- No options should set the current system time.

Shaun Jackman writes:
A bug introduced in svn 11946 broke rdate. It no longer sets the
current system time when no options are specified. The options have
the opposite sense from what one might think, and, oddly enough, -ps
is intentionally a no-op.

Quoth rdate(8) from the BSD System Manager's Manual:

    -p      Do not set, just print the remote time
    -s      Do not print the time.
This commit is contained in:
Bernhard Reutner-Fischer 2006-06-03 10:24:20 +00:00
parent 9a990aaba8
commit 5c0ae06ef1

View File

@ -68,7 +68,7 @@ int rdate_main(int argc, char **argv)
remote_time = askremotedate(argv[optind]);
if (flags & 1) {
if ((flags & 2) == 0) {
time_t current_time;
time(&current_time);
@ -77,10 +77,10 @@ int rdate_main(int argc, char **argv)
else
if (stime(&remote_time) < 0)
bb_perror_msg_and_die("Could not set time of day");
}
/* No need to check for the -p flag as it's the only option left */
} else printf("%s", ctime(&remote_time));
if ((flags & 1) == 0)
printf("%s", ctime(&remote_time));
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}