tzdata (2024b-6) unstable; urgency=medium Previously, the tzdata package in Debian used the /etc/timezone file to configure the system's timezone. This method is not supported by systemd and certain desktop environments, which instead only change the /etc/localtime symlink to point to a file in /usr/share/zoneinfo. For this reason, starting with version 2024b-5, the tzdata package no longer automatically creates the /etc/timezone file, but still updates it if it exists. In a future release, the /etc/timezone file will be automatically removed and support for it in the maintainer scripts will be completely dropped. The debian-installer from Trixie also no longer creates this file. It should be fine to just remove this file, but it is also fine waiting for the automatic removal in a future release. The system's timezone configuration can still be done interactively using Debconf by reconfiguring the tzdata package, using 'dpkg-reconfigure tzdata'. The way to programmatically read or configure the system's timezone is described in /usr/share/doc/tzdata/README.Debian. -- Aurelien Jarno Mon, 13 Jan 2025 23:25:11 +0100 tzdata (2023d-1) unstable; urgency=medium From 2023c-8 on the tzdata package ships only timezones that follow the current rules of geographical region (continent or ocean) and city name. All legacy timezone symlinks (old or merged timezones mentioned in the upstream backward file) were moved to tzdata-legacy. This includes the US/* timezones. Please install tzdata-legacy in case you need the legacy timezones or to restore the previous behavior. This might be needed in case the system provides timezone-aware data over the network (e. g. SQL databases). -- Benjamin Drung Tue, 02 Jan 2024 14:17:33 +0100