When I go to set date and time I have a box that is grayed out and I can't tic the box to chose to set time and date automatically. Why and or what can I do to be able to chose the option?
Debian 10 KDE
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Can't set date and time automatically
- Hallvor
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Re: Can't set date and time automatically
[HowTo] Install and configure Debian bookworm
Debian 12 | KDE Plasma | ThinkPad T440s | 4 × Intel® Core™ i7-4600U CPU @ 2.10GHz | 12 GiB RAM | Mesa Intel® HD Graphics 4400 | 1 TB SSD
Debian 12 | KDE Plasma | ThinkPad T440s | 4 × Intel® Core™ i7-4600U CPU @ 2.10GHz | 12 GiB RAM | Mesa Intel® HD Graphics 4400 | 1 TB SSD
- FreewheelinFrank
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Re: Can't set date and time automatically
Do you need something like systemd-timesyncd? I have that on my system.
Re: Can't set date and time automatically
Installed ntp.
I have an industry specific program, it is Windows only, after I finish up my work, I;ll go back to Debian and the time was not correct.
At first after ntp install I didn't think it was working but then I looked down at the time and it was correct. I guess it was getting network time.
Still don't know why the time is different after leaving windows but I'm good now that it is getting network time.
What is systemd-timesyncd and is it better than ntp?
Thanks
I have an industry specific program, it is Windows only, after I finish up my work, I;ll go back to Debian and the time was not correct.
At first after ntp install I didn't think it was working but then I looked down at the time and it was correct. I guess it was getting network time.
Still don't know why the time is different after leaving windows but I'm good now that it is getting network time.
What is systemd-timesyncd and is it better than ntp?
Thanks
Re: Can't set date and time automatically
Debian uses UTC time and windows as far as I know uses local time. Hardware stores the time and windows like to take control
ntp is the old method and is actually being replaced by ntpsec. systemd is newer yet.
- FreewheelinFrank
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Re: Can't set date and time automatically
Description from Synaptic:
As to the second question, I have no idea. I was actually expecting to find ntp installed but it isn't. I had to search for an installed package that might be updating system time from the internet, and that's what I found. It is a dependency of Systemd, and Debian 10 uses Systemd, so I don't know why KDE couldn't use it (XFCE seems to, as system time matches internet time exactly, but XFCE doesn't seem to have any time/date settings dialogue).The package contains the systemd-timesyncd system service that may be used to
synchronize the local system clock with a remote Network Time Protocol server.
- sunrat
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Re: Can't set date and time automatically
How to Fix Windows and Linux Showing Different Times When Dual Booting
Personally I use Option 2 in that article - set Windows to use UTC, and have for many years without issue. You can just download the .reg file and run it in Windows.
I just checked my Bullseye KDE system, it uses systemd-timesyncd.service to do the network sync which must be default as I never changed it. No ntp packages are installed.
Personally I use Option 2 in that article - set Windows to use UTC, and have for many years without issue. You can just download the .reg file and run it in Windows.
I just checked my Bullseye KDE system, it uses systemd-timesyncd.service to do the network sync which must be default as I never changed it. No ntp packages are installed.
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