timedatectlsystemdDeveloperLennartPoetteringlennart@poettering.nettimedatectl1timedatectlControl the system time and datetimedatectl OPTIONSCOMMANDDescriptiontimedatectl may be used to query and
change the system clock and its settings.Use
systemd-firstboot1
to initialize the system time zone for mounted (but not booted)
system images.OptionsThe following options are understood:Do not query the user for authentication for
privileged operations.If set-local-rtc is invoked
and this option is passed, the system clock is synchronized
from the RTC again, taking the new setting into account.
Otherwise, the RTC is synchronized from the system
clock.The following commands are understood:statusShow current settings of the system clock and
RTC, including whether network time synchronization is
enabled. Note that the network time synchronization state
simply reflects whether the
systemd-timesyncd.service unit is
enabled. Even if the status is shown as off with this command
another service might still synchronize the network over the
network.set-time [TIME]Set the system clock to the specified time.
This will also update the RTC time accordingly. The time may
be specified in the format "2012-10-30
18:17:16".set-timezone [TIMEZONE]Set the system time zone to the specified
value. Available timezones can be listed with
list-timezones. If the RTC is configured to
be in the local time, this will also update the RTC time. This
call will alter the /etc/localtime
symlink. See
localtime5
for more information.list-timezonesList available time zones, one per line.
Entries from the list can be set as the system timezone with
set-timezone.set-local-rtc [BOOL]Takes a boolean argument. If
0, the system is configured to maintain the
RTC in universal time. If 1, it will
maintain the RTC in local time instead. Note that maintaining
the RTC in the local timezone is not fully supported and will
create various problems with time zone changes and daylight
saving adjustments. If at all possible, keep the RTC in UTC
mode. Note that invoking this will also synchronize the RTC
from the system clock, unless
is passed (see above).
This command will change the 3rd line of
/etc/adjtime, as documented in
hwclock8.
set-ntp [BOOL]Takes a boolean argument. Controls whether
network time synchronous is enabled (if available). This
enables or disables the
systemd-timesyncd.service unit. Note that
even if time synchronization is turned off with this command
another system service might still synchronize the clock with
the network.Exit statusOn success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure
code otherwise.ExamplesShow current settings:
$ timedatectl
Local time: Di 2015-04-07 16:26:56 CEST
Universal time: Di 2015-04-07 14:26:56 UTC
RTC time: Di 2015-04-07 14:26:56
Time zone: Europe/Berlin (CEST, +0200)
NTP enabled: yes
NTP synchronized: yes
RTC in local TZ: noEnable an NTP daemon:
$ timedatectl set-ntp true
==== AUTHENTICATING FOR org.freedesktop.timedate1.set-ntp ===
Authentication is required to control whether network time synchronization shall be enabled.
Authenticating as: user
Password: ********
==== AUTHENTICATION COMPLETE ===$ systemctl status systemd-timesyncd.service
● systemd-timesyncd.service - Network Time Synchronization
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/systemd-timesyncd.service; enabled)
Active: active (running) since Mo 2015-03-30 14:20:38 CEST; 5s ago
Docs: man:systemd-timesyncd.service(8)
Main PID: 595 (systemd-timesyn)
Status: "Using Time Server 216.239.38.15:123 (time4.google.com)."
CGroup: /system.slice/systemd-timesyncd.service
└─595 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-timesyncd
...See Alsosystemd1,
hwclock8,
date1,
localtime5,
systemctl1,
systemd-timedated.service8,
systemd-timesyncd.service8,
systemd-firstboot1