Daniel B. Thurman wrote, On 08/01/2008 09:28 PM:
Jeremy wrote:
Hello Dan,
Do you have the ntp daemon installed? If so check your /etc/ntp.conf
file. Also check if the ntp daemon is running (system - administartion
- services).
Jeremy
Uh oh, top posting? ;)
Yes, ntp is running and is properly, I believe. It snaps in
once I get the time setting close enough. Somehow time
is off anywhere from 2-8 hours in the past or in the future
after a reboot.
A) are you dual booting with windows or any other OS/distribution (even
another instance of Fedora)?
{perhaps the other OS thinks the hardware clock is/[is not] on UTC.}
B) what are the contents of /etc/adjtime and /etc/sysconfig/clock?
{repeat this question for each instance of Fedora|Unix installed on the
machine.}
C) it seems strange that the /etc/rc.d/init.d/ntpd is not syncing the clock
before kicking off ntpd.
you may need to add the following line to /etc/sysconfig/ntpd
dostep=yes
D) have you tried adding '-g' to OPTIONS=... in /etc/sysconfig/ntpd ?
E) are you using a static IP or dynamic?
on a wired network or wireless?
{Network manager (the default now) works well on wireless dynamic IP
networks, but from what has been said on this list, if you are on a wired
network using static IP's then it is best to `chkconfig NetworkManager off`,
`chkconfig network on`. if you are on static wireless or dynamic wired, it is
a tossup as to which is best to use. NM has been set to come up AFTER many
of the services that REQUIRE networking.}
--
Todd Denniston
Crane Division, Naval Surface Warfare Center (NSWC Crane)
Harnessing the Power of Technology for the Warfighter
--
fedora-list mailing list
fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list