similar to: CentOS Hardware clock time setting.

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 1000 matches similar to: "CentOS Hardware clock time setting."

2011 Mar 04
3
Updating hardware clock from cron
Is there a package to do this? Normally the hardware clock is set during shutdown if one is running ntpd. But if a long-running server shuts down unexpectedly, this isn't done, and the hardware clock might be off by a lot when it comes back up. So setting it periodically from a cron job could be useful. What do others do? Adding a one liner to /etc/cron.daily that invokes
2013 Feb 25
13
running yum update on remote servers
I have read a couple old threads here on updates for servers, and I am looking for some mechanics to getting the actual updates done. I don't want automatic updates; I want to control when and what gets updated. First I have to determine that a particular server needs updates. I suppose a daily script that would run "yum check-updates' and emails me the results could work, but
2010 Nov 12
7
hwclock problem
Hi. I run peridocally (from cron) on all of my machines 30 * * * * root /sbin/hwclock --systohc All of those machines in question take their time via NTP from the same local server, and that server gets its time from a ntp pool. Now I had to reboot a couple of them two days ago and to my surprise all had problems with the time upon booting. Here are the important files: [root at XXXXXX ~]
2011 May 14
9
DomU clock out of sync
Hey all, I was watching some logs on a domU today and i suddenly noticed that the timestamps were off by something on the order of 47 seconds. I was surprised because *I don''t* run independent wall clocks. I checked some other domUs and the "drift" was also very close to that of the first domU. I also checked another dom0, Here the domUs were "only" out of sync by
2006 Jul 19
7
Sync hardware clock
Does any know of a way to sync the hardware clock without a reboot? Graham Johnston Senior Network Analyst Westman Communications Group 204.725.4300 ext 382 johnstong at westmancom.com -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.centos.org/pipermail/centos/attachments/20060719/70ef23ce/attachment-0002.html>
2012 Jun 04
2
system date using ntp client is drifting
Hi, I have a set of servers whose system time is drifting. I am running ntp client on CentOS 5.8. My config is here -> http://fpaste.org/s55U/ Anything i am missing? Regards, Kaushal
2007 Sep 03
5
Dom0 <> DomU clock sync
Hello ! Just a quick question about time synchronization between xen dom0 and domUs... We''re running Xen 3.1 64-bit, with 32 and 64 bits linux guests. It''s up since 89 days and the domU''s time is around 5 minutes behind the dom0, which is updated via ntpdate... Any idea why it doesn''t sync the guests even that /proc/sys/xen/independent_wallclock is 0 ?
2006 Oct 12
5
DO NOT REPLY [Bug 4168] New: Random file has vanished when syncing clock with ntpdate/hwclock ?
https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=4168 Summary: Random file has vanished when syncing clock with ntpdate/hwclock ? Product: rsync Version: 2.6.4 Platform: x86 OS/Version: Linux Status: NEW Severity: major Priority: P3 Component: core AssignedTo: wayned@samba.org
2006 Oct 11
3
NTP and hardware clock
Hi, I had the following problem today. Because of a misconfigured network switch one system suddenly didn't have any network. After a reboot (with the network still unavailable) NTPD refused to start. Most likely because the initial ntpdate failed to work. I find this troubling, because when the network was restored, NTPD could have resumed working (like I'd expect from a true
2011 Feb 06
5
system clock
I am running CntOS 5 with Gnome. Every now and then I have noticed that the computer will somehow get the time wrong by several hours. Is there a simple way to adjust the time? So far the only way I have found is to boot into windows (it is a dual boot system), make the change there, and then get back into CentOS. Older versions of Red Hat and Fedora let you do it by right-clicking on
2004 May 26
1
clock skew again
Hi, ok this time i have really done every thing i can do. i went to http://www.bytefusion.com/download/win2000/middle.htm and downloaded the presentTense time server for windows 2000. i installed it on my backup domain controller. my sys admin wont allow it on the primary domain controller. ok so after installing it on niit91 (10.10.11.91) i came back to my linux box started the ntpd and
2007 Feb 06
2
real time clock drift
This must be documented somewhare but I checked the Xen 3.0 manual and the word "clock" doesn''t even exist in it. I checked the FAQ as well. I am running Xen 3.0.1 and an AMD64 CPU. I found that DOMUs time clock drifts ahead. I installed ntpdate and it reports to change the time but it does not. David _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list
2010 Apr 25
2
hardware clock drift and CDR
Hi, I've noticed that one of my new servers (new mobo) if drifting slowly backwards in time (in aprox. 24 hours, system time drifts back 5 minutes). I have an ntpd process which is supposed to sync with a lan time server but it's not quite working. So I'm launching a manual ntpdate or ntp-client once an hour and that seems to work. However, suppose I update system time at every hour
2008 Feb 07
2
Set hardware clock manually
I can't reboot a server to set the hardware clock to UTC time, but CentOS was installed with the assumption that the PC was running UTC. Is it possible to update the hardware clock to the right time and therefore allow CentOS to maintain the right time without rebooting? I am hoping to use this route for consistency versus changing how CentOS interprets the time so all servers are the same.
2006 Nov 24
19
Time/clock issues with Xen 3.0.3?
The time appears to be perfect inside dom0, however all the domU''s tend to have a slightly faster date which gets further out of sync every day. I''m currently using Xen 3.0.3 with Gentoo Linux, under 3.0.2 I had no problems with domU clocks. Are there any known issues which could cause this? I''d strongly prefer not to run ntpd in every domU, having all domU clocks in
2013 Jan 23
3
clock sync/drift
Hi, We have a little over 100 servers, almost all running CentOS 5.7. Virtually all are Dell servers, generally a mix of 1950s, R610s, and R410s. We use NTP and/or PTP to sync their clocks. One phenomenon we've noticed is that (1) on reboot, the clocks are all greatly out of sync, and (2) if the PTP or NTP process is stopped, the clocks start drifting very quickly. If it was isolated to
2006 Feb 15
2
clock, centos 4 and dual core?
Hi, I have a dual core athlon server and it is gaining 1 day every 2 days w/o time sync. Even with ntpd running, the time is not under control. I must put a very frequent cronjob of 'ntpdate' to keep the time under control. This creates big problems since winbind eventually stops working so my users can't access their data. Any ideas? -- Ugo -> Please don't send a copy of
2006 Feb 07
11
date in domU
Hi all, where can I set the date in domU. ''ntpdate -u ...'' works but dosn''t set the date. date MMDDhhmm has also no effect. What can I do? -- cu Roland Kruggel  mailto: rk-liste@gmx.de System: Intel 3.2Ghz, Debian etch, 2.6.15, KDE 3.4 _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@lists.xensource.com
2017 Aug 17
4
Ubuntu 16.04 dovecot-core requires deprecated ntpdate
I'm building a new Ubuntu 16.04 machine, including Dovecot. When I select the dovecot-core package in Synaptic, it also wants to install ntpdate. Problem: ntpdate has been replaced in Ubuntu with timedatectl. In fact, if ntpdate exists on the machine, ntpd will not work properly. See: https://help.ubuntu.com/lts/serverguide/NTP.html See:
2015 Jun 24
2
Problem with todays update and ntpdate
Hello everybody, I just tried to run 'yum update' and got this error: Error: Package: ntp-4.2.6p5-19.el7.centos.x86_64 (@updates) Requires: ntpdate = 4.2.6p5-19.el7.centos Removing: ntpdate-4.2.6p5-19.el7.centos.x86_64 (@updates) ntpdate = 4.2.6p5-19.el7.centos Updated By: ntpdate-4.2.6p5-19.el7.centos.1.x86_64 (updates) ntpdate =