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Operating Systems SCO Cannot use 'date -t' to set the system date and time Post 302993768 by rbatte1 on Tuesday 14th of March 2017 08:02:51 AM
Old 03-14-2017
Could it also be (given that you don't show any errors) that the timezone gets in the way? The real time is stored in UTC/ZULU/CUT/GMT and it is compensated for by the timezone setting in $TZ before it is displayed.

Is it that the time is set okay, but when you display it there is a discrepancy because of your timezone?

Of course, NTP might be getting in and re-setting the clock too. Typically this is done at boot time as a big step.



Robin
 

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PMCTIME(3)						     Library Functions Manual							PMCTIME(3)

NAME
pmCtime - format the date and time for a reporting timezone C SYNOPSIS
#include <time.h> #include <pcp/pmapi.h> char *pmCtime(const time_t *clock, char *buf); cc ... -lpcp DESCRIPTION
pmCtime is very similar to ctime(3), except the timezone used is the current ``reporting timezone'' (rather than the default TZ environment variable scheme), and the result is returned into a caller-declared buffer (rather than a private buffer). Like ctime(3) the time to be converted is passed via clock, and the result in buf is fixed width fields in the format: Fri Sep 13 00:00:00 1986 The result buffer buf must be at least 26 bytes long, and no attempt is made to check this. pmCtime returns buf as the value of the func- tion. The default current reporting timezone is as defined by the TZ environment variable, so pmCtime and ctime(3) will initially produce similar encoding of the date and time. Use pmNewZone(3), pmNewContextZone(3) or pmUseZone(3) to establish a new current reporting timezone that will effect pmCtime but not ctime(3). SEE ALSO
ctime(3), PMAPI(3), pmLocaltime(3), pmNewContextZone(3), pmNewZone(3) and pmUseZone(3). Performance Co-Pilot PCP PMCTIME(3)
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