Re: strange timezone problem - Mailing list pgsql-general

From Tom Lane
Subject Re: strange timezone problem
Date
Msg-id 18522.1194455802@sss.pgh.pa.us
Whole thread Raw
In response to strange timezone problem  (Nick Johnson <ctfdy@spatula.net>)
Responses Re: strange timezone problem  (Nick Johnson <ctfdy@spatula.net>)
List pgsql-general
Nick Johnson <ctfdy@spatula.net> writes:
> I'm using PostgreSQL 8.2.3 and seeing this behaviour with timezones:

> select create_date from article_lead;
>         create_date
> ---------------------------
>  2007-11-04 16:35:33.17+00
>  2007-11-04 04:35:36.09+00
>  2007-11-05 04:35:36.38+00
>  2007-11-05 16:35:36.67+00
> (4 rows)

> select create_date from article_lead where create_date >= '2007-11-03
> 17:00:00.0' and create_date <='2007-11-04 16:00:00.0';
>         create_date
> ---------------------------
>  2007-11-04 04:35:36.09+00

> Shouldn't that second row have been in the results of the second query?

Huh?  Those results look perfectly sane to me.

> set TimeZone='America/Los_Angeles';
> select create_date from article_lead;
     
> create_date
> ---------------------------
>  2007-11-04 08:35:33.17-08
>  2007-11-03 21:35:36.09-07   <-- why 07?
>  2007-11-04 20:35:36.38-08
>  2007-11-05 08:35:36.67-08

That's correct ... as of last year, DST extends through the first Sunday
in November in the USA.

            regards, tom lane

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