Which is why I always symlink /etc/localtime Not only does it solve these issues, but it makes it very clear which timezone is selected!
-----Original Message----- From: centos-bounces@centos.org [mailto:centos-bounces@centos.org] On Behalf Of Aleksandar Milivojevic Sent: Monday, November 07, 2005 2:45 PM To: centos@centos.org Subject: Re: [CentOS] New Standard/Daylight time-change dates in rhel4u2 butnot centos4.2?
Quoting s.davison@computer.org:
Many thanks, that was basically the problem. It wasn't Canadian time, but it was the wrong /etc/localtime. I don't know where that /etc/localtime came from -- it's not the same as any of the files in the /usr/share/zoneinfo hierarchy. But putting US/Eastern in there did the trick.
My guess is you had old version of tzdata package, that was updated to current version sometime in the past. Now, if you look which package owns /etc/localtime and /usr/share/zoneinfo stuff, you get:
# rpm -qf /etc/localtime glibc-2.3.4-2.13 # rpm -qf /usr/share/zoneinfo/US/Eastern tzdata-2005m-1.EL4
As far as I can see, tzdata package has no pre/postinstall scripts associated with it. That would mean /etc/localtime doesn't get updated when tzdata is updated. Unless I missed something, it's probably a bug in tzdata RPM package.
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