/rc.conf but didn't, so I added the
following lines and rebooted:
ntpdate_enable="YES" # Run ntpdate to sync time on boot (or NO).
ntpdate_program="/usr/sbin/ntpdate" # path to ntpdate, if you want a different one.
ntpdate_fla
I thought I had this in my /etc/rc.conf but didn't, so I added the
following lines and rebooted:
ntpdate_enable="YES" # Run ntpdate to sync time on boot (or NO).
ntpdate_program="/usr/sbin/ntpdate" # path to ntpdate, if you want a different one.
ntpdate_flags="-b clock.isc.org"