George,
Everytime you get a connection the driver will issue set timezone ...
It does not change the default time zone for the server (AFAICS)
On 23 February 2015 at 15:29, Adrian Klaver <adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 02/23/2015 12:15 PM, George Woodring wrote:
This is what I was looking for, however the JDBC does something to make
its timezone the default.
My cluster is set to GMT, I have a DB that is set to US/Pacific, when I
get the connection from JDBC it is US/Eastern. The reset command does
not affect it. I can set timezone in the code to 'US/Pacific" and I see
it change, when I do another RESET timezone it goes back to US/Eastern.
In your original post you mentioned that access to the databases is through a Web server.
Is there just one Web server with one time zone?
Thanks,
George Woodring
iGLASS Networks
www.iglass.net <http://www.iglass.net>
On Mon, Feb 23, 2015 at 10:49 AM, Tom Lane <tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:tgl@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
George Woodring <george.woodring@xxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:george.woodring@iglass.net>> writes:
> Yes, that is where we think we are heading, the issue is that the code does
> not know what it needs to be set back to. We have 90 databases with 5
> different time zones. I was just hoping for a more elegant solution than
> writing a lookup table that says if you are connecting to db x then set to
> timezone y.
"RESET timezone" ?
regards, tom lane
--
Adrian Klaver
adrian.klaver@xxxxxxxxxxx