On Thu, 25 Aug 2011 15:31:34 +0100, Simon Greenwood wrote:
>>
>
> What sort of VPS is it, and what is the kernel that's currently
installed? If it's OpenVZ it should be relatively easy to replace the
kernel. My feeling is that 8.04 is getting a bit out of date especially
when using virtual
On 25 August 2011 15:21, Jon Reynolds wrote:
> On Thu, 25 Aug 2011 15:19:17 +0100, Jon Reynolds wrote:
>
>> Well it now seems that after this reboot (which was just to expand
>> some disk space) my VPS time is all fubar.
>>
>> I set the time/date with nptdate
>>
>> Then repeatedly hitting date
On Thu, 25 Aug 2011 15:19:17 +0100, Jon Reynolds wrote:
Then repeatedly hitting date date shows the date
escallating rapidly, something like an hour per second and the date
shifts wildly.
example after a reboot:
Last login: Mon Dec 12 03:10:47 2011 from 178.78.125.61
jonr@jcrdevelopments:~
On Thu, 25 Aug 2011 15:22:21 +0100, Jon Reynolds wrote:
But something else I don't understand is that these emails I am
sending from this server are showing the correct time...IRSSI shows
the correct time... its only when I use the 'date' command I see a
wrong time.
--
Jon Reynolds (j0nr)
http
But something else I don't understand is that these emails I am sending
from this server are showing the correct time...IRSSI shows the correct
time... its only when I use the 'date' command I see a wrong time.
--
Jon Reynolds (j0nr)
http://www.jcrdevelopments.com
--
ubuntu-uk@lists.ubuntu.c
On Thu, 25 Aug 2011 15:19:17 +0100, Jon Reynolds wrote:
Well it now seems that after this reboot (which was just to expand
some disk space) my VPS time is all fubar.
I set the time/date with nptdate
Then repeatedly hitting date date shows the date
escallating rapidly, something like an hour
Well it now seems that after this reboot (which was just to expand some
disk space) my VPS time is all fubar.
I set the time/date with nptdate
Then repeatedly hitting date date shows the date
escallating rapidly, something like an hour per second and the date
shifts wildly.
I have fed al
Hi all,
I run s3sync to do a backup from my web server to an AWS S3 bucket.
This runs once a week on a cron job and has done so for many many
months.
I had to do a reboot on my server (VPS BTW, running 8,04 LTS) and now
s3sync no longer works.
The command in my backup script is this:
ru