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Subject: |
Date: Possible bug in ISO-8601 formatted dates |
Date: |
Sun, 8 Jan 2012 19:22:09 +0200 |
It seems that ISO-8601 formated dates are not properly handled by the
date utility. The date utility seems to erroneously add
timezone-shifting when using ISO-8601 dates. This example is fine (see
the date roundtrip to back where it started):
✈saturn:~$ date +%s -d "2006-12-31 22:00"
1167595200
✈saturn:~$ date -d @1167595200
Sun Dec 31 22:00:00 IST 2006
However, adding a "t" between the date and hour (as per ISO 8601)
breaks the roundtrip (the timestamp is wrong):
✈saturn:~$ date +%s -d "2006-12-31t22:00"
1167577200
✈saturn:~$ date -d @1167577200
Sun Dec 31 17:00:00 IST 2006
This is on a love-to-hate Debian-based distro, with GNU coreutils 8.5.
I can confirm the issue on CentOS with date 5.97. Without the "t" the
timestamp is correct:
address@hidden beer]# date +%s -d "2006-12-31 22:00"
1167602400
address@hidden beer]# date -d @1167602400
Sun Dec 31 22:00:00 UTC 2006
And with it, the timestamp is wrong.
address@hidden beer]# date +%s -d "2006-12-31t22:00"
1167577200
address@hidden beer]# date -d @1167577200
Sun Dec 31 15:00:00 UTC 2006
Note that IST (from the first server) is UTC+2.
--
Dotan Cohen
http://gibberish.co.il
http://what-is-what.com
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--- Begin Message ---
Subject: |
Re: bug#10455: Date: Possible bug in ISO-8601 formatted dates |
Date: |
Mon, 9 Jan 2012 10:12:42 -0700 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.5.21 (2010-09-15) |
Dotan Cohen wrote:
> Bob Proulx wrote:
> > GNU date didn't learn how to handle ISO-8601 until very recently.
> > Your version 8.5 doesn't have that code yet. Here is the NEWS file
> > entry for the change as it went into the recent 8.13 release.
>
> Thanks, Bob. Have a great week!
Good. I am going to close the bug report ticket with this message
then.
Bob
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