Thomas Lockhart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > I'm not sure that tm_isdst == -1 is a legitimate indicator for mktime() > failure on all platforms; it indicates "don't know", but afaik there is > no defined behavior for the rest of the fields in that case. Can we be > assured that for all platforms the other fields are not damaged? We can't; further investigation showed that another form of the problem was mktime() setting the y/m/d/h/m/s fields one hour earlier than what it was given --- ie, pass it 00:00:00 of a DST forward transition date, get back neither 00:00:00 nor 01:00:00 (either of which would be plausible) but 23:00:00 of the day before! What I did about this was to coalesce all of the three or four places that use mktime just to probe for DST status into a single routine (DetermineLocalTimeZone) that is careful to pass mktime a copy of the original struct tm. No matter how brain dead the system mktime is, it can't screw up the other fields that way ;-). Then we trust tm_isdst and tm_gmtoff only if tm_isdst >= 0. Possibly we'll find that it'd be a good idea to test also for return value == -1, but the tm_isdst test seems to be sufficient for the known bug cases. > Not sure how much code we should put in to guard for cases we can't even > test (RH 5.1 is pretty old). Yeah, but the above-described behavior is reported on RH 7.1 (by two different people). I'm afraid we can't ignore that... regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 6: Have you searched our list archives? http://www.postgresql.org/search.mpl