franzs Posted January 2, 2016 Share Posted January 2, 2016 Hi! Happy new year! Recently, I experienced a strange date problem on my Cubitruck. After a reboot or a powerdown/powerup the date is set to Jan, 1 1970 00:00:00 UTC (aka epoch). As far as I can see the RTC is working. ntpd is enabled on my Cubitruck. (Since it runs its own nameserver with DNSSEC, DNS resolving isn't working if the date is set to epoch. So ntpd can't reach any NTP server.) I'm running a vanila kernel with Debian Jessy (8.2): Linux vaili 4.3.3-sunxi #3 SMP Mon Dec 28 11:27:16 CET 2015 armv7l GNU/Linux Setting the date after a reboot and powerdown/powerup was working some time ago. After a few updates of the system image it wasn't any more. Sorry to be a bit vague here. Please find some information about my system attached. Do you have any idea what's going wrong with the clock? Best regards Franz journalctl-b0.txt hwclock-systohc.txt hwclock-show.txt timedatectl.txt Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Igor Posted January 2, 2016 Share Posted January 2, 2016 Check this thread for solution. http://forum.armbian.com/index.php/topic/550-system-time-always-wrong-after-boot-after-upgrade-from-47-to-481/ &Happy new one to you too Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
franzs Posted January 2, 2016 Author Share Posted January 2, 2016 Hi Igor, thanks for your reply. Installing and using fake-hwclock works. Best regards Franz 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Skygod Posted January 2, 2016 Share Posted January 2, 2016 Cheers for the solution! I saw this behaviour a couple of times on my Banana Pi M1+ and it caused issues with a few scripts such as the python script for setting the GoDaddy DNS Zone to my public IP address. (Learning more every day!) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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