On 13/11/18 8:52 am, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 11/13/18 4:49 AM, Stephen Morris wrote:
So given all this, when searching journalctl for boot messages across particular
datetime ranges, how do you find them when the timestamps in
the journals are blatantly wrong, potentially up until the desktop loads?
I don't know. I've not had this sort of problem since years ago when my HW clock was not
set to GMT/UTC.
FWIW,
[root@meimei ~]# date ; hwclock ; uptime
Tue Nov 13 05:47:36 CST 2018
2018-11-13 05:47:28.405437+08:00
05:47:36 up 3 days
So, you can see my HW clock is running a bit slow.
The hwclock command always shows time as local. (see the man page) But if I reboot and
go into the BIOS
it will show 2018-11-12 21:47...
My hardware clock is running a couple of seconds slow as well.
Just as a matter of curiosity, when you say if you issue hwclock from
the bios (how have you done that) what does journalctl show for the same
time? Does it show, using your example, 2018-11-12 21:47 or does it show
2018-11-13 21:47?
regards,
Steve
_______________________________________________
users mailing list -- users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe send an email to users-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Fedora Code of Conduct: https://getfedora.org/code-of-conduct.html
List Guidelines: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines
List Archives: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx