Alexander Todorov wrote:
Good morning,
that's exactly what I did. I went to BIOS and set the time to correct
value.
Rebooted the machine and pressed F2 so it stays in the BIOS settings
screen for
several hours. The turned it off for several hours during the night and
turned
it on again today. No change in the clock readings.
This sounds like a kernel bug but I'm still not sure what info to
provide if I file a bug report. Any hints?
Does your laptop have a variable speed CPU ? There are notes
on ntp.org (?) on how ntp doesn't like the tick speed varying.
(and if your CPU slows down because it isn't doing much....)
I have had this problem with some HP desktops and while I haven't
fixed it yet, my current workings is to get the latest BIOS
(just in case) and disable the cpuspeed parameter in the
system-config-services (which I just noticed today)
cpuspeed
This throttles your CPU runtime frequency to save power. Many modern laptop CPU's support this
feature and now most new desktops support this. Users should enable only if they are users of
Pentium-M, Centrino, AMD PowerNow, Transmetta, Intel SpeedStep, Athlon-64, Athlon-X2, Intel Core 2
hardware. Laptop users are highly recommended to leave this enabled. Disable this if you want your
CPU to remain at a fixed state.
A couple of things to try.
Pete
--
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Peter Glassenbury Computer Science department
pete@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx University of Canterbury
+64 3 3642987 ext 7762 New Zealand
--
fedora-test-list mailing list
fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx
To unsubscribe:
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list