Re: Having a hard time understanding time zone

From: Dave Cramer <pg(at)fastcrypt(dot)com>
To: Robert DiFalco <robert(dot)difalco(at)gmail(dot)com>
Cc: List <pgsql-jdbc(at)postgresql(dot)org>
Subject: Re: Having a hard time understanding time zone
Date: 2014-04-06 20:45:53
Message-ID: CADK3HHL_B+sM46LCBAs1c4MnKuFYKbgGOR5DHhK52-BXQfyqWg@mail.gmail.com
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Robert,

The driver certainly doesn't do anything to a statement like

insert into foo (datecol) values (now())

it does use the calendar of the vm to get the string representation.

Time, and date are two things not very well handled in java or JDBC. What
is the exact column type and what does it store in the database

But to answer your question you can do:

stmt.setTimestamp(1, t, Calendar.getInstance( TimeZone.getTimeZone("UTC")))

Dave Cramer

dave.cramer(at)credativ(dot)ca
http://www.credativ.ca

On 6 April 2014 13:56, Robert DiFalco <robert(dot)difalco(at)gmail(dot)com> wrote:

> Does the JDBC driver set the timezone to the origin timezone for each
> statement?
>
> I have a date column in a table. My Postgres server is running in UTC. My
> java app is running in "America/Los_Angeles".
>
> I would expect a DEFAULT column of NOW() to insert the current UTC time.
> While if I specify the time with new Date() from Java I would expect the
> Java timezone.
>
> But oddly both set the date field to the localized time in Java and not
> the UTC time.
>
> This makes me think that the driver is somehow forcing the session
> timezone.
>
> If so is there any way to make the driver communicate with the server in
> UTC?
>
> Thanks!
>

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