localtime should be a symbolic link
in Bug Reports
Hello,
i found in the daemon.log and in the syslog allways this messages. what can I do to fix that?
i found in the daemon.log and in the syslog allways this messages. what can I do to fix that?
Jan 15 13:51:11 RepetierServer systemd-timedated[29296]: /etc/localtime should be a symbolic link to a time zone data file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/.
Jan 15 13:51:11 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Started Time & Date Service.
Jan 15 13:52:13 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.timedate1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.timedate1.service'
Jan 15 13:52:13 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Starting Time & Date Service...
Jan 15 13:52:13 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.timedate1'
Jan 15 13:52:13 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Started Time & Date Service.
Jan 15 13:52:13 RepetierServer systemd-timedated[29370]: /etc/localtime should be a symbolic link to a time zone data file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/.
Jan 15 13:53:15 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.timedate1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.timedate1.service'
Jan 15 13:53:15 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Starting Time & Date Service...
Jan 15 13:53:15 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.timedate1'
Jan 15 13:53:15 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Started Time & Date Service.
Jan 15 13:53:15 RepetierServer systemd-timedated[29443]: /etc/localtime should be a symbolic link to a time zone data file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/.
Jan 15 13:54:18 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.timedate1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.timedate1.service'
Jan 15 13:54:18 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Starting Time & Date Service...
Jan 15 13:54:18 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.timedate1'
Jan 15 13:54:18 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Started Time & Date Service.
Jan 15 13:54:18 RepetierServer systemd-timedated[29515]: /etc/localtime should be a symbolic link to a time zone data file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/.
Jan 15 13:55:20 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.timedate1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.timedate1.service'
Jan 15 13:55:20 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Starting Time & Date Service...
Jan 15 13:55:20 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.timedate1'
Jan 15 13:55:20 RepetierServer systemd-timedated[29588]: /etc/localtime should be a symbolic link to a time zone data file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/.
Jan 15 13:55:20 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Started Time & Date Service.
Jan 15 13:56:22 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.timedate1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.timedate1.service'
Jan 15 13:56:22 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Starting Time & Date Service...
Jan 15 13:56:23 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.timedate1'
Jan 15 13:56:23 RepetierServer systemd-timedated[29661]: /etc/localtime should be a symbolic link to a time zone data file in /usr/share/zoneinfo/.
Jan 15 13:56:23 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Started Time & Date Service.
Jan 15 13:57:25 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Activating via systemd: service name='org.freedesktop.timedate1' unit='dbus-org.freedesktop.timedate1.service'
Jan 15 13:57:25 RepetierServer systemd[1]: Starting Time & Date Service...
Jan 15 13:57:25 RepetierServer dbus[457]: [system] Successfully activated service 'org.freedesktop.timedate1'
Comments
On older images login on ssh terminal and run
sudo raspi-config
and go to setting time zone.
thanks for your response. I check it allready in the raspi config. There is the correct timezone set.
pi@Felix:~ $ ls -l /etc/localtime
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 33 Sep 14 12:00 /etc/localtime -> /usr/share/zoneinfo/Europe/Berlin
marking it as link. What do you have? Or did message disappear?Maybe it's not a problem either!!!??? I dont know.
ls -l /etc/localtime
as mentioned in above post and see what it returns in ssh console. See my example above.