On Tue, 13 Dec 2011 23:14:48 +0530, Benjamin wrote:
> Hi,
>
> When i run squidclient mgr:info
>
> squidclient mgr:info
> HTTP/1.0 200 OK
> Server: squid
> Mime-Version: 1.0
>
> Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2011 17:37:47 GMT <------------
>
 Notice how the timezone here is *GMT*. Also known as "international 
 standard time", universal time, UTC, or Zulu.
 <snip mgr report>
> When i check squid starting time :
> ll /var/run/squid.pid
>   -rw-r--r-- 1 root squid 5 Dec 13 19:06 /var/run/squid.pid
> <--------------------------------
>
> current date and time in server : Tue Dec 13 23:10:42 IST 2011
> <----------------------------
 Notice how the time you found (using 'date' command I assume) is in 
 some local timezone called "IST". That is the timezone of the building 
 where the server is plugged in. It can change from one minute to the 
 next according to the local government laws, or where the sun and moon 
 are on that day of the year. You can change it yourself randomly if you 
 like in the machine clock config.
 Example: A few months ago my whole country entered into our daylight 
 saving timezone a month earlier than usual because some sports game was 
 happening and someone in the government wanted tourists to be walking 
 around in daylight and enjoy the scenery more.
>
> and when i run squidclient mgr:info command at this current time, but
> in squidclient mgr:info output i got
>
>
> Expires: Tue, 13 Dec 2011 17:37:47 GMT <---------------------
> Last-Modified: Tue, 13 Dec 2011 17:37:47 GMT <---------------------
>
> Start Time:    Tue, 13 Dec 2011 13:36:15 GMT 
> <------------------------------
> Current Time:    Tue, 13 Dec 2011 17:37:47 GMT
> <------------------------------------
>
> why it showing wrong time. ?
 There is nothing wrong.
 Your machine is operating in local IST timezone for your convenience 
 identifying important things like meals, work breaks, shop hours, etc.
 Squid is operating in GMT/UTC timezone shared with every other Internet 
 machine in order to handle traffic reliably regardless of where it came 
 from.
 You can get a good idea of how confusing it would be if Squid and other 
 machines actually operated on local timezones by looking at the world 
 map of what the time is in each country:
 http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Worldwide_Time_Zones_%28including_DST%29.png
>
> As per my understanding while i m use squidclient mgr:info that
> command should provide live statistics from cachmgr on commandline, m
> i right?
 Yes that is right.
 Amos
Received on Tue Dec 13 2011 - 23:09:47 MST
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