Reference Guide

— mm is the month
— dd is the day
— hh is the hour
— mm is the minutes
— ss is the seconds
— mmmmmm is the number of microseconds
— s is a + (plus) sign or a - (minus) sign, which
indicates the sign of the offset
— off is the offset in minutes
NOTE: The off is the offset in minutes from GMT and
must be in 15-minute increments. The timezone is
represented as an offset from GMT, and the clock
does not automatically adjust to daylight savings time
(for '-d' option).
-z <
zone
> - Sets the time zone by name or index,
or lists possible time zones. For example,
PST8PDT (Western United States), 294 (Seoul),
344 (Sydney). <
zone
> may be:
— <
?
> lists the major timezone names/prefixes
— <
timezone
> is the case-sensitive name of your
timezone or the index listed by '-z timezone-
prefix*'.
— <
timezone-prefix*
> is a prefix of one or more
timezones, followed by '*'.
NOTE: The timezone/daylight savings time is fully
supported for '-l' and '-z' options. Omit the '-l' option
to set the timezone only (eg. '-z US/Central').
-l — Sets the local date and time in the string
yyymmddhhmmss where:
— yyyy is a the year
— mm is the month
— dd is the day
— hh is the hour
— mm is the minute
— ss is the second
— Setting the time using the -l and -z options is
recommended. This command format allows the
CMC to fully support local time zones, including
the ability to automatically adjust the CMC time to
the local Daylight Savings Time.
Example The setractime subcommand supports dates ranging from
1/1/1970 00:00:00 through 12/31/2030 23:59:59. To set the
local time to October 24, 2007 at 3:02:30 PM:
racadm setractime -l 20071024150230
The time was set successfully.
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