Remove CTimeZone/HasCTZSet, root and branch.

These variables no longer have any useful purpose, since there's no reason
to special-case brute force timezones now that we have a valid
session_timezone setting for them.  Remove the variables, and remove the
SET/SHOW TIME ZONE code that deals with them.

The user-visible impact of this is that SHOW TIME ZONE will now show a
POSIX-style zone specification, in the form "<+-offset>-+offset", rather
than an interval value when a brute-force zone has been set.  While perhaps
less intuitive, this is a better definition than before because it's
actually possible to give that string back to SET TIME ZONE and get the
same behavior, unlike what used to happen.

We did not previously mention the angle-bracket syntax when describing
POSIX timezone specifications; add some documentation so that people
can figure out what these strings do.  (There's still quite a lot of
undocumented functionality there, but anybody who really cares can
go read the POSIX spec to find out about it.  In practice most people
seem to prefer Olsen-style city names anyway.)
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2013-11-01 13:57:31 -04:00
parent 1c8a7f617f
commit 45f64f1bbf
6 changed files with 31 additions and 98 deletions

View File

@ -2419,8 +2419,11 @@ January 8 04:05:06 1999 PST
optional daylight-savings zone abbreviation, assumed to stand for one
hour ahead of the given offset. For example, if <literal>EST5EDT</>
were not already a recognized zone name, it would be accepted and would
be functionally equivalent to United States East Coast time. When a
daylight-savings zone name is present, it is assumed to be used
be functionally equivalent to United States East Coast time. In this
syntax, a zone abbreviation can be a string of letters, or an
arbitrary string surrounded by angle brackets (<literal>&lt;&gt;</>).
When a daylight-savings zone abbreviation is present,
it is assumed to be used
according to the same daylight-savings transition rules used in the
<literal>zoneinfo</> time zone database's <filename>posixrules</> entry.
In a standard <productname>PostgreSQL</productname> installation,

View File

@ -243,7 +243,16 @@ SELECT setseed(<replaceable>value</replaceable>);
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</para>
<para>
Timezone settings given as numbers or intervals are internally
translated to POSIX timezone syntax. For example, after
<literal>SET TIME ZONE -7</>, <command>SHOW TIME ZONE</> would
report <literal>&lt;-07&gt;+07</>.
</para>
<para>
See <xref linkend="datatype-timezones"> for more information
about time zones.
</para>

View File

@ -243,34 +243,17 @@ assign_datestyle(const char *newval, void *extra)
* TIMEZONE
*/
typedef struct
{
pg_tz *session_timezone;
int CTimeZone;
bool HasCTZSet;
} timezone_extra;
/*
* check_timezone: GUC check_hook for timezone
*/
bool
check_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
{
timezone_extra myextra;
pg_tz *new_tz;
long gmtoffset;
char *endptr;
double hours;
/*
* Initialize the "extra" struct that will be passed to assign_timezone.
* We don't want to change any of the three global variables except as
* specified by logic below. To avoid leaking memory during failure
* returns, we set up the struct contents in a local variable, and only
* copy it to *extra at the end.
*/
myextra.session_timezone = session_timezone;
myextra.CTimeZone = CTimeZone;
myextra.HasCTZSet = HasCTZSet;
if (pg_strncasecmp(*newval, "interval", 8) == 0)
{
/*
@ -323,12 +306,11 @@ check_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
/* Here we change from SQL to Unix sign convention */
#ifdef HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP
myextra.CTimeZone = -(interval->time / USECS_PER_SEC);
gmtoffset = -(interval->time / USECS_PER_SEC);
#else
myextra.CTimeZone = -interval->time;
gmtoffset = -interval->time;
#endif
myextra.session_timezone = pg_tzset_offset(myextra.CTimeZone);
myextra.HasCTZSet = true;
new_tz = pg_tzset_offset(gmtoffset);
pfree(interval);
}
@ -341,17 +323,14 @@ check_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
if (endptr != *newval && *endptr == '\0')
{
/* Here we change from SQL to Unix sign convention */
myextra.CTimeZone = -hours * SECS_PER_HOUR;
myextra.session_timezone = pg_tzset_offset(myextra.CTimeZone);
myextra.HasCTZSet = true;
gmtoffset = -hours * SECS_PER_HOUR;
new_tz = pg_tzset_offset(gmtoffset);
}
else
{
/*
* Otherwise assume it is a timezone name, and try to load it.
*/
pg_tz *new_tz;
new_tz = pg_tzset(*newval);
if (!new_tz)
@ -367,40 +346,16 @@ check_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
GUC_check_errdetail("PostgreSQL does not support leap seconds.");
return false;
}
myextra.session_timezone = new_tz;
myextra.HasCTZSet = false;
}
}
/*
* Prepare the canonical string to return. GUC wants it malloc'd.
*
* Note: the result string should be something that we'd accept as input.
* We use the numeric format for interval cases, because it's simpler to
* reload. In the named-timezone case, *newval is already OK and need not
* be changed; it might not have the canonical casing, but that's taken
* care of by show_timezone.
*/
if (myextra.HasCTZSet)
{
char *result = (char *) malloc(64);
if (!result)
return false;
snprintf(result, 64, "%.5f",
(double) (-myextra.CTimeZone) / (double) SECS_PER_HOUR);
free(*newval);
*newval = result;
}
/*
* Pass back data for assign_timezone to use
*/
*extra = malloc(sizeof(timezone_extra));
*extra = malloc(sizeof(pg_tz *));
if (!*extra)
return false;
memcpy(*extra, &myextra, sizeof(timezone_extra));
*((pg_tz **) *extra) = new_tz;
return true;
}
@ -411,43 +366,19 @@ check_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
void
assign_timezone(const char *newval, void *extra)
{
timezone_extra *myextra = (timezone_extra *) extra;
session_timezone = myextra->session_timezone;
CTimeZone = myextra->CTimeZone;
HasCTZSet = myextra->HasCTZSet;
session_timezone = *((pg_tz **) extra);
}
/*
* show_timezone: GUC show_hook for timezone
*
* We wouldn't need this, except that historically interval values have been
* shown without an INTERVAL prefix, so the display format isn't what would
* be accepted as input. Otherwise we could have check_timezone return the
* preferred string to begin with.
*/
const char *
show_timezone(void)
{
const char *tzn;
if (HasCTZSet)
{
Interval interval;
interval.month = 0;
interval.day = 0;
#ifdef HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP
interval.time = -(CTimeZone * USECS_PER_SEC);
#else
interval.time = -CTimeZone;
#endif
tzn = DatumGetCString(DirectFunctionCall1(interval_out,
IntervalPGetDatum(&interval)));
}
else
tzn = pg_get_timezone_name(session_timezone);
/* Always show the zone's canonical name */
tzn = pg_get_timezone_name(session_timezone);
if (tzn != NULL)
return tzn;
@ -497,7 +428,7 @@ check_log_timezone(char **newval, void **extra, GucSource source)
*extra = malloc(sizeof(pg_tz *));
if (!*extra)
return false;
memcpy(*extra, &new_tz, sizeof(pg_tz *));
*((pg_tz **) *extra) = new_tz;
return true;
}
@ -519,6 +450,7 @@ show_log_timezone(void)
{
const char *tzn;
/* Always show the zone's canonical name */
tzn = pg_get_timezone_name(log_timezone);
if (tzn != NULL)

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@ -93,8 +93,6 @@ bool ExitOnAnyError = false;
int DateStyle = USE_ISO_DATES;
int DateOrder = DATEORDER_MDY;
int IntervalStyle = INTSTYLE_POSTGRES;
bool HasCTZSet = false;
int CTimeZone = 0;
bool enableFsync = true;
bool allowSystemTableMods = false;

View File

@ -219,15 +219,6 @@ extern int DateOrder;
extern int IntervalStyle;
/*
* HasCTZSet is true if user has set timezone as a numeric offset from UTC.
* If so, CTimeZone is the timezone offset in seconds (using the Unix-ish
* sign convention, ie, positive offset is west of UTC, rather than the
* SQL-ish convention that positive is east of UTC).
*/
extern bool HasCTZSet;
extern int CTimeZone;
#define MAXTZLEN 10 /* max TZ name len, not counting tr. null */
extern bool enableFsync;

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@ -2941,9 +2941,9 @@ DETAIL: Value must be in the range -2147483648 to 2147483647.
SET TIME ZONE 'America/New_York';
SET TIME ZONE '-1.5';
SHOW TIME ZONE;
TimeZone
----------------------
@ 1 hour 30 mins ago
TimeZone
----------------
<-01:30>+01:30
(1 row)
SELECT '2012-12-12 12:00'::timestamptz;