adjtimex 1.29-6 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

adjtimex (1.29-6) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New maintainer (Closes: #636404).
  * debian/adjtimex.service: add systemd service (Closes: #796588).
  * debian/dirs: add new path for systemd service
  * debian/control: limit "Architecture" to linux-any
  * debian/patches/:
    - change the patching order to follow 01->02->03
    - 03-remove-a-few-unused-variable-to-avoid-gcc-warnings.patch:
      remove a few unused variables to avoid gcc warnings.
  * debian/watch: update to use real upstream's URL
  * remove unnecessary debian/dirs file

 -- Roger Shimizu <email address hidden>  Thu, 03 Dec 2015 01:04:06 +0900

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Roger Shimizu
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Roger Shimizu
Architectures:
linux-any
Section:
admin
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
adjtimex_1.29-6.dsc 1.8 KiB 64394af973264ddf37ead14c41a09a33f06264eb4f942f56d3599f7717f70b00
adjtimex_1.29.orig.tar.gz 83.5 KiB 04b9e8b66e77276ed07e78de89af37fd1aa12725923de853480827c4fafd176a
adjtimex_1.29-6.debian.tar.xz 26.4 KiB 2c011dbebe1c96933c358195f7eceb389047b18451e9321d285aac6a6bee9786

Available diffs

No changes file available.

Binary packages built by this source

adjtimex: kernel time variables configuration utility

 This package provides a utility to manipulate the kernel time
 variables. For a machine connected to the Internet, or equipped with
 a precision oscillator or radio clock, the best way to keep the
 system clock accurate is using NTP (Network Time Protocol). However,
 for a standalone or intermittently connected machine, you may use
 adjtimex instead to at least correct for systematic drift. It can
 optionally adjust the system clock using the CMOS clock as a
 reference, and can log times for long-term estimation of drift rates.

adjtimex-dbgsym: debug symbols for package adjtimex

 This package provides a utility to manipulate the kernel time
 variables. For a machine connected to the Internet, or equipped with
 a precision oscillator or radio clock, the best way to keep the
 system clock accurate is using NTP (Network Time Protocol). However,
 for a standalone or intermittently connected machine, you may use
 adjtimex instead to at least correct for systematic drift. It can
 optionally adjust the system clock using the CMOS clock as a
 reference, and can log times for long-term estimation of drift rates.