Date and Time
To view your system's current date and time information, as well as make direct changes to it, use date(1).
Timezone
The default system timezone can be set by linking the timezone file to
/etc/localtime
:
# ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/<timezone> /etc/localtime
Note: If the variable
TIMEZONE
is set in/etc/rc.conf
, it should be removed or commented out, as this will override what has been set withln
on reboot.
To change the timezone on a per user basis, the TZ
variable can be exported
from your shell's profile:
export TZ=<timezone>
Note that setting the timezone does not set the time (or date); instead, it simply specifies an offset from UTC, as described in timezone(3).
Hardware clock
By default, the hardware clock in Void is stored as UTC. Windows does not use
UTC by default, and if you are dual-booting, this will conflict with Void. You
can either change Windows to use UTC, or change Void Linux to use localtime
by
setting the HARDWARECLOCK
variable in /etc/rc.conf
:
export HARDWARECLOCK=localtime
For more details, see hwclock(8).
NTP
To maintain accuracy of your system's clock, you can use the Network Time Protocol (NTP).
Void provides packages for three NTP daemons: NTP, OpenNTPD and Chrony.
Once you have installed an NTP daemon, you can enable the
service for it, either through
its own service or the ntpd
service managed by
xbps-alternatives(1).
NTP
NTP is the official reference implementation of the Network Time Protocol.
The ntp
package provides NTP and the isc-ntpd
service.
For further information, visit the NTP site.
OpenNTPD
OpenNTPD focuses on providing a secure, lean NTP implementation which "just works" with reasonable accuracy for a majority of use-cases.
The openntpd
package provides OpenNTPD and the openntpd
service.
For further information, visit the OpenNTPD site.
Chrony
Chrony is designed to work well in a variety of conditions; it can synchronize faster and with greater accuracy than NTP.
The chrony
package provides Chrony and the chronyd
service.
The Chrony site provides a brief overview of its advantages over NTP, as well as a detailed feature comparison between Chrony, NTP and OpenNTPD.