If a time zone abbreviation used in datetime input is defined in the currently active timezone, use that definition in preference to looking in the timezone_abbreviations list. That allows us to correctly handle abbreviations that have different meanings in different timezones. Also, it eliminates an inconsistency between datetime input and datetime output: the non-ISO datestyles for timestamptz have always printed abbreviations taken from the IANA data, not from timezone_abbreviations. Before this fix, it was possible to demonstrate cases where casting a timestamp to text and back fails or changes the value significantly because of that inconsistency. While this change removes the ability to override the IANA data about an abbreviation known in the current zone, it's not clear that there's any real use-case for doing so. But it is clear that this makes life a lot easier for dealing with abbreviations that have conflicts across different time zones. Also update the pg_timezone_abbrevs view to report abbreviations that are recognized via the IANA data, and *not* report any timezone_abbreviations entries that are thereby overridden. Under the hood, there are now two SRFs, one that pulls the IANA data and one that pulls timezone_abbreviations entries. They're combined by logic in the view. This approach was useful for debugging (since the functions can be called on their own). While I don't intend to document the functions explicitly, they might be useful to call directly. Also improve DecodeTimezoneAbbrev's caching logic so that it can cache zone abbreviations found in the IANA data. Without that, this patch would have caused a noticeable degradation of the runtime of timestamptz_in. Per report from Aleksander Alekseev and additional investigation. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/CAJ7c6TOATjJqvhnYsui0=CO5XFMF4dvTGH+skzB--jNhqSQu5g@mail.gmail.com
PostgreSQL Database Management System
This directory contains the source code distribution of the PostgreSQL database management system.
PostgreSQL is an advanced object-relational database management system that supports an extended subset of the SQL standard, including transactions, foreign keys, subqueries, triggers, user-defined types and functions. This distribution also contains C language bindings.
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