I have set get time from internet in the indicator datetime.
timedatectl says:
$ timedatectl
Local time: Tue 2016-04-12 10:54:21 BST
Universal time: Tue 2016-04-12 09:54:21 UTC
RTC time: Tue 2016-04-12 10:54:20
Time zone: Europe/London (BST, +0100)
Network time on: yes
NTP synchronized: no
RTC in local TZ: yes
Warning: The system is configured to read the RTC time in the local time zone.
This mode can not be fully supported. It will create various problems
with time zone changes and daylight saving time adjustments. The RTC
time is never updated, it relies on external facilities to maintain it.
If at all possible, use RTC in UTC by calling 'timedatectl set-local-rtc 0'.
Which is consistent, but I'm not sure if that's right. My /etc/adjtime says LOCAL, and I do have WIndows 10 installed. I should check if WIndows 10 can handle UTC hardware clock.
The journal has many errors about failing to call adjtime.
I have set get time from internet in the indicator datetime.
timedatectl says:
$ timedatectl
Local time: Tue 2016-04-12 10:54:21 BST
Universal time: Tue 2016-04-12 09:54:21 UTC
RTC time: Tue 2016-04-12 10:54:20
Time zone: Europe/London (BST, +0100)
Network time on: yes
NTP synchronized: no
RTC in local TZ: yes
Warning: The system is configured to read the RTC time in the local time zone.
'timedatectl set-local-rtc 0'.
This mode can not be fully supported. It will create various problems
with time zone changes and daylight saving time adjustments. The RTC
time is never updated, it relies on external facilities to maintain it.
If at all possible, use RTC in UTC by calling
Which is consistent, but I'm not sure if that's right. My /etc/adjtime says LOCAL, and I do have WIndows 10 installed. I should check if WIndows 10 can handle UTC hardware clock.
The journal has many errors about failing to call adjtime.