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The search service can find package by either name (apache), provides(webserver), absolute file names (/usr/bin/apache), binaries (gprof) or shared libraries (libXm.so.2) in standard path. It does not support multiple arguments yet...
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Some machines don't have a working realtime clock (RTC) unit, or no driver for the hardware that does exist. fake-hwclock is a simple set of scripts to save the kernel's current clock periodically (including at shutdown) and restore it at boot so that the system clock keeps at least close to realtime. This will stop some of the problems that may be caused by a system believing it has travelled in time back to 1970, such as needing to perform filesystem checks at every boot. On top of this, use of NTP is still recommended to deal with the fake clock "drifting" while the hardware is halted or rebooting.
Package | Summary | Distribution | Download |
Save/restore system clock on machines without working RTC hardware | fake-hwclock-0.13-1.2.noarch.rpm | ||
fake-hwclock-0.13-1.2.noarch.html | Save/restore system clock on machines without working RTC hardware | OpenSuSE Ports Tumbleweed for noarch | fake-hwclock-0.13-1.2.noarch.rpm |
fake-hwclock-0.13-1.2.noarch.html | Save/restore system clock on machines without working RTC hardware | OpenSuSE Tumbleweed for noarch | fake-hwclock-0.13-1.2.noarch.rpm |
fake-hwclock-0.13-lp160.1.1.noarch.html | Save/restore system clock on machines without working RTC hardware | OpenSuSE Leap 16.0 for noarch | fake-hwclock-0.13-lp160.1.1.noarch.rpm |
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