Difference between revisions of "Problems with hwclock"
(Added X60s to the list) |
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*Thinkpad {{T60p}} | *Thinkpad {{T60p}} | ||
*Thinkpad {{X60s}} | *Thinkpad {{X60s}} | ||
+ | *Thinkpad {{Z61m}} | ||
== Affected Operating Systems == | == Affected Operating Systems == | ||
− | *Linux, all flavours. Tested with kernel 2.6.18 | + | *Linux, all flavours. Tested with kernel 2.6.18, 2.6.19, 2.6.20.6 |
Revision as of 21:03, 16 April 2007
This page discusses the problem with /dev/rtc on certain models.
Problem description
On bootup,a message like this shows up:
select() to /dev/rtc to wait for clock tick timed out
The RTC kernel driver can't handle the system clock.
Possible solutions
The hwclock command knows the parameter --directisa to access the system clock directly. To make this the default behavior, move /sbin/hwclock (or whereever it is located on your system) to /sbin/hwclock.dist and create the following shell script on the previous location:
#!/bin/sh /sbin/hwclock.dist --directisa $*
Make the script executable (apply the same permissions you had for hwclock before) and keep your packaging system from overwriting it on updates.
Affected Models
Affected Operating Systems
- Linux, all flavours. Tested with kernel 2.6.18, 2.6.19, 2.6.20.6