On 6/16/06, Keith G. Robertson-Turner <fedora-gmane.00002@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Kam Leo wrote: >> On Fri, 2006-06-16 at 15:51 -0500, Stéphane Bruno wrote: >>>> Stéphane Bruno wrote: >>>>> I installed FC4 on several Dell PowerEdge servers (PowerEdge >>>>> 850, SC420, etc.), but I notice that every time I reboot the >>>>> server, the system date is changed. >>> I notice that when I shutdown I see an error printed on the >>> screen like "Syncing hardware clock to system time... timeout or >>> something" and it prints that the operation failed. Also, at >>> startup, I notice an error message, something about a timeout >>> occuring for clock tick. Check dmesg, but IMO this is either: a) ... A dead clock battery, or b) ... A missing kernel module/parameter required for that mobo's timer functions. And/or a kernel bug. For the former, obviously just replacing the battery will help :) For the latter, try building a custom kernel RPM using the guide I wrote on: http://fedoranews.org/cms/node/414 ,and check for anything specific to your chipset. You mentioned that you installed FC4 onto "several" servers, but you didn't explicitly state whether or not your problem was affecting all of them. Is it just one of the machines or all of them? If it's just one, and the others are the same hardware, then I'd go with the "dead clock battery" theory.
The dead battery problem should be detected and logged during boot when NTPD encounters a large time difference. During shutdown the clock chip is receiving power from the power supply and does not use its battery/coin cell.
> Disabling UTC will probably fix your problem. The OP has already stated that: "I did not choose the option 'My System clock uses UTC' when installing".
Yes, I read that part of the post. However, I have learned that one needs to verify.
- K.
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