Bug 436738

Summary: Daylight savings time and laptop suspend/resume
Product: [Fedora] Fedora Reporter: Penelope Fudd <bugzilla.redhat.com>
Component: pm-utilsAssignee: Phil Knirsch <pknirsch>
Status: CLOSED WONTFIX QA Contact: Fedora Extras Quality Assurance <extras-qa>
Severity: low Docs Contact:
Priority: low    
Version: 7CC: opensource, rvokal, triage
Target Milestone: ---   
Target Release: ---   
Hardware: All   
OS: Linux   
Whiteboard:
Fixed In Version: Doc Type: Bug Fix
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Clone Of: Environment:
Last Closed: 2008-06-17 03:03:27 UTC Type: ---
Regression: --- Mount Type: ---
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Verified Versions: Category: ---
oVirt Team: --- RHEL 7.3 requirements from Atomic Host:
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Embargoed:

Description Penelope Fudd 2008-03-10 05:03:36 UTC
Description of problem:
My laptop was an hour off today when I resumed operation.

Version-Release number of selected component (if applicable):
glibc-common-2.6-4 -- I'm only attaching this to glibc because it has most of
the timezone stuff; it probably should be moved to a suspend/resume package, but
I don't know how to determine the right package.

How reproducible:
Always?

Steps to Reproduce:
1. Suspend your laptop
2. Wait for daylight savings time to change
3. Resume your laptop
  
Actual results:
Time is off by an hour.

Expected results:
Time is not off by an hour.

Additional info:
I bet this will be a tedious bug to fix.  :-/

Comment 1 Jakub Jelinek 2008-03-11 09:01:57 UTC
glibc has nothing to do with this.  Is your hw clock using UTC or localtime?

Comment 2 Till Maas 2008-03-11 09:24:24 UTC
You should look at these to places to determine, whether or not your hardware
clock uses UTC:

1) $ grep UTC /etc/sysconfig/clock
2) Look at the time you see in your bios

Comment 3 Penelope Fudd 2008-03-13 03:46:57 UTC
It's using localtime.

The 'hwclock -r' command shows the local time (PDT).  Or did you mean reboot and
check the bios time that way?

Comment 4 Till Maas 2008-04-15 12:44:45 UTC
Uh, I thought I answered here already:

(In reply to comment #3)

> The 'hwclock -r' command shows the local time (PDT).  Or did you mean reboot and
> check the bios time that way?

"hwclock -r" seems to show the time in the local timezone, please boot into the
bios and check it there.

Comment 5 Bug Zapper 2008-05-14 15:22:24 UTC
This message is a reminder that Fedora 7 is nearing the end of life. Approximately 30 (thirty) days from now Fedora will stop maintaining and issuing updates for Fedora 7. It is Fedora's policy to close all bug reports from releases that are no longer maintained. At that time this bug will be closed as WONTFIX if it remains open with a Fedora 'version' of '7'.

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Comment 6 Bug Zapper 2008-06-17 03:03:25 UTC
Fedora 7 changed to end-of-life (EOL) status on June 13, 2008. 
Fedora 7 is no longer maintained, which means that it will not 
receive any further security or bug fix updates. As a result we 
are closing this bug. 

If you can reproduce this bug against a currently maintained version 
of Fedora please feel free to reopen this bug against that version.

Thank you for reporting this bug and we are sorry it could not be fixed.