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Date:      Tue, 31 Oct 2000 13:08:09 +0300
From:      Sergei Vyshenski <svysh@pn.sinp.msu.ru>
To:        Max Khon <fjoe@iclub.nsu.ru>, "Alexandr A. Listopad" <laa@atom.ru>
Cc:        freebsd-stable@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: no switching to standard time
Message-ID:  <4.3.2.7.2.20001031130256.00aa3260@vivaldi>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSF.4.21.0010311246570.20504-100000@iclub.nsu.ru>
References:  <20001031092357.A85859@atom.ru>

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CMOS clock is set to UTC.
The output of "date" did not switched to standard local time.
Is it a predefined feature?
Shall I expect automatic switching only with
cmos clock set to local time?


At 12:48 31.10.00 +0600, Max Khon wrote:
>hi, there!
>
> > > Here in Moscow, Russia, I expected the system clock
> > > back to standard time during the night of Oct 29,
> > > exactly as European tradition suggests.
> > >
> > > This did not happened by itself (the output of
> > > "date" was 1 hour ahead of new local time at noon
> > > of Oct 29.). Had to run ntpdate by hand to
> > > bring it 1 hour back.
> > >
> > > Is it a correct behavior?
> > >
> > > System clock here is configured to be kept as GMT and
> > > at the moment it shows up as a correct local time with
> > > "date", e.g.:
> > >
> > > Tue Oct 31 01:16:53 MSK 2000
> >
> > I have a similar problem both in Russian (MSK) and Ukraine (EET), will
> > be good to correct it before 4.2-RELEASE.
>
>do you have CMOS clock set to UTC on both machines?
>we do not have this problem on a bunch of machines (from 3.5-STABLE to
>5.0-CURRENT) with CMOS clock set to local time
>
>/fjoe



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