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Daylight Savings and UNIX?

Anonymous asks: "My company recently asked me to write them a report on how UNIX properly handles the switch to Daylight Savings Time, and back again. When our systems administrators received the report, I was somewhat surprised. Many of them weren't aware that 'cron' would run the affected jobs twice in the fall, and not at all in the spring. Apparently, the man pages on some operating systems, like Solaris, aren't forthcoming with details. Others groups, like database administrators, are completely unaware of the differences between epoch time and wall clock time. Are even technical users ignorant on how UNIX handles time, time zones, and time conversion?"

2 of 94 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Wrong by Col.+Klink+(retired) · · Score: 4, Funny
    From my Debian Woody cron man page:
    Special considerations exist when the clock is changed by less than 3 hours, for example at the beginning and end of daylight savings time. If the time has moved forwards, those jobs which would have run in the time that was skipped will be run soon after the change. Conversely, if the time has moved backwards by less than 3 hours, those jobs that fall into the repeated time will not be re-run.
    --

    -- Don't Tase me, bro!

  2. Daylight Savings? Blech by Eponymous,+Showered · · Score: 4, Funny

    Just have your company relocate to Indiana. We don't need no steenking daylight savings.