• Tom Lane's avatar
    Support timezone abbreviations that sometimes change. · b2cbced9
    Tom Lane authored
    Up to now, PG has assumed that any given timezone abbreviation (such as
    "EDT") represents a constant GMT offset in the usage of any particular
    region; we had a way to configure what that offset was, but not for it
    to be changeable over time.  But, as with most things horological, this
    view of the world is too simplistic: there are numerous regions that have
    at one time or another switched to a different GMT offset but kept using
    the same timezone abbreviation.  Almost the entire Russian Federation did
    that a few years ago, and later this month they're going to do it again.
    And there are similar examples all over the world.
    
    To cope with this, invent the notion of a "dynamic timezone abbreviation",
    which is one that is referenced to a particular underlying timezone
    (as defined in the IANA timezone database) and means whatever it currently
    means in that zone.  For zones that use or have used daylight-savings time,
    the standard and DST abbreviations continue to have the property that you
    can specify standard or DST time and get that time offset whether or not
    DST was theoretically in effect at the time.  However, the abbreviations
    mean what they meant at the time in question (or most recently before that
    time) rather than being absolutely fixed.
    
    The standard abbreviation-list files have been changed to use this behavior
    for abbreviations that have actually varied in meaning since 1970.  The
    old simple-numeric definitions are kept for abbreviations that have not
    changed, since they are a bit faster to resolve.
    
    While this is clearly a new feature, it seems necessary to back-patch it
    into all active branches, because otherwise use of Russian zone
    abbreviations is going to become even more problematic than it already was.
    This change supersedes the changes in commit 513d06de et al to modify the
    fixed meanings of the Russian abbreviations; since we've not shipped that
    yet, this will avoid an undesirably incompatible (not to mention incorrect)
    change in behavior for timestamps between 2011 and 2014.
    
    This patch makes some cosmetic changes in ecpglib to keep its usage of
    datetime lookup tables as similar as possible to the backend code, but
    doesn't do anything about the increasingly obsolete set of timezone
    abbreviation definitions that are hard-wired into ecpglib.  Whatever we
    do about that will likely not be appropriate material for back-patching.
    Also, a potential free() of a garbage pointer after an out-of-memory
    failure in ecpglib has been fixed.
    
    This patch also fixes pre-existing bugs in DetermineTimeZoneOffset() that
    caused it to produce unexpected results near a timezone transition, if
    both the "before" and "after" states are marked as standard time.  We'd
    only ever thought about or tested transitions between standard and DST
    time, but that's not what's happening when a zone simply redefines their
    base GMT offset.
    
    In passing, update the SGML documentation to refer to the Olson/zoneinfo/
    zic timezone database as the "IANA" database, since it's now being
    maintained under the auspices of IANA.
    b2cbced9
date.c 60.2 KB