The swich with dailight savings time
Chris Linstruth
chris at ukelele.UUCP
Thu Apr 11 10:29:30 AEST 1991
pinkas at st860.intel.com (Israel Pinkas) writes:
>
>In article <9 at phlpa.UUCP> scott at phlpa.UUCP (Scott Scheingold) writes:
>
>> I have noticed that some of my cron jobs are running an hour later
>> than they are normally run. Example uucp.cleanup is supposed to
>> .. stuff deleted ..
>> run at a specific time. My next question would be when we switch
>> back to EST will this become a problem once again.
>
>This problem is a basic result of the PC style architecture. (However,
>AT&T could have solved this in software.)
>
>The PC architecture's battery powered clock stores the date and time (year,
>month, day, hours, minutes, seconds). Most other architectures just have a
>counter that counts seconds or clock ticks.
>
>... makes some valuable suggestions ...
I dealt with this problem by setting the hardware clock to GMT and
setting the system clock at boot time with:
:
# @(#)bsetdate.sh 1.1
TZ=GMT0;export TZ
date `/etc/setup -d` > /dev/null
. /etc/TIMEZONE
echo "System time: \c"
date
setup -d outputs the CMOS clock setting in a date(1) parsable format.
This is on uPort V/AT and Daylight to Standard time switches have been
automatic and effortless for two years. cron even seems to be executing
jobs at the appropriate times.
--
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