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I have been getting these errors whenever I boot
Tue Oct 2 14:57:59 2012: HARDWARECLOCK= is deprecated. See rc.conf(5) and hwclock(8) for details.
Tue Oct 2 14:57:59 2012: :: Adjusting system time and setting kernel time zone [BUSY] TIMEZONE= is deprecated. See rc.conf(5) for details.
I also get the same thing but for HOSTNAME but it is not in the logs. Should I just remove those from my rc.conf? any help greatly appreciated.
Last edited by djyoung4 (2012-10-02 22:56:15)
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With the switch to systemd you will need to create new configuration files.
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Have you read these man pages? They tell you what to do.
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In addition to above, https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Rc.conf
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I'm reading the man pages now. thanks for the quick responses. I'm assuming once I create the new files and add the necessary info that I should remove it from the rc.conf. correct?
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Yes, although I prefer to comment stuff out and not outright remove it. Makes reverting the changes much easier in case something doesn't work.
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thats what I did. All fixed now. Thanks for the help.
Last edited by djyoung4 (2012-10-02 22:57:00)
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Hello, sorry for asking this here but, I have the exact same problem with HOSTNAME and I did everything correctly, i have my /etc/hostname created with the hostname in there but the problem remain, how can I solve this ?
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@aliasbody: you'll still get the warning as long as HOSTNAME is set in /etc/rc.conf (even if /etc/hostname is what is being used). That is to avoid confusion in case people don't realise that the /etc/rc.conf HOSTNAME is actually being ignored.
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@aliasbody: you'll still get the warning as long as HOSTNAME is set in /etc/rc.conf (even if /etc/hostname is what is being used). That is to avoid confusion in case people don't realise that the /etc/rc.conf HOSTNAME is actually being ignored.
The problem is that I am talking about my laptop (fresh installation 1 week ago with already the new changes) and on the /etc/rc.conf there is no hostname= in any place :S...
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tomegun wrote:@aliasbody: you'll still get the warning as long as HOSTNAME is set in /etc/rc.conf (even if /etc/hostname is what is being used). That is to avoid confusion in case people don't realise that the /etc/rc.conf HOSTNAME is actually being ignored.
The problem is that I am talking about my laptop (fresh installation 1 week ago with already the new changes) and on the /etc/rc.conf there is no hostname= in any place :S...
Hm. Might be a bug then. Are you using initscripts-2012.09.2? It should have been fixed in that release.
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aliasbody wrote:tomegun wrote:@aliasbody: you'll still get the warning as long as HOSTNAME is set in /etc/rc.conf (even if /etc/hostname is what is being used). That is to avoid confusion in case people don't realise that the /etc/rc.conf HOSTNAME is actually being ignored.
The problem is that I am talking about my laptop (fresh installation 1 week ago with already the new changes) and on the /etc/rc.conf there is no hostname= in any place :S...
Hm. Might be a bug then. Are you using initscripts-2012.09.2? It should have been fixed in that release.
I update the System and now the problem is solved (I really have a little perception of time xD). Thanks anyways
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