![]() ![]() Since dual-boot configurations aren’t common for Cache’ and Ensemble installations, I won’t say more about this. When Linux is used in a dual-boot configuration with Windows, this is not the case (Windows uses local time for its system clock). ![]() On a dedicated server, UTC is very common. What about “System clock uses UTC”? This refers to the server’s hardware clock. The system-config-date utility can show you. So how do you set TZ? How does it affect the time on a Linux server? Let’s see what we can learn: The System Timezone -įor my test, I’m using Ensemble 2016.1 on a virtual CentOS system. This function is automatically called by the other time conversion functions that depend on the timezone.” “The tzset() function initializes the tzname variable from the TZ environment variable. The manpage on my CentOS 7 test system (RHEL 6 says the same) has this to say: This is recommended to improve the performance of Cache’s time-related functions. The Update Checklist for v2015.1 recommends setting the TZ environment variable on Linux platforms and points to the manpage for tzset. Setting the TZ Environment Variable on Linux ![]()
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