On Tue, Feb 24, 2015 at 2:15 AM, Mitu Verma <mitu.ve...@ericsson.com> wrote:
> What could be the possible impacts of leap second on June 30 2105 (which > will make the one second longer time) at PostgreSQL database ? > > As an experiment, try setting the time to the leap second and see if postgres stores it as you expect. Ie, set your time to "June 30, 2015 23:59:60 UTC". On 9.4.1 it is not looking like it knows that second exists. postgres=> select version(); -[ RECORD 1 ]-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- version | PostgreSQL 9.4.1 on amd64-portbld-freebsd9.3, compiled by cc (GCC) 4.2.1 20070831 patched [FreeBSD], 64-bit Time: 163.817 ms postgres=> select 'June 30, 2015 23:59:59 UTC'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2015-06-30 19:59:59-04 (1 row) Time: 22.110 ms postgres=> select 'June 30, 2015 23:59:60 UTC'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2015-06-30 20:00:00-04 (1 row) Time: 0.643 ms postgres=> select 'July 1, 2015 00:00:00 UTC'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2015-06-30 20:00:00-04 (1 row) Time: 0.731 ms postgres=> set timezone='UTC'; SET Time: 17.630 ms postgres=> select 'July 1, 2015 00:00:00 UTC'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2015-07-01 00:00:00+00 (1 row) Time: 0.661 ms postgres=> select 'June 30, 2015 23:59:60 UTC'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2015-07-01 00:00:00+00 (1 row) Time: 0.726 ms postgres=> select 'June 30, 2015 23:59:59 UTC'::timestamptz; timestamptz ------------------------ 2015-06-30 23:59:59+00 (1 row) Time: 0.698 ms