How To Fix The Clock In Slackware

Alexzee

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Many times I have tried fixing the clock in Slackware and for some reason timeconfig didn't work for me at all.

I found a way to fix the clock and it works every time the clock is wrong.

Open the terminal as root and run these commands one at a time.

date -s "12:00:00"

ntpdate time.nist.gov


Finally to make the new set right time permanent also for the BIOS battery clock issue

hwclock --systohc

Most of the time I don't have to run "hwclock --systohc" because it fixes it'self after running ntpdate time.nist.gov.
 


Here is a much simpler method to do the same thing. As root, enter "netdate time.nist.gov"
That will sync your hardware and running clocks to the time server at nist with one command. If you leave your system running day and night, you may want to put that into a cron job to run, say, daily or weekly, depending on the amount of correction you may need.
 
Here is a much simpler method to do the same thing. As root, enter "netdate time.nist.gov"
That will sync your hardware and running clocks to the time server at nist with one command. If you leave your system running day and night, you may want to put that into a cron job to run, say, daily or weekly, depending on the amount of correction you may need.
Got it, thanks!

I'll have to learn about cron jobs as I'm not sure what file I would edit to add a job.
 
I have Slackware 14.2 installed on a 64-bit Sony laptop and the time runs 10 min's fast every month.
Any ideas why this is happening?
 
I have Slackware 14.2 installed on a 64-bit Sony laptop and the time runs 10 min's fast every month.
Any ideas why this is happening?
The hardware clock is, basically, a crystal oscillator and a counter/timer. If the crystal frequency is off, then the period between counts are not what is expected. I would say that the oscillator that is your hardware clock circuit is running a little fast. This happens often in older laptop designs, as they age.
I used to have a laptop that I kept on top of a file cabinet and was using that as my file and print server. It used to gain 16 seconds a day. (That is almost the amount of time you are experiencing. :) ). I ran a cron job to go out to a time server to get the correct time, every morning, timed before I powered up my office. This piece of ancient history, was about 14-15 years ago. Today, my file server (NAS) is a Raspberry Pi 3B+.
 
My Sony laptop is about 5 years old so it looks and sounds like from your description; the oscillator is fast.
Thanks for the info. HuMJohn.

Strangely this only happens with Slackware.
I've had Linux Mint and Fedora installed on my laptop in the past and the time didn't run fast. Go figure:-
 
Alexzee, I believe that Linpassion wanted to say 'substituted'.
ok, thanks.

With my brand new build I only had to fix the time once with 'timeconfig' and set the clock to UTC and it's running well now.

Happy Holidays!
Alex
 

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