From 56cc653631a872a0ee625748dd68d0eb26b994be Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Gerard Beekmans Date: Mon, 11 Mar 2002 21:00:00 +0000 Subject: updated chapter7-setclock text git-svn-id: http://svn.linuxfromscratch.org/LFS/trunk/BOOK@1704 4aa44e1e-78dd-0310-a6d2-fbcd4c07a689 --- chapter01/changelog.xml | 6 ++++++ chapter07/setclock.xml | 24 ++++++++++-------------- 2 files changed, 16 insertions(+), 14 deletions(-) diff --git a/chapter01/changelog.xml b/chapter01/changelog.xml index ad41f976f..24c160328 100644 --- a/chapter01/changelog.xml +++ b/chapter01/changelog.xml @@ -30,6 +30,12 @@ +March 11th, 2002 [gerard]: Chapter 07 - Setclock: The text +here hinted towards the fact that you could skip configuring this step +which isn't true unless the entire script would be removed. So the text was +changed a bit to just have them create the file no matter how the hardware +clock is setup. + March 11th, 2002 [gerard]: Chapter 07 - Loadkeys: Removed the need to configure a /etc/sysconfig/keyboard file. The kbd patch makes this obsolete (loadkeys -d is used diff --git a/chapter07/setclock.xml b/chapter07/setclock.xml index c7fd116ea..432d0790f 100644 --- a/chapter07/setclock.xml +++ b/chapter07/setclock.xml @@ -2,20 +2,16 @@ Configuring the setclock script +This setclock script reads the time from your hardware clock (also +known as BIOS or CMOS clock) and either converts that time to localtime +using the /etc/localtime file (if the hardware clock +is set to GMT) or not (if the hardware clock is already set to localtime). +There is no way to auto-detect whether the hardware clock is set to GMT or +not, so we need to configure that here ourselves. -The setclock script is only for real use when the hardware clock (also -known as BIOS or CMOS clock) isn't set to GMT time. The recommended -setup is setting the hardware clock to GMT and having the time converted -to localtime using the /etc/localtime symbolic link. But if an -OS is run that doesn't understand a clock set to GMT (most notable are -Microsoft OS'es) you may want to set the clock to localtime so that -the time is properly displayed on those OS'es. This script will then -set the kernel time to the hardware clock without converting the time using -the /etc/localtime symlink. - -If you want to use this script on your system even if the -hardware clock is set to GMT, then the UTC variable below has to be -changed to the value of 1. +Change the value of the UTC variable below to a +0 (zero) if your hardware clock is not set to GMT +time. Create a new file /etc/sysconfig/clock by running the following: @@ -23,7 +19,7 @@ the following: cat > /etc/sysconfig/clock << "EOF" # Begin /etc/sysconfig/clock -UTC=0 +UTC=1 # End /etc/sysconfig/clock EOF -- cgit v1.2.3-54-g00ecf