Re: 6.5.0 datetime bug?
От | Thomas Lockhart |
---|---|
Тема | Re: 6.5.0 datetime bug? |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 38E4C640.3B4907F0@alumni.caltech.edu обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: 6.5.0 datetime bug? (gravity@dds.nl) |
Список | pgsql-hackers |
> > Hmm, I happen to have a 6.5.0 system sitting here: It works there, so I suspect > > something with your local operating system config. > anyone? It turns out to be a problem in the local country config :) Why does the Netherlands (or at least my RH5.2 timezone database) think you switch to DST on March 26? The date_part() function was just masking the problem: postgres=# select '3-27-2000'::timestamp-'3-6-2000'::timestamp;?column? ----------20 23:00 (1 row) postgres=# select '3-26-2000'::timestamp-'3-6-2000'::timestamp;?column? ----------20 00:00 (1 row) When you do the date arithmetic, you are automatically calculating an *absolute* time difference which can be affected by DST boundaries. For some reason, we don't have a date_part() available for the date data type, which would have been my suggested workaround. We'd flame the implementer, but that's me so I'll be nice :( It is probably too late to get this added for v7.0, though I might be able to add the code to the backend so it could be a (very) small CREATE FUNCTION operation to get it usable for 7.0. Will look at it. - Thomas -- Thomas Lockhart lockhart@alumni.caltech.edu South Pasadena, California
В списке pgsql-hackers по дате отправления: