R Lists06 a écrit :
I believe it was taken care of with tzdata-2006m-3.el4.
you can run the following command on you server:
# zdump -v US/Pacific
replace US/Pacific with your timezone. you should see Sun Mar 11. if you see Apr 1 they you need to update.
hth. cameron
What do you mean?
If I do this
[root@ns1 ~]# zdump -v US/Pacific | wc -l 372
Obviously I get 372 lines of stuff...
How does one decipher that?
I guess the command should be % zdump -v US/Pacific | grep 2007
centos 4.4 output (OK): US/Pacific Sun Mar 11 09:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Mar 11 01:59:59 2007 PST isdst=0 gmtoff=-28800 US/Pacific Sun Mar 11 10:00:00 2007 UTC = Sun Mar 11 03:00:00 2007 PDT isdst=1 gmtoff=-25200 US/Pacific Sun Nov 4 08:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Nov 4 01:59:59 2007 PDT isdst=1 gmtoff=-25200 US/Pacific Sun Nov 4 09:00:00 2007 UTC = Sun Nov 4 01:00:00 2007 PST isdst=0 gmtoff=-28800
RHEL 3 output (system unpatched): US/Pacific Sun Apr 1 09:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Apr 1 01:59:59 2007 PST isdst=0 gmtoff=-28800 US/Pacific Sun Apr 1 10:00:00 2007 UTC = Sun Apr 1 03:00:00 2007 PDT isdst=1 gmtoff=-25200 US/Pacific Sun Oct 28 08:59:59 2007 UTC = Sun Oct 28 01:59:59 2007 PDT isdst=1 gmtoff=-25200 US/Pacific Sun Oct 28 09:00:00 2007 UTC = Sun Oct 28 01:00:00 2007 PST isdst=0 gmtoff=-28800