On Thu, Aug 09, 2012 at 04:40:19PM -0700, Craig White wrote: > > On Aug 9, 2012, at 2:26 PM, Russell Jones wrote: > > >> > >> Here's a question: run hwclock, then, when you reboot, go into the BIOS, > >> and see what the time is. > >> > >> mark > > > > > > > > Thanks Mark. "hwclock" showed the right time before reboot. After > > reboot, entering BIOS it still showed the correct local time. After > > the server came up, "date" is slow by 5 hours. Let's back up a bit. I bet Mr Jones, the OP, is in the US central time zone, which right now is 5 hours earlier than UTC. I'm betting the hardware clock is set to UTC, but that Centos believes that the hw clock is set to local time, i.e. CST6CDT. (That is how it would be set for Windoze.) There is some pitiful setting to correct the Windoze problem, and it is being applied. It shouldn't be. Reboot, set bios clock to UTC. Then track down wherever Centos gets the idea that you have a dual boot windows machine whose clock is set to local time, and whack that. I'm reasonably confident that this is the problem. The "exactly five hours off" is what clued me. I think some others up-thread have been hinting about this, at least indirectly. Dave -- The principles of accounting are not arbitrary. They are natural law. -- Mencius Moldbug _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos