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Date:      Fri, 9 Nov 2007 13:08:36 +0000
From:      RW <fbsd06@mlists.homeunix.com>
To:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: cmos clock to utc time code?
Message-ID:  <20071109130836.0c6a482c@gumby.homeunix.com.>
In-Reply-To: <60c2cba1d147b49bb5faf48c10b94add@prodigy.net>
References:  <cc27b6348de6c5969cade3d9d68fa230@prodigy.net> <31AE442CCBC1094ABC40CE85B0149F0642BB68@MAIL1.registry.otago.ac.nz> <60c2cba1d147b49bb5faf48c10b94add@prodigy.net>

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On Thu, 8 Nov 2007 20:56:44 -0800
jekillen <jekillen@prodigy.net> wrote:

> 
> On Nov 8, 2007, at 6:21 PM, Brent Jones wrote:
> 
> > There's no time zone setting in a cmos clock.  Just set the time to
> > whatever UTC is, and you should be good to go.  Ideally though, you
> > should have the system do an ntpdate command first, which will take 
> > care
> > of the clock issue for you.  Just put:
> >
> > ntpdate_enable="YES"
> >
> > in your rc.conf file, and it will run before ntpd starts.
> I have ntpd_enable="YES"
> in /etc/rc.conf already, would there be a conflict?

There's no conflict

> While this machine is being configured with all the
> functional software I want working, hub mail server with
> Cyrus, Apache/php/mysql. while I am getting everything
> set up and tested the machine will not be running 24/7
> so ntpdate would probably be a better choice,

Just run both. 



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