The CentOS wiki link I mentioned [ http://wiki.centos.org/TipsAndTricks/VMWare_Server ], has instructions adapted from VMware knowledge base link mentioned by many of you [ http://kb.vmware.com/kb/1006427 ].
I have followed the instructions on CentOS wiki, but it doesn't seem to work. Most of the suggestions here are same as mentioned in the CentOS wiki/VMware knowledge base. Any comments or suggestions?
- CS.
On Tue, Oct 13, 2009 at 6:34 PM, Ray Van Dolson rayvd@bludgeon.org wrote:
On Tue, Oct 13, 2009 at 04:31:03PM -0700, nate wrote:
Carlos Santana wrote:
Howdy,
I am having time-drift issues on my CentOS VM. I had referred to following documentation: http://wiki.centos.org/TipsAndTricks/VMWare_Server , however it didn't help. I used kickstart for creating this VM and I am listing important steps in ref to timekeeping issue. Any comments or suggestion would be appreciated.
[..]
VMware Tools not installed.
You should certainly install vmware tools, and enable time sync to the guest. Also don't run an ntp server in a Vmware VM.
This is what I'd always thought, but the VMware KB link[1] referenced in the other reply in this thread seems to indicate that best practice is to use NTP + kernel w/ clock/divider options (unless it's new enough to not need it) and to *not* use the VMware Tools host time sync.
That said, you should certainly still have VMware Tools installed, it just sounds like the host time sync is no longer preferred...
Also note that they recommend you remove the local time source in ntp.conf...
Ray
[1] http://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/microsites/search.do?language=en_US&cmd... _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos