Andrey Gaskov created FLINK-35650: ------------------------------------- Summary: Incorrect TIMESTAMP_LTZ type behavior in Table SQL Key: FLINK-35650 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/FLINK-35650 Project: Flink Issue Type: Bug Components: Table SQL / API, Table SQL / Client, Table SQL / Runtime Affects Versions: 1.18.1, 1.17.2, 1.20.0 Environment: Local environment, Open Source Flink without modifications, the cluster started by ./bin/start-cluster.sh Reporter: Andrey Gaskov
The file named /home/miron/tmp/data.csv contains a single line: {code:java} "1970-01-01 00:00:00Z" {code} Run the following commands in Flink SQL client: {code:java} Flink SQL> SET 'sql-client.execution.result-mode' = 'tableau'; [INFO] Execute statement succeeded. Flink SQL> SET 'table.local-time-zone' = 'Asia/Shanghai'; [INFO] Execute statement succeeded. Flink SQL> SET 'execution.runtime-mode' = 'batch'; [INFO] Execute statement succeeded. Flink SQL> > create table t_in ( > t timestamp_ltz > ) with ( > 'connector' = 'filesystem', > 'path' = '/home/miron/tmp/data.csv', > 'format' = 'csv' > ); [INFO] Execute statement succeeded. Flink SQL> select * from t_in; +----------------------------+ | t | +----------------------------+ | 1970-01-01 08:00:00.000000 | +----------------------------+ 1 row in set (1.33 seconds) {code} So far so good. The behavior corresponds to the specification. Run the following query: {code:java} Flink SQL> select TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(0, 0); +-------------------------+ | EXPR$0 | +-------------------------+ | 1970-01-01 08:00:00.000 | +-------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.36 seconds) {code} This is also correct. Zero point on the timeline corresponds 1970-01-01 00:00:00 at zero UTC offset which corresponds to 1970-01-01 08:00:00 at Asia/Shanghai time zone. Now things get worse: {code:java} Flink SQL> select * from t_in where t <= TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(0, 0); Empty set (0.47 seconds) {code} *{color:#de350b}This is wrong.{color}* We should get the record as a result. We could fix it the following way: {code:java} Flink SQL> select * from t_in where t <= TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(8*60*60, 0); +----------------------------+ | t | +----------------------------+ | 1970-01-01 08:00:00.000000 | +----------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.37 seconds) {code} Even though we got the record, we should not specify 8*60*60 parameter to TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ. But the most ridiculous result is the following: {code:java} Flink SQL> select * from t_in where t = TO_TIMESTAMP_LTZ(8*60*60, 0); +----------------------------+ | t | +----------------------------+ | 1970-01-01 16:00:00.000000 | +----------------------------+ 1 row in set (0.37 seconds) {code} *{color:#de350b}This is absolutely wrong.{color}* By changing the comparison function from "<=" to "=" in the where clause we got wrong time. The same behavior we get in Java. The result is an object of Instance class with wrong value. Also, in Java I got more wrong cases that could not be reproduced using SQL Client. -- This message was sent by Atlassian Jira (v8.20.10#820010)