Oliver Jowett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Also I'm a bit nervous about that hardcoded 2004 start date for the scan > in pgtz.c -- that will presumably break if the timezone data files are > updated for post-2004 changes without a corresponding change to the scan > code.
Actually, that was intentional. My thought was that if it picks the right zone now, while we are testing it, it will continue to pick the right zone in future. Let's suppose we do that, and then Congress decides to fool with the US' DST laws again in 2009. The zic people will update their database, we will propagate that upstream change, and identify_system_timezone will immediately fail on any machine with an un-updated local timezone database. Now I suppose the owners of such machines would have good reason to update their libc databases soon ... but the point is that probing future time exposes us to risks from unforeseeable future changes, and I don't see that it gives any advantages. The Antarctica/McMurdo business is more interesting. I am not sure why it picks McMurdo today when it picked Auckland before, since the previous code certainly didn't scan backwards far enough to distinguish those zones either. I would have thought that you'd get the first exact match with the old code, and if the scan order is consistent that would be McMurdo. Possibly there's some phase-of-the-moon behavior involved in the scan order. Have you reinstalled PG without wiping the installation directories first? If the TZ files are installed by overwriting an existing tree, I can believe that the live directory entries would end up in a different physical order each time you do it. In general though, the zic database has a lot of duplicate and near-duplicate zone entries, and I'm not sure we can hope to pick one that the user will think is his local zone when there are several perfect matches. (This morning I was trying to think of a way of at least not running the calculations over again for each of several perfect duplicates, but AFAICS we'd have to rely on noticing multiple hard links, which would be awfully platform-dependent not to say fragile...) regards, tom lane ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 7: don't forget to increase your free space map settings