Date/Time Support
PostgreSQL uses an internal heuristic
parser for all date/time input support. Dates and times are input as
strings, and are broken up into distinct fields with a preliminary
determination of what kind of information may be in the
field. Each field is interpreted and either assigned a numeric
value, ignored, or rejected.
The parser contains internal lookup tables for all textual fields,
including months, days of the week, and time zones.
This appendix includes information on the content of these
lookup tables and describes the steps used by the parser to decode
dates and times.
Date/Time Input Interpretation
The date/time type inputs are all decoded using the following procedure.
Break the input string into tokens and categorize each token as
a string, time, time zone, or number.
If the numeric token contains a colon (:>), this is
a time string. Include all subsequent digits and colons.
If the numeric token contains a dash (->), slash
(/>), or two or more dots (.>), this is
a date string which may have a text month.
If the token is numeric only, then it is either a single field
or an ISO 8601 concatenated date (e.g.,
19990113 for January 13, 1999) or time
(e.g., 141516 for 14:15:16).
If the token starts with a plus (+>) or minus
(->), then it is either a time zone or a special
field.
If the token is a text string, match up with possible strings.
Do a binary-search table lookup for the token
as either a special string (e.g., today),
day (e.g., Thursday),
month (e.g., January),
or noise word (e.g., at, on).
Set field values and bit mask for fields.
For example, set year, month, day for today,
and additionally hour, minute, second for now.
If not found, do a similar binary-search table lookup to match
the token with a time zone.
If still not found, throw an error.
When the token is a number or number field:
If there are eight or six digits,
and if no other date fields have been previously read, then interpret
as a concatenated date
(e.g.,
19990118 or 990118).
The interpretation is YYYYMMDD> or YYMMDD>.
If the token is three digits
and a year has already been read, then interpret as day of year.
If four or six digits and a year has already been read, then
interpret as a time (HHMM> or HHMMSS>).
If three or more digits and no date fields have yet been found,
interpret as a year (this forces yy-mm-dd ordering of the remaining
date fields).
Otherwise the date field ordering is assumed to follow the
DateStyle> setting: mm-dd-yy, dd-mm-yy, or yy-mm-dd.
Throw an error if a month or day field is found to be out of range.
If BC has been specified, negate the year and add one for
internal storage. (There is no year zero in the Gregorian
calendar, so numerically 1 BC becomes year zero.)
If BC was not specified, and if the year field was two digits in length,
then adjust the year to four digits. If the field is less than 70, then
add 2000, otherwise add 1900.
Gregorian years AD 1-99 may be entered by using 4 digits with leading
zeros (e.g., 0099> is AD 99). Previous versions of
PostgreSQL accepted years with three
digits and with single digits, but as of version 7.0 the rules have
been tightened up to reduce the possibility of ambiguity.
Date/Time Key Words
shows the tokens that are
recognized as names of months.
Month Names
Month
Abbreviations
January
Jan
February
Feb
March
Mar
April
Apr
May
June
Jun
July
Jul
August
Aug
September
Sep, Sept
October
Oct
November
Nov
December
Dec
shows the tokens that are
recognized as names of days of the week.
Day of the Week Names
Day
Abbreviations
Sunday
Sun
Monday
Mon
Tuesday
Tue, Tues
Wednesday
Wed, Weds
Thursday
Thu, Thur, Thurs
Friday
Fri
Saturday
Sat
shows the tokens that serve
various modifier purposes.
Date/Time Field Modifiers
Identifier
Description
ABSTIME
Ignored
AM
Time is before 12:00
AT
Ignored
JULIAN>, JD>, J>
Next field is Julian Day
ON
Ignored
PM
Time is on or after 12:00
T
Next field is time
The key word ABSTIME is ignored for historical
reasons: In very old releases of
PostgreSQL, invalid values of type abstime
were emitted as Invalid Abstime. This is no
longer the case however and this key word will likely be dropped in
a future release.
time zone
input abbreviations
shows the time zone
abbreviations recognized by PostgreSQL
in date/time input values. Note that these names are not>
necessarily used for date/time output — output is driven by the
official timezone abbreviation(s) associated with the currently selected
parameter setting. (It is
likely that future releases will make some use of timezone>
for input as well.)
The table is organized by time zone offset from UTC>,
rather than alphabetically. This is intended to facilitate
matching local usage with recognized abbreviations for cases where
these might differ.
Australian Time Zones
There are three naming conflicts between Australian time zone
names and time zone names commonly used in North and South America:
ACST, CST, and
EST. If the run-time option
australian_timezones is set to true then
ACST, CST,
EST, and SAT are interpreted
as Australian time zone names, as shown in . If it is false (which is the
default), then ACST, CST,
and EST are taken as American time zone names,
and SAT is interpreted as a noise word
indicating Saturday.
Australian Time Zone Abbreviations for Input
Time Zone
Offset from UTC
Description
ACST
+09:30
Central Australia Standard Time
CST
+10:30
Australian Central Standard Time
EST
+10:00
Australian Eastern Standard Time
SAT
+09:30
South Australian Standard Time
time zone
configuration names
shows the time zone
names recognized by PostgreSQL as valid
settings for the parameter. Note that
these names are conceptually as well as practically different from
the names shown in :
most of these names imply a local daylight-savings time rule, whereas
the former names each represent just a fixed offset from UTC.
In many cases there are several equivalent names for the same zone.
These are listed on the same line. The table is primarily sorted
by the name of the principal city of the zone.
Time Zone Names for Setting timezone>
Time Zone
Africa/Abidjan
Africa/Accra
Africa/Addis_Ababa
Africa/Algiers
Africa/Asmera
Africa/Bamako
Africa/Bangui
Africa/Banjul
Africa/Bissau
Africa/Blantyre
Africa/Brazzaville
Africa/Bujumbura
Africa/Cairo Egypt
Africa/Casablanca
Africa/Ceuta
Africa/Conakry
Africa/Dakar
Africa/Dar_es_Salaam
Africa/Djibouti
Africa/Douala
Africa/El_Aaiun
Africa/Freetown
Africa/Gaborone
Africa/Harare
Africa/Johannesburg
Africa/Kampala
Africa/Khartoum
Africa/Kigali
Africa/Kinshasa
Africa/Lagos
Africa/Libreville
Africa/Lome
Africa/Luanda
Africa/Lubumbashi
Africa/Lusaka
Africa/Malabo
Africa/Maputo
Africa/Maseru
Africa/Mbabane
Africa/Mogadishu
Africa/Monrovia
Africa/Nairobi
Africa/Ndjamena
Africa/Niamey
Africa/Nouakchott
Africa/Ouagadougou
Africa/Porto-Novo
Africa/Sao_Tome
Africa/Timbuktu
Africa/Tripoli Libya
Africa/Tunis
Africa/Windhoek
America/Adak America/Atka US/Aleutian
America/Anchorage SystemV/YST9YDT US/Alaska
America/Anguilla
America/Antigua
America/Araguaina
America/Aruba
America/Asuncion
America/Bahia
America/Barbados
America/Belem
America/Belize
America/Boa_Vista
America/Bogota
America/Boise
America/Buenos_Aires
America/Cambridge_Bay
America/Campo_Grande
America/Cancun
America/Caracas
America/Catamarca
America/Cayenne
America/Cayman
America/Chicago CST6CDT SystemV/CST6CDT US/Central
America/Chihuahua
America/Cordoba America/Rosario
America/Costa_Rica
America/Cuiaba
America/Curacao
America/Danmarkshavn
America/Dawson
America/Dawson_Creek
America/Denver MST7MDT SystemV/MST7MDT US/Mountain America/Shiprock Navajo
America/Detroit US/Michigan
America/Dominica
America/Edmonton Canada/Mountain
America/Eirunepe
America/El_Salvador
America/Ensenada America/Tijuana Mexico/BajaNorte
America/Fortaleza
America/Glace_Bay
America/Godthab
America/Goose_Bay
America/Grand_Turk
America/Grenada
America/Guadeloupe
America/Guatemala
America/Guayaquil
America/Guyana
America/Halifax Canada/Atlantic SystemV/AST4ADT
America/Havana Cuba
America/Hermosillo
America/Indiana/Indianapolis America/Indianapolis America/Fort_Wayne EST SystemV/EST5 US/East-Indiana
America/Indiana/Knox America/Knox_IN US/Indiana-Starke
America/Indiana/Marengo
America/Indiana/Vevay
America/Inuvik
America/Iqaluit
America/Jamaica Jamaica
America/Jujuy
America/Juneau
America/Kentucky/Louisville America/Louisville
America/Kentucky/Monticello
America/La_Paz
America/Lima
America/Los_Angeles PST8PDT SystemV/PST8PDT US/Pacific US/Pacific-New
America/Maceio
America/Managua
America/Manaus Brazil/West
America/Martinique
America/Mazatlan Mexico/BajaSur
America/Mendoza
America/Menominee
America/Merida
America/Mexico_City Mexico/General
America/Miquelon
America/Monterrey
America/Montevideo
America/Montreal
America/Montserrat
America/Nassau
America/New_York EST5EDT SystemV/EST5EDT US/Eastern
America/Nipigon
America/Nome
America/Noronha Brazil/DeNoronha
America/North_Dakota/Center
America/Panama
America/Pangnirtung
America/Paramaribo
America/Phoenix MST SystemV/MST7 US/Arizona
America/Port-au-Prince
America/Port_of_Spain
America/Porto_Acre America/Rio_Branco Brazil/Acre
America/Porto_Velho
America/Puerto_Rico SystemV/AST4
America/Rainy_River
America/Rankin_Inlet
America/Recife
America/Regina Canada/East-Saskatchewan Canada/Saskatchewan SystemV/CST6
America/Santiago Chile/Continental
America/Santo_Domingo
America/Sao_Paulo Brazil/East
America/Scoresbysund
America/St_Johns Canada/Newfoundland
America/St_Kitts
America/St_Lucia
America/St_Thomas America/Virgin
America/St_Vincent
America/Swift_Current
America/Tegucigalpa
America/Thule
America/Thunder_Bay
America/Toronto Canada/Eastern
America/Tortola
America/Vancouver Canada/Pacific
America/Whitehorse Canada/Yukon
America/Winnipeg Canada/Central
America/Yakutat
America/Yellowknife
Antarctica/Casey
Antarctica/Davis
Antarctica/DumontDUrville
Antarctica/Mawson
Antarctica/McMurdo Antarctica/South_Pole
Antarctica/Palmer
Antarctica/Rothera
Antarctica/Syowa
Antarctica/Vostok
Asia/Aden
Asia/Almaty
Asia/Amman
Asia/Anadyr
Asia/Aqtau
Asia/Aqtobe
Asia/Ashgabat Asia/Ashkhabad
Asia/Baghdad
Asia/Bahrain
Asia/Baku
Asia/Bangkok
Asia/Beirut
Asia/Bishkek
Asia/Brunei
Asia/Calcutta
Asia/Choibalsan
Asia/Chongqing Asia/Chungking
Asia/Colombo
Asia/Dacca Asia/Dhaka
Asia/Damascus
Asia/Dili
Asia/Dubai
Asia/Dushanbe
Asia/Gaza
Asia/Harbin
Asia/Hong_Kong Hongkong
Asia/Hovd
Asia/Irkutsk
Asia/Jakarta
Asia/Jayapura
Asia/Jerusalem Asia/Tel_Aviv Israel
Asia/Kabul
Asia/Kamchatka
Asia/Karachi
Asia/Kashgar
Asia/Katmandu
Asia/Krasnoyarsk
Asia/Kuala_Lumpur
Asia/Kuching
Asia/Kuwait
Asia/Macao Asia/Macau
Asia/Magadan
Asia/Makassar Asia/Ujung_Pandang
Asia/Manila
Asia/Muscat
Asia/Nicosia Europe/Nicosia
Asia/Novosibirsk
Asia/Omsk
Asia/Oral
Asia/Phnom_Penh
Asia/Pontianak
Asia/Pyongyang
Asia/Qatar
Asia/Qyzylorda
Asia/Rangoon
Asia/Riyadh
Asia/Riyadh87 Mideast/Riyadh87
Asia/Riyadh88 Mideast/Riyadh88
Asia/Riyadh89 Mideast/Riyadh89
Asia/Saigon
Asia/Sakhalin
Asia/Samarkand
Asia/Seoul ROK
Asia/Shanghai PRC
Asia/Singapore Singapore
Asia/Taipei ROC
Asia/Tashkent
Asia/Tbilisi
Asia/Tehran Iran
Asia/Thimbu Asia/Thimphu
Asia/Tokyo Japan
Asia/Ulaanbaatar Asia/Ulan_Bator
Asia/Urumqi
Asia/Vientiane
Asia/Vladivostok
Asia/Yakutsk
Asia/Yekaterinburg
Asia/Yerevan
Atlantic/Azores
Atlantic/Bermuda
Atlantic/Canary
Atlantic/Cape_Verde
Atlantic/Faeroe
Atlantic/Madeira
Atlantic/Reykjavik Iceland
Atlantic/South_Georgia
Atlantic/St_Helena
Atlantic/Stanley
Australia/ACT Australia/Canberra Australia/NSW Australia/Sydney
Australia/Adelaide Australia/South
Australia/Brisbane Australia/Queensland
Australia/Broken_Hill Australia/Yancowinna
Australia/Darwin Australia/North
Australia/Hobart Australia/Tasmania
Australia/LHI Australia/Lord_Howe
Australia/Lindeman
Australia/Melbourne Australia/Victoria
Australia/Perth Australia/West
CET
EET
Etc/GMT+1
Etc/GMT+2
Etc/GMT+3
Etc/GMT+4
Etc/GMT+5
Etc/GMT+6
Etc/GMT+7
Etc/GMT+8
Etc/GMT+9
Etc/GMT+10
Etc/GMT+11
Etc/GMT+12
Etc/GMT-1
Etc/GMT-2
Etc/GMT-3
Etc/GMT-4
Etc/GMT-5
Etc/GMT-6
Etc/GMT-7
Etc/GMT-8
Etc/GMT-9
Etc/GMT-10
Etc/GMT-11
Etc/GMT-12
Etc/GMT-13
Etc/GMT-14
Europe/Amsterdam
Europe/Andorra
Europe/Athens
Europe/Belfast
Europe/Belgrade Europe/Ljubljana Europe/Sarajevo Europe/Skopje Europe/Zagreb
Europe/Berlin
Europe/Brussels
Europe/Bucharest
Europe/Budapest
Europe/Chisinau Europe/Tiraspol
Europe/Copenhagen
Europe/Dublin Eire
Europe/Gibraltar
Europe/Helsinki
Europe/Istanbul Asia/Istanbul Turkey
Europe/Kaliningrad
Europe/Kiev
Europe/Lisbon Portugal
Europe/London GB GB-Eire
Europe/Luxembourg
Europe/Madrid
Europe/Malta
Europe/Minsk
Europe/Monaco
Europe/Moscow W-SU
Europe/Oslo Arctic/Longyearbyen Atlantic/Jan_Mayen
Europe/Paris
Europe/Prague Europe/Bratislava
Europe/Riga
Europe/Rome Europe/San_Marino Europe/Vatican
Europe/Samara
Europe/Simferopol
Europe/Sofia
Europe/Stockholm
Europe/Tallinn
Europe/Tirane
Europe/Uzhgorod
Europe/Vaduz
Europe/Vienna
Europe/Vilnius
Europe/Warsaw Poland
Europe/Zaporozhye
Europe/Zurich
Factory
GMT GMT+0 GMT-0 GMT0 Greenwich Etc/GMT Etc/GMT+0 Etc/GMT-0 Etc/GMT0 Etc/Greenwich
Indian/Antananarivo
Indian/Chagos
Indian/Christmas
Indian/Cocos
Indian/Comoro
Indian/Kerguelen
Indian/Mahe
Indian/Maldives
Indian/Mauritius
Indian/Mayotte
Indian/Reunion
MET
Pacific/Apia
Pacific/Auckland NZ
Pacific/Chatham NZ-CHAT
Pacific/Easter Chile/EasterIsland
Pacific/Efate
Pacific/Enderbury
Pacific/Fakaofo
Pacific/Fiji
Pacific/Funafuti
Pacific/Galapagos
Pacific/Gambier SystemV/YST9
Pacific/Guadalcanal
Pacific/Guam
Pacific/Honolulu HST SystemV/HST10 US/Hawaii
Pacific/Johnston
Pacific/Kiritimati
Pacific/Kosrae
Pacific/Kwajalein Kwajalein
Pacific/Majuro
Pacific/Marquesas
Pacific/Midway
Pacific/Nauru
Pacific/Niue
Pacific/Norfolk
Pacific/Noumea
Pacific/Pago_Pago Pacific/Samoa US/Samoa
Pacific/Palau
Pacific/Pitcairn SystemV/PST8
Pacific/Ponape
Pacific/Port_Moresby
Pacific/Rarotonga
Pacific/Saipan
Pacific/Tahiti
Pacific/Tarawa
Pacific/Tongatapu
Pacific/Truk
Pacific/Wake
Pacific/Wallis
Pacific/Yap
UCT Etc/UCT
UTC Universal Zulu Etc/UTC Etc/Universal Etc/Zulu
WET
In addition to the names listed in the table,
PostgreSQL will accept time zone names of the
form STD>offset> or
STD>offset>DST>, where
STD> is a zone abbreviation, offset> is a
numeric offset in hours west from UTC, and DST> is an
optional daylight-savings zone abbreviation, assumed to stand for one hour
ahead of the given offset. For example, if EST5EDT> were not
already a recognized zone name, it would be accepted and would be
functionally equivalent to USA East Coast time. When a daylight-savings
zone name is present, it is assumed to be used according to USA time zone
rules, so this feature is of limited use outside North America.
One should also be wary that this provision can lead to
silently accepting bogus input, since there is no check on the
reasonableness of the zone abbreviations. For example,
SET TIMEZONE TO FOOBAR0> will work, leaving the system
effectively using a rather peculiar abbreviation for GMT.
History of Units
The Julian Date was invented by the French scholar
Joseph Justus Scaliger (1540-1609)
and probably takes its name from Scaliger's father,
the Italian scholar Julius Caesar Scaliger (1484-1558).
Astronomers have used the Julian period to assign a unique number to
every day since 1 January 4713 BC. This is the so-called Julian Date
(JD). JD 0 designates the 24 hours from noon UTC on 1 January 4713 BC
to noon UTC on 2 January 4713 BC.
The Julian Date
is different from the Julian
Calendar
. The Julian calendar
was introduced by Julius Caesar in 45 BC. It was in common use
until the year 1582, when countries started changing to the Gregorian
calendar. In the Julian calendar, the tropical year is
approximated as 365 1/4 days = 365.25 days. This gives an error of
about 1 day in 128 years.
The accumulating calendar error prompted
Pope Gregory XIII to reform the calendar in accordance with
instructions from the Council of Trent.
In the Gregorian calendar, the tropical year is approximated as
365 + 97 / 400 days = 365.2425 days. Thus it takes approximately 3300
years for the tropical year to shift one day with respect to the
Gregorian calendar.
The approximation 365+97/400 is achieved by having 97 leap years
every 400 years, using the following rules:
Every year divisible by 4 is a leap year.
However, every year divisible by 100 is not a leap year.
However, every year divisible by 400 is a leap year after all.
So, 1700, 1800, 1900, 2100, and 2200 are not leap years. But 1600,
2000, and 2400 are leap years.
By contrast, in the older Julian calendar all years divisible by 4 are leap
years.
The papal bull of February 1582 decreed that 10 days should be dropped
from October 1582 so that 15 October should follow immediately after
4 October.
This was observed in Italy, Poland, Portugal, and Spain. Other Catholic
countries followed shortly after, but Protestant countries were
reluctant to change, and the Greek orthodox countries didn't change
until the start of the 20th century.
The reform was observed by Great Britain and Dominions (including what is
now the USA) in 1752.
Thus 2 September 1752 was followed by 14 September 1752.
This is why Unix systems have the cal program
produce the following:
$ cal 9 1752
September 1752
S M Tu W Th F S
1 2 14 15 16
17 18 19 20 21 22 23
24 25 26 27 28 29 30
The SQL standard states that Within the definition of a
datetime literal
, the datetime
value
s are constrained by the natural rules for dates and
times according to the Gregorian calendar
. Dates between
1752-09-03 and 1752-09-13, although eliminated in some countries
by Papal fiat, conform to natural rules
and are
hence valid dates.
Different calendars have been developed in various parts of the
world, many predating the Gregorian system.
For example,
the beginnings of the Chinese calendar can be traced back to the 14th
century BC. Legend has it that the Emperor Huangdi invented the
calendar in 2637 BC.
The People's Republic of China uses the Gregorian calendar
for civil purposes. The Chinese calendar is used for determining
festivals.