On Sun, Apr 24, 2005 at 07:09:44PM +0200, Karsten Hilbert wrote: > Isn't the following what you want? ... > gnumed=> select version(); > version > --------------------------------------------------------------- > PostgreSQL 7.1.3 on i686-pc-linux-gnu, compiled by GCC 2.95.3 That *definitely* isn't anything I'd want. That version of PostgreSQL is almost four years old and has serious data loss problems. Aside from numerous bug fixes, there have been changes in behavior since then. > gnumed=> create teable test (f timestamp with time zone); > CREATE Does that really work in 7.1.3? Trying to create a "teable" fails with a syntax error in all the versions I tried (7.2.7, 7.3.9, 7.4.7, 8.0.2, all from CVS). I'll create a "table" instead. > gnumed=> set time zone '+2:00'; > SET VARIABLE > gnumed=> show time zone; > NOTICE: Time zone is +2:00 > SHOW VARIABLE > gnumed=> insert into test (f) values (now()); > INSERT 6462134 1 > gnumed=> SELECT * from test; > f > ------------------------ > 2005-04-24 17:06:10+00 > (1 row) > > gnumed=> select f, f::timestamp at time zone 'MEZ' from test; > f | timezone > ------------------------+------------------------ > 2005-04-24 17:06:10+00 | 2005-04-24 18:06:10+01 > (1 row) The above example gives different results depending on the version of PostgreSQL, and none of the versions I tested show output in different time zones. The following were all run around 22:25 UTC or a few minutes later: 7.2.7 create table test (f timestamp with time zone); CREATE set time zone '+2:00'; SET VARIABLE show time zone; psql:foo.sql:4: NOTICE: Time zone is '+2:00' SHOW VARIABLE insert into test (f) values (now()); INSERT 37830 1 SELECT * from test; f ------------------------------- 2005-04-24 22:25:51.669218+00 (1 row) select f, f::timestamp at time zone 'MEZ' from test; f | timezone -------------------------------+---------------------------- 2005-04-24 22:25:51.669218+00 | 2005-04-24 23:25:51.669218 (1 row) 7.3.9 create table test (f timestamp with time zone); CREATE TABLE set time zone '+2:00'; SET show time zone; TimeZone ---------- +2:00 (1 row) insert into test (f) values (now()); INSERT 731399 1 SELECT * from test; f ------------------------------- 2005-04-24 22:26:41.733617+00 (1 row) select f, f::timestamp at time zone 'MEZ' from test; f | timezone -------------------------------+------------------------------- 2005-04-24 22:26:41.733617+00 | 2005-04-24 21:26:41.733617+00 (1 row) 7.4.7 create table test (f timestamp with time zone); CREATE TABLE set time zone '+2:00'; SET show time zone; TimeZone ---------- +2:00 (1 row) insert into test (f) values (now()); INSERT 450835 1 SELECT * from test; f ------------------------------- 2005-04-24 22:27:25.631466+00 (1 row) select f, f::timestamp at time zone 'MEZ' from test; f | timezone -------------------------------+------------------------------- 2005-04-24 22:27:25.631466+00 | 2005-04-24 21:27:25.631466+00 (1 row) 8.0.2 create table test (f timestamp with time zone); CREATE TABLE set time zone '+2:00'; psql:foo.sql:3: ERROR: unrecognized time zone name: "+2:00" set time zone '+2'; SET show time zone; TimeZone ---------- 02:00:00 (1 row) insert into test (f) values (now()); INSERT 0 1 SELECT * from test; f ------------------------------ 2005-04-25 00:28:33.34721+02 (1 row) select f, f::timestamp at time zone 'MEZ' from test; f | timezone ------------------------------+------------------------------ 2005-04-25 00:28:33.34721+02 | 2005-04-25 01:28:33.34721+02 (1 row) -- Michael Fuhr http://www.fuhr.org/~mfuhr/ ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 8: explain analyze is your friend