----- "James Washer" <washer@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > The time is aware of MY timezone (easily tested).. but I'd still not > sure if is the time of the panic... or some later time > > On Mon, 2009-03-30 at 12:08 -0700, James Washer wrote: > > If I run 'sys', I see timestamps such as > > DATE: Thu Mar 26 08:53:13 2009 > > > > What "time" is this.. the time the panic occurred? The time the dump was > > "collected"? Is it Zulu timeszone, is it my (the crash investigators) > > time zone, is it the timezone of the system that crashed? It's a ctime() translation of the contents of the kernel's "xtime" timespec structure. So running on a live system, you can see it change. On a dumpfile, that's a good question, because thinking about it, it may have slightly different meanings depending upon the dumpfile-creation mechanism used. So, for example, on a netdump or diskdump it's whatever was last there when the kernel memory containing the data structure was copied to disk or over the network. With a kdump, it would still be getting bumped up until the point where the kernel transitions/kexec's into the secondary kernel, right? Anyway, it's *somewhere* around the time of the panic... Dave -- Crash-utility mailing list Crash-utility@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/crash-utility