LevT
Platinum Member | Редактировать | Профиль | Сообщение | Цитировать | Сообщить модератору used вот, наткнулся по случаю: Цитата: You can force the CMOS TOD clock's offset to be initialized to a specific value at power on. To do so, set the option rtc.diffFromUTC in the virtual machine's .vmx configuration file to a value in seconds. For example, setting rtc.diffFromUTC = 0 sets the clock to UTC at power on, while setting rtc.diffFromUTC = -25200 sets it to Pacific Daylight Time, seven hours earlier than UTC. The guest operating system can still change the offset value after power on by writing a new time to the CMOS TOD clock. You can also force the CMOS TOD clock to start at a specified time whenever the virtual machine is powered on, independent of the real time. To do this, set the configuration file option rtc.startTime. The value you specify is in seconds since Jan 1, 1970 00:00 UTC, but it is converted to the local time zone of the host operating system before setting the CMOS TOD clock (under the assumption that the guest operating system wants the CMOS TOD clock to read in local time). If your guest operating system is running the CMOS TOD clock in UTC or some other time zone, you should correct for this when setting rtc.startTime. | Добавлено: tools.syncTime = FALSE time.synchronize.continue = FALSE time.synchronize.restore = FALSE time.synchronize.resume.disk = FALSE time.synchronize.shrink = FALSE time.synchronize.tools.startup = FALSE Information on these settings is also available in VMware Knowledge Base article 1189. Добавлено: Since guest operating systems generally get their time from the virtual CMOS TOD clock when they are powered on, you need to set this device to your fictitious time if you want the time to persist across guest restarts. If you want to start a guest with the same time on every startup, use the rtc.startTime option described in the earlier section Virtual CMOS RTC. If instead you want the guest to have a constant offset from real time as maintained by the host, you can use the rtc.diffFromUTC option, or simply set the CMOS TOD clock from the virtual machine's BIOS setup screen or from within the guest operating system. In Microsoft Windows, setting the system time automatically updates the CMOS clock. In Linux, you can use the /sbin/hwclock program to set the CMOS clock. Alternatively, because most Linux distributions are configured to copy the system time into the CMOS clock during system shutdown, you can simply set the system time and shut down the guest system before restarting it again. А вообче-то вся премудрость вот из этого документа: http://www.vmware.com/resources/techresources/1066 | Всего записей: 17126 | Зарегистр. 14-10-2001 | Отправлено: 20:20 20-08-2008 | Исправлено: LevT, 21:15 20-08-2008 |
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