1. 16 Jan, 2001 2 commits
  2. 15 Jan, 2001 4 commits
  3. 14 Jan, 2001 6 commits
  4. 13 Jan, 2001 16 commits
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
    • Bruce Momjian's avatar
      Backed out: · 0651a579
      Bruce Momjian authored
      ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
      
      Attached is a set of patches for a couple of bugs dealing with
      timestamps in JDBC.
      
      Bug#1) Incorrect timestamp stored in DB if client timezone different
      than DB.
      0651a579
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
      Add information about bit types. Adjust some other things to promote · 526427f6
      Peter Eisentraut authored
      SQL type names over internal type names.
      526427f6
    • Bruce Momjian's avatar
      Attached is a set of patches for a couple of bugs dealing with · 475c1452
      Bruce Momjian authored
      timestamps in JDBC.
      
      Bug#1) Incorrect timestamp stored in DB if client timezone different
      than DB.
      
      The buggy implementation of setTimestamp() in PreparedStatement simply
      used the toString() method of the java.sql.Timestamp object to convert
      to a string to send to the database.  The format of this is yyyy-MM-dd
      hh:mm:ss.SSS which doesn't include any timezone information.  Therefore
      the DB assumes its timezone since none is specified.  That is OK if the
      timezone of the client and server are the same, however if they are
      different the wrong timestamp is received by the server.  For example if
      the client is running in timezone GMT and wants to send the timestamp
      for noon to a server running in PST (GMT-8 hours), then the server will
      receive 2000-01-12 12:00:00.0 and interprete it as 2000-01-12
      12:00:00-08 which is 2000-01-12 04:00:00 in GMT.  The fix is to send a
      format to the server that includes the timezone offset.  For simplicity
      sake the fix uses a SimpleDateFormat object with its timezone set to GMT
      so that '+00' can be used as the timezone for postgresql.  This is done
      as SimpleDateFormat doesn't support formating timezones in the way
      postgresql expects.
      
      Bug#2) Incorrect handling of partial seconds in getting timestamps from
      the DB
      
      When the SimpleDateFormat object parses a string with a format like
      yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss.SS it expects the fractional seconds to be three
      decimal places (time precision in java is miliseconds = three decimal
      places).  This seems like a bug in java to me, but it is unlikely to be
      fixed anytime soon, so the postgresql code needed modification to
      support the java behaviour.  So for example a string of '2000-01-12
      12:00:00.12-08' coming from the database was being converted to a
      timestamp object with a value of 2000-01-12 12:00:00.012GMT-08:00.  The
      fix was to check for a '.' in the string and if one is found append on
      an extra zero to the fractional seconds part.
      
      Bug#3) Performance problems
      
      In fixing the above two bugs, I noticed some things that could be
      improved.  In PreparedStatement.setTimestamp(),
      PreparedStatement.setDate(), ResultSet.getTimestamp(), and
      ResultSet.getDate() these methods were creating a new SimpleDateFormat
      object everytime they were called.  To avoid this unnecessary object
      creation overhead, I changed the code to use static variables for
      keeping a single instance of the needed formating objects.
      Also the code used the + operator for string concatenation.  As everyone
      should know this is very inefficient and the use of StringBuffers is
      prefered.
      
      I also did some cleanup in ResultSet.getTimestamp().  This method has
      had multiple patches applied some of which resulted in code that was no
      longer needed.  For example the ISO timestamp format that postgresql
      uses specifies the timezone as an offset like '-08'.  Code was added at
      one point to convert the postgresql format to the java one which is
      GMT-08:00, however the old code was left around which did nothing.  So
      there was code that looked for yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:sszzzzzzzzz and
      yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:sszzz.  This second format would never be encountered
      because zzz (i.e. -08) would be converted into the former (also note
      that the SimpleDateFormat object treats zzzzzzzzz and zzz the same, the
      number of z's does not matter).
      
      
      There was another problem/fix mentioned on the email lists today by
      mcannon@internet.com which is also fixed by this patch:
      
      Bug#4) Fractional seconds lost when getting timestamp from the DB
      A patch by Jan Thomea handled the case of yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:sszzzzzzzzz
      but not the fractional seconds version yyyy-MM-dd hh:mm:ss.SSzzzzzzzzz.
      
      The code is fixed to handle this case as well.
      
      Barry Lind
      475c1452
    • Bruce Momjian's avatar
      More cleanup. · 20dfd50c
      Bruce Momjian authored
      20dfd50c
    • Tom Lane's avatar
      Relax test on typmod matching between a table and its proposed ON SELECT · 160675ec
      Tom Lane authored
      rule.  Needed to avoid failure when reloading a 7.0 pg_dump of a view
      that has a NUMERIC column.
      160675ec
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
      Windows wants shared libraries in PATH. · f8bdef07
      Peter Eisentraut authored
      f8bdef07
    • Marc G. Fournier's avatar
      · 25c0ffb9
      Marc G. Fournier authored
      check one last time for any erros ...
      25c0ffb9
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
      New shell for the to be written CHECKPOINT documentation, so the summary · 2a6c0822
      Peter Eisentraut authored
      shows up in psql now.
      2a6c0822
    • Marc G. Fournier's avatar
      · 1fc331bb
      Marc G. Fournier authored
      ignore his too
      1fc331bb
    • Marc G. Fournier's avatar
      · 3c085b1b
      Marc G. Fournier authored
      and this time?
      3c085b1b
    • Marc G. Fournier's avatar
      · d5e66044
      Marc G. Fournier authored
      try this again ...
      d5e66044
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
      Clean up garbage. · 16cc90cc
      Peter Eisentraut authored
      16cc90cc
    • Peter Eisentraut's avatar
      Surely one README file is enough. · bc615509
      Peter Eisentraut authored
      bc615509
    • Bruce Momjian's avatar
    • Marc G. Fournier's avatar
      · 3f8ea178
      Marc G. Fournier authored
      okay, this appears to work ...
      
      onlly changes aer adding some white space ...
      3f8ea178
  5. 12 Jan, 2001 12 commits