> > date/time storage problem: timestamp parsed incorrectly... > > > It looks like a bad parser or defaults for time values. The > > example code below explains the problem best. I'm not sure why, > > or where... but it took me about a day to track down (PostgreSQL > > is never wrong!). If I include a timezone, things seem to work. > > For some reason, only dates from yesterday and today break > > things... I think it's because -7 is the same as my timezone, PST > > (now -7). > > Well, as long as you realize that PostgreSQL is always right you are > on track ;) > > I'm guessing that you have a damaged timezone database on your > system. What time zone does your system think it is in? What system > are you running on? I'm not seeing a problem on my Linux box running > 7.2 (well, except for the jump at the time zone boundary): > > lockhart=# select timestamp '2002-4-7 2:0:0.0'; > timestamptz > ------------------------ > 2002-04-07 01:00:00-08 > (1 row) > > But that is not the 2036 result you are seeing, so I can only > speculate on your specific problem...
ACK! Hmm... fresh build of FreeBSD: $ uname -a FreeBSD ninja1.internal 4.5-STABLE FreeBSD 4.5-STABLE #0: Fri Apr 5 18:08:12 PST 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/opt/obj/opt/src/sys/NINJA i386 $ psql # SELECT timestamp '2002-4-7 2:0:0.0'; timestamptz ------------------------ 2036-06-02 22:57:08-07 (1 row) # SELECT version(); version ------------------------------------------------------------ PostgreSQL 7.2 on i386--freebsd4.5, compiled by GCC 2.95.3 (1 row) This isn't happy making. What OS are you running? Seems like a lower level problem. Do you know if it's a system call making the formatting call? -sc -- Sean Chittenden ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 1: subscribe and unsubscribe commands go to [EMAIL PROTECTED]