Re: issues with Statement.getTimestamp(int, Calendar) - Mailing list pgsql-jdbc

From Ravi Periasamy
Subject Re: issues with Statement.getTimestamp(int, Calendar)
Date
Msg-id 752250.99365.qm@web60525.mail.yahoo.com
Whole thread Raw
In response to Re: issues with Statement.getTimestamp(int, Calendar)  (Dave Cramer <pg@fastcrypt.com>)
Responses Re: issues with Statement.getTimestamp(int, Calendar)  (Oliver Jowett <oliver@opencloud.com>)
List pgsql-jdbc
Dave,

I'm in Asia/Calcutta (India) time zone. It is +5.30
from GMT.

I'm almost certain there's a bug in
Statement.getTimestamp(int, Calendar). Where as,
Resultset.getTimestamp(int, Calendar) gives the
correct value.

I suspect the AbstractJdbc2Statement.changetime()
method.

Thanks
Ravi

--- Dave Cramer <pg@fastcrypt.com> wrote:

> Ravi,
>
> what is your time zone from what you have my guess
> would be -9:00 ?
>
> I think the JVM adjusts the actual time to your
> local timezone when
> it prints it.
>
> Dave
> On 12-Dec-06, at 11:05 PM, Ravi Periasamy wrote:
>
> > The test case is as follows.
> >
> > I created a function as follows:
> > ==================================================
> > create or replace function testouttimestamp(OUT a1
> > timestamp) AS $$
> > begin
> >   a1 := '1970-01-01 00:00:00';
> > end;
> > $$ language plpgsql;
> > ==================================================
> >
> > and called through JDBC as follows:
> > ==================================================
> > TimeZone tz = TimeZone.getTimeZone("GMT");
> > Calendar cr = Calendar.getInstance(tz);
> > CallableStatement stmt = con.prepareCall( "{call
> > testouttimestamp(?)}");
> > stmt.registerOutParameter(1, Types.TIMESTAMP);
> > stmt.execute();
> > Timestamp ts = stmt.getTimestamp(1, cr);
> > System.out.println("ts = " + ts);
> > ==================================================
> >
> > Actual Result ==>
> > 1969-12-31 18:30:00.0
> >
> > Expected Result ==>
> > 1970-01-01 05:30:00.0
> >
> > Note: ResultSet.getTimestamp(int, Calendar) works
> > fine.
> >
> > Thanks
> > Ravi
> >
> > --- Oliver Jowett <oliver@opencloud.com> wrote:
> >
> >> Ravi Periasamy wrote:
> >>> Dear PSQL-JDBC team,
> >>>
> >>> There is a issue with
> Statement.getTimestamp(int,
> >>> Calendar). The timestamp is offset in the wrong
> >>> direction.
> >>>
> >>> The quivalent on ResultSet.getTimestamp(int,
> >> Calendar)
> >>> works fine.
> >>>
> >>> Is this a known bug, can we expect a fix for
> this,
> >>> when?
> >>
> >> Can you send a testcase demonstrating the problem
> >> please?
> >>
> >> -O
> >>
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
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> >
>
>




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