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Date:      Wed, 29 Dec 2004 19:01:04 -0800
From:      Kevin Smith <smithcam@adelphia.net>
To:        Mario Hoerich <m@MHoerich.de>, freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: system time mysteriously changes
Message-ID:  <41D36F70.2040104@adelphia.net>
In-Reply-To: <20041229185145.GA38358@Pandora.MHoerich.de>
References:  <41D23B31.2030907@adelphia.net> <20041229185145.GA38358@Pandora.MHoerich.de>

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Mario Hoerich wrote:

># Kevin Smith:
>  
>
>>I'm having a problem with my system clock.  The time will be fine for a 
>>few days, then all of a sudden, I will notice that it has jumped ahead 
>>by a number of hours (usually enough to change the day to the next day). 
>>    
>>
>
>Does the number of hours vary or is it constant?
>  
>
I'll check when it does it again. I recall it being +7 hours ahead.

>
>  
>
>>Any ideas on what could be wrong ?  I also have ntpd running, which I 
>>used as an attempt to keep the clock set correctly (in effort to find a 
>>solution to the problem), but it does not appear to be able to handle 
>>correcting the time.
>>    
>>
>
>Could you check which timezone the "advanced" time is displayed
>in? Sounds like some application assumes -say- UTC instead of PST.
>  
>
I'm pretty sure that the "advanced" time stayed at PST (ie the time zone 
did not change).  But I'll check again...

btw,  I did another experiment.  I powered off the system for 12 hours 
and restarted it. The time was still correct, so I guess that rules out 
motherboard battery.

>Obviously, even ntp couldn't fix that, since the time is
>actually valid (just not your current localtime).
>
>It's just a shot in the dark, though.
>
>HTH,
>Mario
>
>  
>



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