Re: Conversion errors for datetime fields
Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
From: Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
To: Larry Rosenman <ler@lerctr.org>
Cc: pgsql-bugs@postgresql.org
Date: 2000-12-29T04:00:14Z
Lists: pgsql-bugs
> Oh, and the UnixWare strftime man page allows %s to return 00-61. They're just repeating a common mistake. If you want to learn something about the subject, try some non-computer timekeeping references, for example the US Naval Observatory: http://tycho.usno.navy.mil/leapsec.html After digging around a little, the source of this particular meme seems to be the old C standard. The theory among those who are aware it's an error is that some member of the ISO C committee did enough research to know that two leap seconds could be inserted in a single year, but not enough to realize that they wouldn't be inserted in the same minute. (See above USNO page: in fact there are four agreed-on windows for leap second insertion per year, but only two have been used historically.) The error has since contaminated the Java spec, as well as most all Unix documentation. I suspect that this error may go back even further, perhaps to the original Unix C library documentation. In any case it was only a documentation error, as no C library of that vintage actually had any leap-second support whatever. > SO, we need to allow it as well. I suspect the C99 standard or > some other POSIX/SUS/etc standard changed. C99 *corrects* this error; it specifies 0-60 not 0-61 as the range of tm_sec. (It also describes actual support for leap-second timekeeping, which the original C standard did not.) But this is all irrelevant, anyway, unless you want people to install atomic clocks before they can run Postgres. We don't have support for leap-second timekeeping, and few if any of the platforms we run on do either. IMHO, accepting :60 when we do not have the ability to do anything correct with it won't improve matters. regards, tom lane