
Dear Friends,
We may be making a false assumption that the original writer's bios clock is set to GMT. If not, setting it to GMT will make chaos for dual booting windows. For someone new to the grml way of doing things, one should note that during the original install, when asked for a language, the default setting US english leaves the time zone as austria(cet). One must, for example, in NY choose on of the us english settings at the bottom of the list, and so on.
If this be a dual boot system, and the clock is set to local time, leave it and use the grml-setlang command, which sets the locale, or, if one need an setup which is not in the locales provided, one can edit /etc/default/locale manually. Obviously, Mika did not set up locales there for someone speaking us english located in Kenya, or Japanese located in NYC, but these things exist, and living here in NYC, I see locales with "non-corresponding" time zones every day.
(yes, I did indeed use grml to set up a friends 'locale farsi, tz new york" laptop a few days ago ;) - welcome to new york....)
Best, m
On Mon, 2007-03-19 at 10:05 +0100, Michael Prokop wrote:
- Paul Weaver iso@isorox.co.uk [20070319 10:02]:
On Mon, Mar 19, 2007 at 09:39:43AM +0100, Michael Prokop wrote:
- coscell@mail.batol.net coscell@mail.batol.net [20070319 05:15]:
After reboot, the system time is always incorrect. How to adjust it? Thank you!
That page reports
If you change the time (using 'date --set ...', ntpdate,...) it is worth setting also the hardware clock to the correct time: # hwclock --hctosys [--utc]
However man tzconfig states --hctosys Set the System Time from the Hardware Clock.
Which loads the time from hardware. Am I missing something? Shouldn't this read --systohc?
Ouch, of course - yes. Thanks for pointing, fixed.
regards, -mika- _______________________________________________ Grml mailing list - Grml@mur.at http://lists.mur.at/mailman/listinfo/grml join #grml on irc.freenode.org grml-devel-blog: http://grml.supersized.org/