On Thu, Dec 27, 2012 at 11:08 PM, Robert Moskowitz <rgm at htt-consult.com>wrote: > > On 12/27/2012 03:26 PM, Reindl Harald wrote: > > Am 27.12.2012 21:17, schrieb Robert Moskowitz: > >> I am having problems with RoundCube: > >> > >> 'Your session is invalid or expired' > >> > >> So I went looking for logs and in /var/log/roundcube/errors I find LOTS > >> of warnings about problems with my timezone. Kind of a challenge to > >> copy the log entries over here (will do if needed). > >> > >> Anyway, for right now I am looking as to where my 'Detroit > >> American/New_York' (what I am seeing in Gnomes calendar preferences) > >> string is stored. > >> > >> Roundcube seems to want 'America/New_York'? > >> > >> Shouldn't I be seeing 'America/Detroit' when I look at the calendar > >> selection in Gnome? > > https://www.google.com/search?q=php+timezone > > > > php.ini: > > date.timezone = "your-timezone" > > Not the place where Centos is storing timezone. Or perhaps this is > where RoundCube is expecting it? This file is at its default content. > It is timestamped Jul 3. > > And /etc/localtime is a binary file. A little digging and it SEEMS that > files are copied to /etc/localtime from /usr/share/zonetime ? > > But I can't figure out what RoundCube is doing. Probably will have to > go and join that list... > > > > > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > The timezone in PHP should be configured according to your needs manually. RoundCube is looking at /etc/php.ini , if you have installed php from yum on centos -- Best Regards, Yonatan Pingle RHCT | RHCSA | CCNA1