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Operating Systems Linux Red Hat Hardware and system timing are different Post 302904627 by rbatte1 on Thursday 5th of June 2014 08:54:36 AM
Old 06-05-2014
Have a look at the date command manual page:-
Code:
man date

That should let you set the system clock. Take care considering the time zone.

Why is the hardware clock important to you?

Also have a look at the clock manual page:-
Code:
man clock

I hope that this helps,

Robin
 

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clock(3C)						   Standard C Library Functions 						 clock(3C)

NAME
clock - report CPU time used SYNOPSIS
#include <time.h> clock_t clock(void); DESCRIPTION
The clock() function returns the amount of CPU time (in microseconds) used since the first call to clock() in the calling process. The time reported is the sum of the user and system times of the calling process and its terminated child processes for which it has executed the wait(3C) function, the pclose(3C) function, or the system(3C) function. RETURN VALUES
Dividing the value returned by clock() by the constant CLOCKS_PER_SEC, defined in the <time.h> header, will give the time in seconds. If the process time used is not available or cannot be represented, clock returns the value (clock_t) -1. USAGE
The value returned by clock() is defined in microseconds for compatibility with systems that have CPU clocks with much higher resolution. Because of this, the value returned will wrap around after accumulating only 2147 seconds of CPU time (about 36 minutes). ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |Interface Stability |Standard | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT-Level |MT-Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
times(2), popen(3C), system(3C), wait(3C), attributes(5), standards(5) SunOS 5.10 24 Jul 2002 clock(3C)
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