Trouble with hwclock set at local time
Hi!
Since a recent update to all my computers at home (one laptop and two
desktops, all running Debian/testing among other OSes) some time last
weekend, I am having trouble with clock settings (I didn't directly change
anything, or least nothing that I was aware of consciously doing). On each
boot, the system clock always gets initialized as if the hwclock was set
to UTC, although all configuration files I can think of tell it should be
in local time. On one desktop, I can (and did) change the hwclock to UTC,
and it solves the problem, of course, but the other two computers are dual
boot with M$ Tax Windoze XP (laptop) and Windoze 2000 (the other desktop).
If I set the hwclock to UTC in order to avoid trouble with the file system
check on startup (it complains the date on the filesystem is in the
future), Windoze shows a time with an extra 5 hours (my local time is
Eastern/Canada) (at least for Windoze 2000, I didn't try with XP yet).
Here is the content of /etc/default/rcS:
#
# Defaults for the boot scripts in /etc/rcS.d
#
# Time files in /tmp are kept in days.
TMPTIME=0
# Set to yes if you want sulogin to be spawned on bootup
SULOGIN=no
# Set to no if you want to be able to login over telnet/rlogin
# before system startup is complete (as soon as inetd is started)
DELAYLOGIN=yes
# Set UTC=yes if your system clock is set to UTC (GMT), and UTC=no if not.
UTC=no
# Set VERBOSE to "no" if you would like a more quiet bootup.
VERBOSE=yes
# Set EDITMOTD to "no" if you don't want /etc/motd to be editted
automatically
EDITMOTD=yes
# Set FSCKFIX to "yes" if you want to add "-y" to the fsck at startup.
FSCKFIX=no
As I mentioned, if I change UTC=no to UTC=yes, everything goes well,
except for the extra hours in Windoze. I searched a lot on google, and I
didn't find any good solution or explanation. I am not so familiar with
the details time setting, so I come here to ask for help. Was there
something wrong with my configuration prior to upgrading that showed up
after? I don't really remember all the questions the installer asked me
about time settings when I installed the systems (the most recent
installation is last summer on the laptop, the other two about two years
ago), and what I answered, but up till now, I never had any trouble with
time.
Thanks for any help.
--
François Duranleau
LIGUM, Université de Montréal
"There, now you have a top and a bottom! But you've lost a degree of your
freedom. Now you must stand on the ground. But now you feel easier, don't
you? You have less to trouble your mind."
- from _Neon Genesis Evangelion_
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