Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Dual boot
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Dual boot Post 302481448 by Corona688 on Friday 17th of December 2010 02:04:21 PM
Old 12-17-2010
A mystery to me too. It seems to work reasonably, though of course there's some hitches.

The most annoying may be the system clock. Windows sets it to the local time zone, while most Linux distributions set it to UTC. With the result that when you boot Linux it may complain about files having mtimes in the future, etc, etc.
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Dual boot no more

Ok I had a windows and RH dual boot system and have now converted over completly to the linux system. How do I regain the other half of my drive? I cannot see it in the disk manager. what do I do to format so that i can mount it? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: macdonto
1 Replies

2. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Dual Boot help...

Hi there! I have a laptop which I plan on installing a dual boot on with Windows and Linux. I have Windows 98 installed at the moment, and I also have a copy of Slackware 8. I talked to friend, and he said he had some problems installing a dual boot with linux on his laptop... So I just came... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: satan404
2 Replies

3. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Dual Boot Solaris 8

Greetings, I have learned much since joining the message board, but I was unable to locate any information concerning dual booting Solaris with Windows on a machine with standardized equipment. I have read on the sun.com page that it is possible and can even be pushed to the rear partition, but... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: TStoddard
3 Replies

4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

XP/Linux dual boot

Does anyone have any idea how I can manage an XP/Linux dual boot (I want to use debian), I can't find anything about it on the internet! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: XDC_Wolf
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Dual Boot on HP-UX

Hy all Does anyone have Info on how to make a dual boot HP UX 10-20 HP UX 11 on a server ? Thanks in advance Olivier (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Olivier
3 Replies

6. BSD

dual boot

I have recently installed free bsd on my windows xp laptop so that now it is a dual boot system. It worked fine for the first couple of days, but now whenever I try to boot into windows it hangs, giving the message WINDOWS\System32\DRIVERS\agp440.sys, bsd however, loads fine. I was wondering either... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: elfhat
3 Replies

7. Solaris

solaris dual boot

hi ;) So I have 2 HDD (SATA and ATA). On the SATA I've installed WindwosXP and now I want to install solaris 10 on the ATA disk. Is it possible if the ATA disk is primary to make dual boot ? thank you very much (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: nocture
0 Replies

8. Solaris

Dual Boot XP Solaris

Does here know how to configure the Windows XP Boot loader to dual boot XP and Solaris 10? I installed Solaris after XP but it did not detect the XP installation, and I really can't reformat right now. (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Super User
3 Replies

9. Linux

Dual-boot help

Does anyone know if it is possible to have a dual-boot machine with Linux (RH FC 5) and Unix (Solaris 10)? I currently have one OS (Linux RH FC 5) on one drive (master) and another OS (Unix - Solaris 10) on the other drive (slave). I am a little unsure of what to modify the grub.config file with,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: trmn8r
1 Replies

10. Ubuntu

Do you dual-boot with other os

When I first started using Linux (Ubuntu) I decided to just do a full install. The PC I installed it on, was full of viruses and to be honest, I was never good handling them. So, I decided to just go for it and install. Anyways I got another computer recently, a much newer one and I decided to... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: billcrosby
3 Replies
dtsdate(1m)															       dtsdate(1m)

NAME
dtsdate - Sets local clock from a remote dtsd server host SYNOPSIS
dtsdate [-q] [-s] [-u] remote_host [nsecs] ARGUMENTS
Queries the difference in time between the local host and the remote host, but does not change the local clock. The returned result (2 if the time would have been reset, 1 if there was an error, and 0 otherwise) can be used by a script to determine what action to take. Causes dtsdate to work silently, without showing the time. Shows the time in UTC, rather than in the current time zone. The name or the IP address of a remote host that has a dtsd server. An integer giving the number of seconds by which the remote and local host times can dif- fer, without the local host's clock being reset. If nsecs is 0, or if it is not specified, it is treated as if it were extremely large, and no resetting occurs. DESCRIPTION
The dtsdate command sets the local clock of a system to be the same as the host remote_host, running a dtsd server. The purpose of dtsdate is to ensure that clock skew is minimized at initial cell configuration or at host instantiation, because it is difficult to start DCE and its components if the skew is too great. Clocks among all DCE components must be within five minutes of each other, to prevent failure of CDS and of security. Some DCE components have even more stringent requirements. For instance, a DFS file server cannot start if its local host differs from other DFS hosts by more than ten seconds. The dtsdate command can be used for adjusting a clock backwards, before DCE is running on a host. Adjusting a clock backwards while DCE is running can cause many difficulties, because security and file system software generally require system time to increase monotonically. NOTES
The remote host must be running as a DTS server. This means that the dtsd on that system must have registered the DTS management inter- face, because dtsdate uses the management call to get the current time from that host. For dtsdate to be able to set the clock, it must run as a privileged user (root). EXIT VALUE
If the -q argument is given, dtsdate returns 2 if the remote time and local time differ by more than nsecs, 1 if there was an error, and 0 otherwise. If the -q argument is not given, dtsdate returns 1 if there was an error, and 0 otherwise. EXAMPLES
With only the host argument: dtsdate remotehost dtsdate prints out the time on the remote host. In this example: dtsdate -s -q remotehost 10 dtsdate does not print out the remote host's time. If the times differ by more than 10 seconds, it returns the value of 1, otherwise 0. In the next example: dtsdate -s remotehost 10 dtsdate sets the clock if it differed from the remote clock by more than 10 seconds. It does this work silently, because of the -s option. The following example shows a shell script that uses the return value of dtsdate: dtsdate -s -q remhost 10 result = $? if [ $result -eq 0 ] ; then echo "Time is within tolerence." elif [ $result -eq 1 ] ; then echo "Could not contact remote host." >&2 else # result = 2 if dtsdate remhost 10; then # it failed! echo "Could not set the clock." >&2 fi fi RELATED INFORMATION
Commands: dtsd(1m) dtsdate(1m)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:45 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy