On 08-11-2011 18:20, Jorge Almeida wrote:
I have HARDWARECLOCK="UTC" TIMEZONE="right/Portugal"
Here I use Europe/Lisbon as timezone, I guess one should use a valid timezone as found in /usr/share/zoneinfo
in /etc/rc.conf, but I'm not sure this is the right thing to do. I use clockspeed to keep the clock synchronized with a ntp server, and other
From the small description on the download(?) page [1] of clockspeed the objective of the program is to try and keep the time accurate when there is no network connectivity, but you say you synchronize with a ntp server. ntpd[2] also keeps a drift file to account for clock drift and ntpd is widely used and well maintained.
sofware requires a "right/*" timezone. Anyone has any knowledge to share about this issue? For example, "date" gives output that ignores leap seconds. Is this a date issue, unrelated with rc.conf? Anyone else using a right/* timezone?
I'd say leap seconds are a time reference problem, date only reports what the time reference says. If you continually sync with a ntp server then leap seconds will be taken care of when ntpd syncs, I'd say that if you need such an accurate time reference that leap seconds matter then maybe using a pc and the normal timekeeping methods is not the best choice. [1] http://cr.yp.to/clockspeed.html [2] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Network_Time_Protocol_daemon -- Mauro Santos