Hi Adrian, thanks for the encouragement. If anyone can comment on the code, I'd still be very interested. Cheers, Lutz On Thursday, 06.09.2018 06:27:14 Adrian Klaver wrote: > On 09/03/2018 09:11 AM, Lutz Gehlen wrote: > > Hello all, > > > > unfortunately, I have so far not received a reply to my question > > below. I am well aware that no one has an obligation to reply; I > > was just wondering whether I phrased my question badly or > > whether there is anything else I could do to improve it. > > Caveat, I am not a C programmer so I cannot comment on the > correctness of the code. The question and it's phrasing look > alright to me though. Your most recent post landed on a > holiday(Labor Day) here in the States and therefore may have got > lost in the return to work on Tuesday. Hopefully someone more > knowledgeable then I will see this and comment on the C portion > of your post. > > > Thanks for your help and best wishes, > > Lutz > > > > On Friday, 10.08.2018 09:05:40 Lutz Gehlen wrote: > >> Hello all, > >> > >> I am trying to implement a C function that accepts a date > >> ("date" > >> in the sense of a type of information, not a postgres datatype) > >> as parameter (among others) and returns a certain point in > >> time. > >> (The background is to calculate the time of dawn and dusk at > >> the > >> given date.) Ideally, I would like to accept a timestamp value > >> and return another timestamp as result. I have implemented the > >> function, but I would like to ask advice on whether my > >> implementation is the recommended way to achieve this. > >> > >> To get started - since this is my first attempt at a C function > >> in postgres - I implemented a function that accepts the date > >> as three separate int32 values for year, month, and day and > >> returns the time of dawn as a float8 for the minutes since > >> midnight (this is what the implemented algorithm internally > >> returns, anyway): > >> > >> ---- > >> PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(dawn_utc); > >> > >> Datum dawn_utc(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) { > >> > >> float8 lat = PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(0); > >> float8 lon = PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(1); > >> int32 year = PG_GETARG_INT32(2); > >> int32 month = PG_GETARG_INT32(3); > >> int32 day = PG_GETARG_INT32(4); > >> float8 solar_depression = PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(5); > >> > >> // postgres-independent computation goes here > >> float8 dawn_utc = calc_dawn_utc > >> > >> (lat, lon, year, month, day, solar_depression); > >> > >> PG_RETURN_FLOAT8(dawn_utc); > >> > >> } > >> ---- > >> > >> This works fine. However, it would be more convenient if the > >> function would accept a date or timestamp value and return a > >> timestamp. So I modified the first part of the function like > >> this, based on code snippets I found in the postgres source > >> code: > >> > >> ---- > >> PG_FUNCTION_INFO_V1(dawn_utc); > >> > >> Datum dawn_utc(PG_FUNCTION_ARGS) { > >> > >> float8 lat = PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(0); > >> float8 lon = PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(1); > >> Timestamp timestamp = PG_GETARG_TIMESTAMP(2); > >> float8 solar_depression = PG_GETARG_FLOAT8(3); > >> > >> struct pg_tm tt; > >> struct pg_tm *tm = &tt; > >> fsec_t fsec; > >> > >> if (timestamp2tm(timestamp, NULL, tm, &fsec, NULL, NULL) != > >> 0) > >> > >> ereport(ERROR, > >> > >> (errcode(ERRCODE_DATETIME_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE), > >> > >> errmsg("timestamp out of range"))); > >> > >> // postgres-independent computation goes here > >> float8 dawn_utc = calc_dawn_utc > >> > >> (lat, lon, tm->tm_year, tm->tm_mon, tm->tm_mday, > >> > >> solar_depression; > >> ---- > >> > >> For the second part of the function, I now have to add the > >> calculated number of minutes to the date portion of the > >> timestamp > >> variable. One has to be aware that depending on the geographic > >> location dawn_utc can possibly be negative or larger than 1440 > >> (i.e. 24h). I am not sure whether I should construct an > >> interval > >> value from the number of minutes and add that to the timestamp. > >> I > >> have not figured out how to do this, but decided to calculate a > >> new timestamp in a more fundamental way: > >> > >> ---- > >> > >> tm->tm_sec = 0; > >> tm->tm_min = 0; > >> tm->tm_hour = 0; > >> Timestamp result; > >> if (tm2timestamp(tm, 0, NULL, &result) != 0) > >> > >> ereport(ERROR, > >> > >> (errcode(ERRCODE_DATETIME_VALUE_OUT_OF_RANGE), > >> > >> errmsg("timestamp out of range"))); > >> > >> #ifdef HAVE_INT64_TIMESTAMP > >> > >> /* timestamp is microseconds since 2000 */ > >> result += dawn_utc * USECS_PER_MINUTE; > >> > >> #else > >> > >> /* timestamp is seconds since 2000 */ > >> result += dawn_utc * (double) SECS_PER_MINUTE; > >> > >> #endif > >> > >> PG_RETURN_TIMESTAMP(result); > >> > >> ---- > >> > >> Again this code is based on what I found in the source code. It > >> seems to work correctly (at least on my development machine), > >> but > >> I am wondering whether this is a safe and recommended way to > >> achieve this result or whether it is considered bad practice to > >> manipulate a timestamp on such fundamental level. > >> > >> Thank you for your advice and best wishes, > >> Lutz