Обсуждение: Bug in tzdata 2022g

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Bug in tzdata 2022g

От
Nacho Caballero
Дата:
There appears to be a bug in the latest postgres release, which uses tzdata 2022g to reflect the recent DST change in Mexico. 

When I convert a UTC timestamp to Mexico City time in 13.10 (Debian 13.10-1.pgdg110+1), I get a one hour difference, which is wrong:

select timezone('America/Mexico_City', '2023-05-06T08:00+00:00'), timezone('America/Bogota', '2023-05-06T08:00+00:00');
      timezone       |      timezone
---------------------+---------------------
 2023-05-06 02:00:00 | 2023-05-06 03:00:00

However, when I run it in PostgreSQL 12.10 (Ubuntu 12.10-1.pgdg20.04+1), I get the right answer (no time difference):

      timezone       |      timezone      
---------------------+---------------------
 2023-05-06 03:00:00 | 2023-05-06 03:00:00

Re: Bug in tzdata 2022g

От
Tom Lane
Дата:
Nacho Caballero <nachocab@gmail.com> writes:
> There appears to be a bug in the latest postgres release, which uses tzdata
> 2022g to reflect the recent DST change in Mexico.

I see no bug here.  America/Mexico_City is reported as being -06
all year round, which agrees with what the tzdb commentary says:

# From Paul Eggert (2022-10-28):
# The new Mexican law was published today:
# https://www.dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle.php?codigo=5670045&fecha=28/10/2022
# This abolishes DST except where US DST rules are observed,
# and in addition changes all of Chihuahua to -06 with no DST.

Meanwhile, Bogota has been -05 year-round since the nineties.

If you disagree with either of these conclusions, you had better
provide some solid evidence to back it up; and the place to be
complaining to is the tzdata maintainers, not us.

> However, when I run it in PostgreSQL 12.10 (Ubuntu 12.10-1.pgdg20.04+1), I
> get the right answer (no time difference):

Apparently, your PG 12.10 installation is using some pre-2022f
version of tzdata.  Mexico didn't abolish DST until late last year.

            regards, tom lane



Re: Bug in tzdata 2022g

От
Nacho Caballero
Дата:
Thanks to the reply, Tom. My bad, I was being misled by savvytime.com, startpage.com and search.brave.com

Other providers like timeanddate.com, google.com and https://www.cenam.mx/hora_oficial/default2.aspx have the correct time.

On Sat, May 6, 2023 at 4:50 PM Tom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us> wrote:
Nacho Caballero <nachocab@gmail.com> writes:
> There appears to be a bug in the latest postgres release, which uses tzdata
> 2022g to reflect the recent DST change in Mexico.

I see no bug here.  America/Mexico_City is reported as being -06
all year round, which agrees with what the tzdb commentary says:

# From Paul Eggert (2022-10-28):
# The new Mexican law was published today:
# https://www.dof.gob.mx/nota_detalle.php?codigo=5670045&fecha=28/10/2022
# This abolishes DST except where US DST rules are observed,
# and in addition changes all of Chihuahua to -06 with no DST.

Meanwhile, Bogota has been -05 year-round since the nineties.

If you disagree with either of these conclusions, you had better
provide some solid evidence to back it up; and the place to be
complaining to is the tzdata maintainers, not us.

> However, when I run it in PostgreSQL 12.10 (Ubuntu 12.10-1.pgdg20.04+1), I
> get the right answer (no time difference):

Apparently, your PG 12.10 installation is using some pre-2022f
version of tzdata.  Mexico didn't abolish DST until late last year.

                        regards, tom lane