Michael Fuhr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> SET TimeZone TO 'Asia/Hong_Kong';
> SELECT '1901/12/14 1:00'::abstime;
> abstime
>
> 2038-01-19 07:51:40+08
> (1 row)
> I'd guess this is due to the 32-bitness of abstime. Those timestamps
> are around the min a
Bruce Momjian writes:
> Michael Fuhr wrote:
>> I'd guess this is due to the 32-bitness of abstime. Those timestamps
>> are around the min and max values of a 32-bit timestamp based on the
>> traditional Unix epoch.
> Yea, I see the same thing in 8.0.X. I don't think abstime should be
> used in
Michael Fuhr wrote:
> On Fri, Jul 22, 2005 at 10:15:40AM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote:
> >
> > Current CVS shows:
> >
> > test=> select '1901/12/14 1:00'::abstime;
> > abstime
> >
> > 1901-12-14 01:00:00-05
> > (1 row)
>
> Depends on your timez
On Fri, Jul 22, 2005 at 10:15:40AM -0400, Bruce Momjian wrote:
>
> Current CVS shows:
>
> test=> select '1901/12/14 1:00'::abstime;
> abstime
>
>1901-12-14 01:00:00-05
> (1 row)
Depends on your timezone:
SET TimeZone TO 'US/Easter
jw wrote:
> # select '1901/12/14 1:00'::abstime;
> abstime
>
> 2038-01-19 07:22:24+08
> (1 row)
Current CVS shows:
test=> select '1901/12/14 1:00'::abstime;
abstime
1901-12-14 01:00:00-05