no (obvious) option to set hwclock to utc during 12.04 alternate install
Affects | Status | Importance | Assigned to | Milestone | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
clock-setup (Ubuntu) |
Triaged
|
Low
|
Unassigned |
Bug Description
When installing 12.04 from an alternate CD, the time setting dialogue checks that my timezone is correct, but it doesn't ask about whether the hardware clock should be set to local time or UTC.
The problem has been there since, possibly, the previous release; I initially upgraded to Precise from an Oneiric install, and after a lot of head-scratching, discovered that hwclock set to local time was causing problems such as unexpected errors on a shared partition, due (I presume) to timestamps being wrong.
I run Lucid on the same machine, and also Windows Vista with a fix to read the hwclock as UTC. After running Precise and then booting into Vista, I was getting the time showing as 13 hrs ahead of actual time. This corresponds to the 13 hrs that NZDT is ahead of UTC.
I did a fresh install of Precise from the Beta1 alternate CD and the same thing has happened.
If people who want to use UTC are supposed to answer "no" to the question about local timezone and then set UTC manually, it is not made clear during the installation.
affects: | debian-installer (Ubuntu) → tzsetup (Ubuntu) |
This is still present in beta 2 candidate. /etc/default/rcS shows "UTC=no" when the local time of Pacific/Auckland is confirmed during installation.