postgresql/src/test/regress/sql/interval.sql
Tom Lane df7641e25a Add a new GUC variable called "IntervalStyle" that decouples interval output
from DateStyle, and create a new interval style that produces output matching
the SQL standard (at least for interval values that fall within the standard's
restrictions).  IntervalStyle is also used to resolve the conflict between the
standard and traditional Postgres rules for interpreting negative interval
input.

Ron Mayer
2008-11-09 00:28:35 +00:00

202 lines
7.1 KiB
SQL

--
-- INTERVAL
--
SET DATESTYLE = 'ISO';
SET IntervalStyle to postgres;
-- check acceptance of "time zone style"
SELECT INTERVAL '01:00' AS "One hour";
SELECT INTERVAL '+02:00' AS "Two hours";
SELECT INTERVAL '-08:00' AS "Eight hours";
SELECT INTERVAL '-1 +02:03' AS "22 hours ago...";
SELECT INTERVAL '-1 days +02:03' AS "22 hours ago...";
SELECT INTERVAL '1.5 weeks' AS "Ten days twelve hours";
SELECT INTERVAL '1.5 months' AS "One month 15 days";
SELECT INTERVAL '10 years -11 month -12 days +13:14' AS "9 years...";
CREATE TABLE INTERVAL_TBL (f1 interval);
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 1 minute');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 5 hour');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 10 day');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 34 year');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 3 months');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 14 seconds ago');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('1 day 2 hours 3 minutes 4 seconds');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('6 years');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('5 months');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('5 months 12 hours');
-- badly formatted interval
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('badly formatted interval');
INSERT INTO INTERVAL_TBL (f1) VALUES ('@ 30 eons ago');
-- test interval operators
SELECT '' AS ten, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL;
SELECT '' AS nine, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL
WHERE INTERVAL_TBL.f1 <> interval '@ 10 days';
SELECT '' AS three, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL
WHERE INTERVAL_TBL.f1 <= interval '@ 5 hours';
SELECT '' AS three, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL
WHERE INTERVAL_TBL.f1 < interval '@ 1 day';
SELECT '' AS one, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL
WHERE INTERVAL_TBL.f1 = interval '@ 34 years';
SELECT '' AS five, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL
WHERE INTERVAL_TBL.f1 >= interval '@ 1 month';
SELECT '' AS nine, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL
WHERE INTERVAL_TBL.f1 > interval '@ 3 seconds ago';
SELECT '' AS fortyfive, r1.*, r2.*
FROM INTERVAL_TBL r1, INTERVAL_TBL r2
WHERE r1.f1 > r2.f1
ORDER BY r1.f1, r2.f1;
-- Test multiplication and division with intervals.
-- Floating point arithmetic rounding errors can lead to unexpected results,
-- though the code attempts to do the right thing and round up to days and
-- minutes to avoid results such as '3 days 24:00 hours' or '14:20:60'.
-- Note that it is expected for some day components to be greater than 29 and
-- some time components be greater than 23:59:59 due to how intervals are
-- stored internally.
CREATE TABLE INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL (span interval);
COPY INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL FROM STDIN;
41 mon 12 days 360:00
-41 mon -12 days +360:00
-12 days
9 mon -27 days 12:34:56
-3 years 482 days 76:54:32.189
4 mon
14 mon
999 mon 999 days
\.
SELECT span * 0.3 AS product
FROM INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL;
SELECT span * 8.2 AS product
FROM INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL;
SELECT span / 10 AS quotient
FROM INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL;
SELECT span / 100 AS quotient
FROM INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL;
DROP TABLE INTERVAL_MULDIV_TBL;
SET DATESTYLE = 'postgres';
SET IntervalStyle to postgres_verbose;
SELECT '' AS ten, * FROM INTERVAL_TBL;
-- test avg(interval), which is somewhat fragile since people have been
-- known to change the allowed input syntax for type interval without
-- updating pg_aggregate.agginitval
select avg(f1) from interval_tbl;
-- test long interval input
select '4 millenniums 5 centuries 4 decades 1 year 4 months 4 days 17 minutes 31 seconds'::interval;
-- test justify_hours() and justify_days()
SELECT justify_hours(interval '6 months 3 days 52 hours 3 minutes 2 seconds') as "6 mons 5 days 4 hours 3 mins 2 seconds";
SELECT justify_days(interval '6 months 36 days 5 hours 4 minutes 3 seconds') as "7 mons 6 days 5 hours 4 mins 3 seconds";
-- test justify_interval()
SELECT justify_interval(interval '1 month -1 hour') as "1 month -1 hour";
-- test fractional second input, and detection of duplicate units
SET DATESTYLE = 'ISO';
SET IntervalStyle TO postgres;
SELECT '1 millisecond'::interval, '1 microsecond'::interval,
'500 seconds 99 milliseconds 51 microseconds'::interval;
SELECT '3 days 5 milliseconds'::interval;
SELECT '1 second 2 seconds'::interval; -- error
SELECT '10 milliseconds 20 milliseconds'::interval; -- error
SELECT '5.5 seconds 3 milliseconds'::interval; -- error
SELECT '1:20:05 5 microseconds'::interval; -- error
SELECT interval '1-2'; -- SQL year-month literal
-- test SQL-spec syntaxes for restricted field sets
SELECT interval '1' year;
SELECT interval '2' month;
SELECT interval '3' day;
SELECT interval '4' hour;
SELECT interval '5' minute;
SELECT interval '6' second;
SELECT interval '1' year to month;
SELECT interval '1-2' year to month;
SELECT interval '1 2' day to hour;
SELECT interval '1 2:03' day to hour;
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04' day to hour;
SELECT interval '1 2' day to minute;
SELECT interval '1 2:03' day to minute;
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04' day to minute;
SELECT interval '1 2' day to second;
SELECT interval '1 2:03' day to second;
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04' day to second;
SELECT interval '1 2' hour to minute;
SELECT interval '1 2:03' hour to minute;
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04' hour to minute;
SELECT interval '1 2' hour to second;
SELECT interval '1 2:03' hour to second;
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04' hour to second;
SELECT interval '1 2' minute to second;
SELECT interval '1 2:03' minute to second;
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04' minute to second;
-- test syntaxes for restricted precision
SELECT interval(0) '1 day 01:23:45.6789';
SELECT interval(2) '1 day 01:23:45.6789';
SELECT interval '12:34.5678' minute to second(2); -- per SQL spec
SELECT interval(2) '12:34.5678' minute to second; -- historical PG
SELECT interval(2) '12:34.5678' minute to second(2); -- syntax error
SELECT interval '1.234' second;
SELECT interval '1.234' second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2.345' day to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03' day to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03.4567' day to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04.5678' day to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2.345' hour to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03.45678' hour to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04.5678' hour to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2.3456' minute to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03.5678' minute to second(2);
SELECT interval '1 2:03:04.5678' minute to second(2);
-- test inputting and outputting SQL standard interval literals
SET IntervalStyle TO sql_standard;
SELECT interval '0' AS "zero",
interval '1-2' year to month AS "year-month",
interval '1 2:03:04' day to second AS "day-time",
- interval '1-2' AS "negative year-month",
- interval '1 2:03:04' AS "negative day-time";
-- test input of some not-quite-standard interval values in the sql style
SET IntervalStyle TO postgres;
SELECT interval '+1 -1:00:00',
interval '-1 +1:00:00',
interval '+1-2 -3 +4:05:06.789',
interval '-1-2 +3 -4:05:06.789';
-- test output of couple non-standard interval values in the sql style
SET IntervalStyle TO sql_standard;
SELECT interval '1 day -1 hours',
interval '-1 days +1 hours',
interval '1 years 2 months -3 days 4 hours 5 minutes 6.789 seconds',
- interval '1 years 2 months -3 days 4 hours 5 minutes 6.789 seconds';