Time settings out of sync
Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2012 1:27 am
Note: I have posted this in the Main LMDE (tracking testing) upgrade thread. However i felt it more appropriate to put it in a new thread as it does not concern upgrades. If my assumption is wrong, this thread may be closed.
I needs some help.
My system is triple boot with LMDE (tracking Testing and installed ages ago) along with Crunchbang Waldorf and WinXP.
The issue is with the time setting going haywire every so often almost on every reboot. The RTC clock is set to UTC and the WinXP has its registry edited to read RTC as UTC and not as localtime. Internet time sync on WinXP is disabled. My time zone is Asia/Kolkatta. Crunchbang displays the time right always and does have ntp installed.
Its LMDE that is displaying the time wrong at almost every reboot (and writing the wrong time to RTC at shutdown, which in turn is affecting other OS's). I have ntp installed, so the time corrects itself when connected to the net, but the RTC time is almost everytime not what it needs to be. It goes off (always falls behind, never runs ahead) by about 1.5 to a few hours. I don't understand where the system is going wrong. I have tried dpkg-reconfigure tzdata, hwclock --systohc --utc and tried deleting the /etc/adjtime file as well, but to no effect.
My LMDE had most Mint stuff removed quite a while back and then some were reinstalled including mint-update and the pin priority in the /etc/preferences file was 500 for both mint and debian repos. Now everything is as per the original setting as it were meant to be for LMDE tracking Debian Testing (as per zerozero's FAQ thread on repos/sources). There are no other sources at all. I use Gnome 3 and Gnome Classic if it matters, but have openbox installed as well but rarely use.
Are there multiple packages that are controlling time setting in my system because of the change of control from mint to debian(gnome). I do not have Mint/Cinnamon installed currentky though I had Cinnamon for a while earlier and now is removed.
How do i correct this? I would like to correct this in LMDE as thats where any goof up from my side might have happened and also because its the primary OS. Is it possible other OS's are responsible? If yes, what to do and where?
Any help/advice will gratefully recieved.
I needs some help.
My system is triple boot with LMDE (tracking Testing and installed ages ago) along with Crunchbang Waldorf and WinXP.
The issue is with the time setting going haywire every so often almost on every reboot. The RTC clock is set to UTC and the WinXP has its registry edited to read RTC as UTC and not as localtime. Internet time sync on WinXP is disabled. My time zone is Asia/Kolkatta. Crunchbang displays the time right always and does have ntp installed.
Its LMDE that is displaying the time wrong at almost every reboot (and writing the wrong time to RTC at shutdown, which in turn is affecting other OS's). I have ntp installed, so the time corrects itself when connected to the net, but the RTC time is almost everytime not what it needs to be. It goes off (always falls behind, never runs ahead) by about 1.5 to a few hours. I don't understand where the system is going wrong. I have tried dpkg-reconfigure tzdata, hwclock --systohc --utc and tried deleting the /etc/adjtime file as well, but to no effect.
My LMDE had most Mint stuff removed quite a while back and then some were reinstalled including mint-update and the pin priority in the /etc/preferences file was 500 for both mint and debian repos. Now everything is as per the original setting as it were meant to be for LMDE tracking Debian Testing (as per zerozero's FAQ thread on repos/sources). There are no other sources at all. I use Gnome 3 and Gnome Classic if it matters, but have openbox installed as well but rarely use.
Are there multiple packages that are controlling time setting in my system because of the change of control from mint to debian(gnome). I do not have Mint/Cinnamon installed currentky though I had Cinnamon for a while earlier and now is removed.
How do i correct this? I would like to correct this in LMDE as thats where any goof up from my side might have happened and also because its the primary OS. Is it possible other OS's are responsible? If yes, what to do and where?
Any help/advice will gratefully recieved.