mirror of
https://github.com/postgres/postgres.git
synced 2026-03-10 02:01:23 -04:00
This corrects a small bug in zic that caused it to output an incorrect year-2440 transition in the Africa/Casablanca zone. More interestingly, zic has grown a "-r" option that limits the range of zone transitions that it will put into the output files. That might be useful to people who don't like the weird GMT offsets that tzdb likes to use for very old dates. It appears that for dates before the cutoff time specified with -r, zic will use the zone's standard-time offset as of the cutoff time. So for example one might do make install ZIC_OPTIONS='-r @-1893456000' to cause all dates before 1910-01-01 to be treated as though 1910 standard time prevailed indefinitely far back. (Don't blame me for the unfriendly way of specifying the cutoff time --- it's seconds since or before the Unix epoch. You can use extract(epoch ...) to calculate it.) As usual, back-patch to all supported branches.
128 lines
5.7 KiB
Text
128 lines
5.7 KiB
Text
src/timezone/README
|
|
|
|
This is a PostgreSQL adapted version of the IANA timezone library from
|
|
|
|
https://www.iana.org/time-zones
|
|
|
|
The latest version of the timezone data and library source code is
|
|
available right from that page. It's best to get the merged file
|
|
tzdb-NNNNX.tar.lz, since the other archive formats omit tzdata.zi.
|
|
Historical versions, as well as release announcements, can be found
|
|
elsewhere on the site.
|
|
|
|
Since time zone rules change frequently in some parts of the world,
|
|
we should endeavor to update the data files before each PostgreSQL
|
|
release. The code need not be updated as often, but we must track
|
|
changes that might affect interpretation of the data files.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Time Zone data
|
|
==============
|
|
|
|
We distribute the time zone source data as-is under src/timezone/data/.
|
|
Currently, we distribute just the abbreviated single-file format
|
|
"tzdata.zi", to reduce the size of our tarballs as well as churn
|
|
in our git repo. Feeding that file to zic produces the same compiled
|
|
output as feeding the bulkier individual data files would do.
|
|
|
|
While data/tzdata.zi can just be duplicated when updating, manual effort
|
|
is needed to update the time zone abbreviation lists under tznames/.
|
|
These need to be changed whenever new abbreviations are invented or the
|
|
UTC offset associated with an existing abbreviation changes. To detect
|
|
if this has happened, after installing new files under data/ do
|
|
make abbrevs.txt
|
|
which will produce a file showing all abbreviations that are in current
|
|
use according to the data/ files. Compare this to known_abbrevs.txt,
|
|
which is the list that existed last time the tznames/ files were updated.
|
|
Update tznames/ as seems appropriate, then replace known_abbrevs.txt
|
|
in the same commit. Usually, if a known abbreviation has changed meaning,
|
|
the appropriate fix is to make it refer to a long-form zone name instead
|
|
of a fixed GMT offset.
|
|
|
|
The core regression test suite does some simple validation of the zone
|
|
data and abbreviations data (notably by checking that the pg_timezone_names
|
|
and pg_timezone_abbrevs views don't throw errors). It's worth running it
|
|
as a cross-check on proposed updates.
|
|
|
|
When there has been a new release of Windows (probably including Service
|
|
Packs), the list of matching timezones need to be updated. Run the
|
|
script in src/tools/win32tzlist.pl on a Windows machine running this new
|
|
release and apply any new timezones that it detects. Never remove any
|
|
mappings in case they are removed in Windows, since we still need to
|
|
match properly on the old version.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Time Zone code
|
|
==============
|
|
|
|
The code in this directory is currently synced with tzcode release 2019a.
|
|
There are many cosmetic (and not so cosmetic) differences from the
|
|
original tzcode library, but diffs in the upstream version should usually
|
|
be propagated to our version. Here are some notes about that.
|
|
|
|
For the most part we want to use the upstream code as-is, but there are
|
|
several considerations preventing an exact match:
|
|
|
|
* For readability/maintainability we reformat the code to match our own
|
|
conventions; this includes pgindent'ing it and getting rid of upstream's
|
|
overuse of "register" declarations. (It used to include conversion of
|
|
old-style function declarations to C89 style, but thank goodness they
|
|
fixed that.)
|
|
|
|
* We need the code to follow Postgres' portability conventions; this
|
|
includes relying on configure's results rather than hand-hacked #defines,
|
|
and not relying on <stdint.h> features that may not exist on old systems.
|
|
(In particular this means using Postgres' definitions of the int32 and
|
|
int64 typedefs, not int_fast32_t/int_fast64_t. Likewise we use
|
|
PG_INT32_MIN/MAX not INT32_MIN/MAX.)
|
|
|
|
* Since Postgres is typically built on a system that has its own copy
|
|
of the <time.h> functions, we must avoid conflicting with those. This
|
|
mandates renaming typedef time_t to pg_time_t, and similarly for most
|
|
other exposed names.
|
|
|
|
* zic.c's typedef "lineno" is renamed to "lineno_t", because having
|
|
"lineno" in our typedefs list would cause unfortunate pgindent behavior
|
|
in some other files where we have variables named that.
|
|
|
|
* We have exposed the tzload() and tzparse() internal functions, and
|
|
slightly modified the API of the former, in part because it now relies
|
|
on our own pg_open_tzfile() rather than opening files for itself.
|
|
|
|
* tzparse() is adjusted to avoid loading the TZDEFRULES zone unless
|
|
really necessary, and to ignore any leap-second data it may supply.
|
|
We also cache the result of loading the TZDEFRULES zone, so that
|
|
that's not repeated more than once per process.
|
|
|
|
* There's a fair amount of code we don't need and have removed,
|
|
including all the nonstandard optional APIs. We have also added
|
|
a few functions of our own at the bottom of localtime.c.
|
|
|
|
* In zic.c, we have added support for a -P (print_abbrevs) switch, which
|
|
is used to create the "abbrevs.txt" summary of currently-in-use zone
|
|
abbreviations that was described above.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The most convenient way to compare a new tzcode release to our code is
|
|
to first run the tzcode source files through a sed filter like this:
|
|
|
|
sed -r \
|
|
-e 's/^([ \t]*)\*\*([ \t])/\1 *\2/' \
|
|
-e 's/^([ \t]*)\*\*$/\1 */' \
|
|
-e 's|^\*/| */|' \
|
|
-e 's/\bregister[ \t]//g' \
|
|
-e 's/\bATTRIBUTE_PURE[ \t]//g' \
|
|
-e 's/int_fast32_t/int32/g' \
|
|
-e 's/int_fast64_t/int64/g' \
|
|
-e 's/intmax_t/int64/g' \
|
|
-e 's/INT32_MIN/PG_INT32_MIN/g' \
|
|
-e 's/INT32_MAX/PG_INT32_MAX/g' \
|
|
-e 's/struct[ \t]+tm\b/struct pg_tm/g' \
|
|
-e 's/\btime_t\b/pg_time_t/g' \
|
|
-e 's/lineno/lineno_t/g' \
|
|
|
|
and then run them through pgindent. (The first three sed patterns deal
|
|
with conversion of their block comment style to something pgindent
|
|
won't make a hash of; the remainder address other points noted above.)
|
|
After that, the files can be diff'd directly against our corresponding
|
|
files.
|