Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Jerome Santos
That did it! Thanks a lot!!! Jerome On 4/18/06, Stuart Henderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On 2006/04/18 14:34, Jerome Santos wrote: > > Except I want DST, so that it should show 2 PM. I can't figure out how > to > > set this. > > symlink /etc/localtime to /usr/share/zoneinfo/foo.

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Otto Moerbeek
On Tue, 18 Apr 2006, Darrin Chandler wrote: > You have both "server" *and* "servers" active in your config? Hmm. In > any case ntpd should be logging to /var/log/daemon by default. Messages > there will be a great clue as to what's going on, hopefully. ntpd allowes having multiple server and mult

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2006/04/18 19:37, Martin Schrvder wrote: > time if you use the country zone (like ch.pool.ntp.org in > Switzerland) - for all these zones, you can again use the 0, 1 or ...really crappy for some countries, alas. UK, from a well-connected host: round-trip min/avg/max/std-dev = 134.025/134.025/1

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Stuart Henderson
On 2006/04/18 14:34, Jerome Santos wrote: > Except I want DST, so that it should show 2 PM. I can't figure out how to > set this. symlink /etc/localtime to /usr/share/zoneinfo/foo.

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Joachim Schipper
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 02:34:30PM -0400, Jerome Santos wrote: > **SOLVED** ( I think) > > First I killed ntpd, then did ntpd -s north-america.pool.ntp.org and got: > set local clock to Tue Apr 18 13:28:59 EST 2006 (offset -3558.915779s) > > Except I want DST, so that it should show 2 PM. I can't

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Jerome Santos
**SOLVED** ( I think) First I killed ntpd, then did ntpd -s north-america.pool.ntp.org and got: set local clock to Tue Apr 18 13:28:59 EST 2006 (offset -3558.915779s) Except I want DST, so that it should show 2 PM. I can't figure out how to set this. On 4/18/06, Jerome Santos <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Martin Schröder
On 2006-04-18 08:22:55 -0700, Darrin Chandler wrote: > I'd comment out the single server commands and go with "servers > pool.ntp.org" and see what happens. "As pool.ntp.org will assign you timeservers from all over the world, time quality will not be ideal. You get a bit better result if you use

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Oliver Peter
Hi, On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 11:07:17AM -0400, Jerome Santos wrote: > Hi there I've been trying to sync my system time using ntpd. I followed the > FAQ on how to do this but it always seems that my time is 10 minutes fast. > > my /etc/ntpd.conf: [...] > #sync to a single server > server 0.north-am

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Michael Hernandez
On Apr 18, 2006, at 11:07 AM, Jerome Santos wrote: Any hints or pointers much appreciated!! have you tried running ntpd -s once to set the time immediately? If you don't it will only be corrected "gradually". Mike

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Darrin Chandler
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 08:22:55AM -0700, Darrin Chandler wrote: > You have both "server" *and* "servers" active in your config? Hmm. In > any case ntpd should be logging to /var/log/daemon by default. Messages > there will be a great clue as to what's going on, hopefully. > > I'd comment out the

Re: time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Darrin Chandler
On Tue, Apr 18, 2006 at 11:07:17AM -0400, Jerome Santos wrote: > Hi there I've been trying to sync my system time using ntpd. I followed the > FAQ on how to do this but it always seems that my time is 10 minutes fast. > > my /etc/ntpd.conf: > > > # $OpenBSD: ntpd.conf,v 1.7 2004/07/20 17:38:35 h

time is always 10 minutes fast!

2006-04-18 Thread Jerome Santos
Hi there I've been trying to sync my system time using ntpd. I followed the FAQ on how to do this but it always seems that my time is 10 minutes fast. my /etc/ntpd.conf: # $OpenBSD: ntpd.conf,v 1.7 2004/07/20 17:38:35 henning Exp $ # sample ntpd configuration file, see ntpd.conf(5) # Addresses