1<!DOCTYPE html> 2<html lang="en"> 3<head> 4 <title>Theory and pragmatics of the tz code and data</title> 5 <meta charset="UTF-8"> 6 <style> 7 pre {margin-left: 2em; white-space: pre-wrap;} 8 </style> 9</head> 10 11<body> 12<h1>Theory and pragmatics of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data</h1> 13 <h3>Outline</h3> 14 <nav> 15 <ul> 16 <li><a href="#scope">Scope of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 17 database</a></li> 18 <li><a href="#naming">Timezone identifiers</a></li> 19 <li><a href="#abbreviations">Time zone abbreviations</a></li> 20 <li><a href="#accuracy">Accuracy of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 21 database</a></li> 22 <li><a href="#functions">Time and date functions</a></li> 23 <li><a href="#stability">Interface stability</a></li> 24 <li><a href="#leapsec">Leap seconds</a></li> 25 <li><a href="#calendar">Calendrical issues</a></li> 26 <li><a href="#planets">Time and time zones off earth</a></li> 27 </ul> 28 </nav> 29 30<section> 31 <h2 id="scope">Scope of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 32<p> 33The <a 34href="https://www.iana.org/time-zones"><code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 35database</a> attempts to record the history and predicted future of 36civil time scales. 37It organizes <a href="tz-link.html">time zone and daylight saving time 38data</a> by partitioning the world into <a 39href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tz_database_time_zones"><dfn>timezones</dfn></a> 40whose clocks all agree about timestamps that occur after the <a 41href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_time">POSIX Epoch</a> 42(1970-01-01 00:00:00 <a 43href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordinated_Universal_Time"><abbr 44title="Coordinated Universal Time">UTC</abbr></a>). 45Although 1970 is a somewhat-arbitrary cutoff, there are significant 46challenges to moving the cutoff earlier even by a decade or two, due 47to the wide variety of local practices before computer timekeeping 48became prevalent. 49Most timezones correspond to a notable location and the database 50records all known clock transitions for that location; 51some timezones correspond instead to a fixed <abbr>UTC</abbr> offset. 52</p> 53 54<p> 55Each timezone typically corresponds to a geographical region that is 56smaller than a traditional time zone, because clocks in a timezone 57all agree after 1970 whereas a traditional time zone merely 58specifies current standard time. For example, applications that deal 59with current and future timestamps in the traditional North 60American mountain time zone can choose from the timezones 61<code>America/Denver</code> which observes US-style daylight saving 62time (<abbr>DST</abbr>), 63and <code>America/Phoenix</code> which does not observe <abbr>DST</abbr>. 64Applications that also deal with past timestamps in the mountain time 65zone can choose from over a dozen timezones, such as 66<code>America/Boise</code>, <code>America/Edmonton</code>, and 67<code>America/Hermosillo</code>, each of which currently uses mountain 68time but differs from other timezones for some timestamps after 1970. 69</p> 70 71<p> 72Clock transitions before 1970 are recorded for location-based timezones, 73because most systems support timestamps before 1970 and could 74misbehave if data entries were omitted for pre-1970 transitions. 75However, the database is not designed for and does not suffice for 76applications requiring accurate handling of all past times everywhere, 77as it would take far too much effort and guesswork to record all 78details of pre-1970 civil timekeeping. 79Although some information outside the scope of the database is 80collected in a file <code>backzone</code> that is distributed along 81with the database proper, this file is less reliable and does not 82necessarily follow database guidelines. 83</p> 84 85<p> 86As described below, reference source code for using the 87<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database is also available. 88The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code is upwards compatible with <a 89href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POSIX">POSIX</a>, an international 90standard for <a 91href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix">UNIX</a>-like systems. 92As of this writing, the current edition of POSIX is: <a 93href="https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/"> The Open 94Group Base Specifications Issue 7</a>, IEEE Std 1003.1-2017, 2018 95Edition. 96Because the database's scope encompasses real-world changes to civil 97timekeeping, its model for describing time is more complex than the 98standard and daylight saving times supported by POSIX.1-2017. 99A <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> timezone corresponds to a ruleset that can 100have more than two changes per year, these changes need not merely 101flip back and forth between two alternatives, and the rules themselves 102can change at times. 103Whether and when a timezone changes its clock, 104and even the timezone's notional base offset from <abbr>UTC</abbr>, 105are variable. 106It does not always make sense to talk about a timezone's 107"base offset", which is not necessarily a single number. 108</p> 109 110</section> 111 112<section> 113 <h2 id="naming">Timezone identifiers</h2> 114<p> 115Each timezone has a name that uniquely identifies the timezone. 116Inexperienced users are not expected to select these names unaided. 117Distributors should provide documentation and/or a simple selection 118interface that explains each name via a map or via descriptive text like 119"Czech Republic" instead of the timezone name "<code>Europe/Prague</code>". 120If geolocation information is available, a selection interface can 121locate the user on a timezone map or prioritize names that are 122geographically close. For an example selection interface, see the 123<code>tzselect</code> program in the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code. 124The <a href="https://cldr.unicode.org">Unicode Common Locale Data 125Repository</a> contains data that may be useful for other selection 126interfaces; it maps timezone names like <code>Europe/Prague</code> to 127locale-dependent strings like "Prague", "Praha", "Прага", and "布拉格". 128</p> 129 130<p> 131The naming conventions attempt to strike a balance 132among the following goals: 133</p> 134 135<ul> 136 <li> 137 Uniquely identify every timezone where clocks have agreed since 1970. 138 This is essential for the intended use: static clocks keeping local 139 civil time. 140 </li> 141 <li> 142 Indicate to experts where the timezone's clocks typically are. 143 </li> 144 <li> 145 Be robust in the presence of political changes. 146 For example, names are typically not tied to countries, to avoid 147 incompatibilities when countries change their name (e.g., 148 Swaziland→Eswatini) or when locations change countries (e.g., Hong 149 Kong from UK colony to China). 150 There is no requirement that every country or national 151 capital must have a timezone name. 152 </li> 153 <li> 154 Be portable to a wide variety of implementations. 155 </li> 156 <li> 157 Use a consistent naming conventions over the entire world. 158 </li> 159</ul> 160 161<p> 162Names normally have the form 163<var>AREA</var><code>/</code><var>LOCATION</var>, where 164<var>AREA</var> is a continent or ocean, and 165<var>LOCATION</var> is a specific location within the area. 166North and South America share the same area, '<code>America</code>'. 167Typical names are '<code>Africa/Cairo</code>', 168'<code>America/New_York</code>', and '<code>Pacific/Honolulu</code>'. 169Some names are further qualified to help avoid confusion; for example, 170'<code>America/Indiana/Petersburg</code>' distinguishes Petersburg, 171Indiana from other Petersburgs in America. 172</p> 173 174<p> 175Here are the general guidelines used for 176choosing timezone names, 177in decreasing order of importance: 178</p> 179 180<ul> 181 <li> 182 Use only valid POSIX file name components (i.e., the parts of 183 names other than '<code>/</code>'). 184 Do not use the file name components '<code>.</code>' and 185 '<code>..</code>'. 186 Within a file name component, use only <a 187 href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ASCII">ASCII</a> letters, 188 '<code>.</code>', '<code>-</code>' and '<code>_</code>'. 189 Do not use digits, as that might create an ambiguity with <a 190 href="https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/basedefs/V1_chap08.html#tag_08_03">POSIX.1-2017 191 <code>TZ</code> strings</a>. 192 A file name component must not exceed 14 characters or start with 193 '<code>-</code>'. 194 E.g., prefer <code>America/Noronha</code> to 195 <code>America/Fernando_de_Noronha</code>. 196 Exceptions: see the discussion of legacy names below. 197 </li> 198 <li> 199 A name must not be empty, or contain '<code>//</code>', or 200 start or end with '<code>/</code>'. 201 </li> 202 <li> 203 Do not use names that differ only in case. 204 Although the reference implementation is case-sensitive, some 205 other implementations are not, and they would mishandle names 206 differing only in case. 207 </li> 208 <li> 209 If one name <var>A</var> is an initial prefix of another 210 name <var>AB</var> (ignoring case), then <var>B</var> must not 211 start with '<code>/</code>', as a regular file cannot have the 212 same name as a directory in POSIX. 213 For example, <code>America/New_York</code> precludes 214 <code>America/New_York/Bronx</code>. 215 </li> 216 <li> 217 Uninhabited regions like the North Pole and Bouvet Island 218 do not need locations, since local time is not defined there. 219 </li> 220 <li> 221 If all the clocks in a timezone have agreed since 1970, 222 do not bother to include more than one timezone 223 even if some of the clocks disagreed before 1970. 224 Otherwise these tables would become annoyingly large. 225 </li> 226 <li> 227 If boundaries between regions are fluid, such as during a war or 228 insurrection, do not bother to create a new timezone merely 229 because of yet another boundary change. This helps prevent table 230 bloat and simplifies maintenance. 231 </li> 232 <li> 233 If a name is ambiguous, use a less ambiguous alternative; 234 e.g., many cities are named San José and Georgetown, so 235 prefer <code>America/Costa_Rica</code> to 236 <code>America/San_Jose</code> and <code>America/Guyana</code> 237 to <code>America/Georgetown</code>. 238 </li> 239 <li> 240 Keep locations compact. 241 Use cities or small islands, not countries or regions, so that any 242 future changes do not split individual locations into different 243 timezones. 244 E.g., prefer <code>Europe/Paris</code> to <code>Europe/France</code>, 245 since 246 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_in_France#History">France 247 has had multiple time zones</a>. 248 </li> 249 <li> 250 Use mainstream English spelling, e.g., prefer 251 <code>Europe/Rome</code> to <code>Europa/Roma</code>, and 252 prefer <code>Europe/Athens</code> to the Greek 253 <code>Ευρώπη/Αθήνα</code> or the Romanized 254 <code>Evrópi/Athína</code>. 255 The POSIX file name restrictions encourage this guideline. 256 </li> 257 <li> 258 Use the most populous among locations in a region, 259 e.g., prefer <code>Asia/Shanghai</code> to 260 <code>Asia/Beijing</code>. 261 Among locations with similar populations, pick the best-known 262 location, e.g., prefer <code>Europe/Rome</code> to 263 <code>Europe/Milan</code>. 264 </li> 265 <li> 266 Use the singular form, e.g., prefer <code>Atlantic/Canary</code> to 267 <code>Atlantic/Canaries</code>. 268 </li> 269 <li> 270 Omit common suffixes like '<code>_Islands</code>' and 271 '<code>_City</code>', unless that would lead to ambiguity. 272 E.g., prefer <code>America/Cayman</code> to 273 <code>America/Cayman_Islands</code> and 274 <code>America/Guatemala</code> to 275 <code>America/Guatemala_City</code>, but prefer 276 <code>America/Mexico_City</code> to 277 <code>America/Mexico</code> 278 because <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_in_Mexico">the 279 country of Mexico has several time zones</a>. 280 </li> 281 <li> 282 Use '<code>_</code>' to represent a space. 283 </li> 284 <li> 285 Omit '<code>.</code>' from abbreviations in names. 286 E.g., prefer <code>Atlantic/St_Helena</code> to 287 <code>Atlantic/St._Helena</code>. 288 </li> 289 <li> 290 Do not change established names if they only marginally violate 291 the above guidelines. 292 For example, do not change the existing name <code>Europe/Rome</code> to 293 <code>Europe/Milan</code> merely because Milan's population has grown 294 to be somewhat greater than Rome's. 295 </li> 296 <li> 297 If a name is changed, put its old spelling in the 298 '<code>backward</code>' file as a link to the new spelling. 299 This means old spellings will continue to work. 300 Ordinarily a name change should occur only in the rare case when 301 a location's consensus English-language spelling changes; for example, 302 in 2008 <code>Asia/Calcutta</code> was renamed to <code>Asia/Kolkata</code> 303 due to long-time widespread use of the new city name instead of the old. 304 </li> 305</ul> 306 307<p> 308Guidelines have evolved with time, and names following old versions of 309these guidelines might not follow the current version. When guidelines 310have changed, old names continue to be supported. Guideline changes 311have included the following: 312</p> 313 314<ul> 315<li> 316Older versions of this package used a different naming scheme. 317See the file '<code>backward</code>' for most of these older names 318(e.g., '<code>US/Eastern</code>' instead of '<code>America/New_York</code>'). 319The other old-fashioned names still supported are 320'<code>WET</code>', '<code>CET</code>', '<code>MET</code>', and 321'<code>EET</code>' (see the file '<code>europe</code>'). 322</li> 323 324<li> 325Older versions of this package defined legacy names that are 326incompatible with the first guideline of location names, but which are 327still supported. 328These legacy names are mostly defined in the file 329'<code>etcetera</code>'. 330Also, the file '<code>backward</code>' defines the legacy names 331'<code>Etc/GMT0</code>', '<code>Etc/GMT-0</code>', '<code>Etc/GMT+0</code>', 332'<code>GMT0</code>', '<code>GMT-0</code>' and '<code>GMT+0</code>', 333and the file '<code>northamerica</code>' defines the legacy names 334'<code>EST5EDT</code>', '<code>CST6CDT</code>', 335'<code>MST7MDT</code>', and '<code>PST8PDT</code>'. 336</li> 337 338<li> 339Older versions of these guidelines said that 340there should typically be at least one name for each <a 341href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_3166-1"><abbr 342title="International Organization for Standardization">ISO</abbr> 3433166-1</a> officially assigned two-letter code for an inhabited 344country or territory. 345This old guideline has been dropped, as it was not needed to handle 346timestamps correctly and it increased maintenance burden. 347</li> 348</ul> 349 350<p> 351The file <code>zone1970.tab</code> lists geographical locations used 352to name timezones. 353It is intended to be an exhaustive list of names for geographic 354regions as described above; this is a subset of the timezones in the data. 355Although a <code>zone1970.tab</code> location's 356<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longitude">longitude</a> 357corresponds to 358its <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_mean_time">local mean 359time (<abbr>LMT</abbr>)</a> offset with one hour for every 15° 360east longitude, this relationship is not exact. 361The backward-compatibility file <code>zone.tab</code> is similar 362but conforms to the older-version guidelines related to <abbr>ISO</abbr> 3166-1; 363it lists only one country code per entry and unlike <code>zone1970.tab</code> 364it can list names defined in <code>backward</code>. 365Applications that process only timestamps from now on can instead use the file 366<code>zonenow.tab</code>, which partitions the world more coarsely, 367into regions where clocks agree now and in the predicted future; 368this file is smaller and simpler than <code>zone1970.tab</code> 369and <code>zone.tab</code>. 370</p> 371 372<p> 373The database defines each timezone name to be a zone, or a link to a zone. 374The source file <code>backward</code> defines links for backward 375compatibility; it does not define zones. 376Although <code>backward</code> was originally designed to be optional, 377nowadays distributions typically use it 378and no great weight should be attached to whether a link 379is defined in <code>backward</code> or in some other file. 380The source file <code>etcetera</code> defines names that may be useful 381on platforms that do not support POSIX.1-2017-style <code>TZ</code> strings; 382no other source file other than <code>backward</code> 383contains links to its zones. 384One of <code>etcetera</code>'s names is <code>Etc/UTC</code>, 385used by functions like <code>gmtime</code> to obtain leap 386second information on platforms that support leap seconds. 387Another <code>etcetera</code> name, <code>GMT</code>, 388is used by older code releases. 389</p> 390</section> 391 392<section> 393 <h2 id="abbreviations">Time zone abbreviations</h2> 394<p> 395When this package is installed, it generates time zone abbreviations 396like '<code>EST</code>' to be compatible with human tradition and POSIX. 397Here are the general guidelines used for choosing time zone abbreviations, 398in decreasing order of importance: 399</p> 400 401<ul> 402 <li> 403 Use three to six characters that are ASCII alphanumerics or 404 '<code>+</code>' or '<code>-</code>'. 405 Previous editions of this database also used characters like 406 space and '<code>?</code>', but these characters have a 407 special meaning to the 408 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_shell">UNIX shell</a> 409 and cause commands like 410 '<code><a href="https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html#set">set</a> 411 `<a href="https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/date.html">date</a>`</code>' 412 to have unexpected effects. 413 Previous editions of this guideline required upper-case letters, but the 414 Congressman who introduced 415 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chamorro_Time_Zone">Chamorro 416 Standard Time</a> preferred "ChST", so lower-case letters are now 417 allowed. 418 Also, POSIX from 2001 on relaxed the rule to allow '<code>-</code>', 419 '<code>+</code>', and alphanumeric characters from the portable 420 character set in the current locale. 421 In practice ASCII alphanumerics and '<code>+</code>' and 422 '<code>-</code>' are safe in all locales. 423 424 <p> 425 In other words, in the C locale the POSIX extended regular 426 expression <code>[-+[:alnum:]]{3,6}</code> should match the 427 abbreviation. 428 This guarantees that all abbreviations could have been specified by a 429 POSIX.1-2017 <code>TZ</code> string. 430 </p> 431 </li> 432 <li> 433 Use abbreviations that are in common use among English-speakers, 434 e.g., 'EST' for Eastern Standard Time in North America. 435 We assume that applications translate them to other languages 436 as part of the normal localization process; for example, 437 a French application might translate 'EST' to 'HNE'. 438 439 <p> 440 <small>These abbreviations (for standard/daylight/etc. time) are: 441 ACST/ACDT Australian Central, 442 AST/ADT/APT/AWT/ADDT Atlantic, 443 AEST/AEDT Australian Eastern, 444 AHST/AHDT Alaska-Hawaii, 445 AKST/AKDT Alaska, 446 AWST/AWDT Australian Western, 447 BST/BDT Bering, 448 CAT/CAST Central Africa, 449 CET/CEST/CEMT Central European, 450 ChST Chamorro, 451 CST/CDT/CWT/CPT Central [North America], 452 CST/CDT China, 453 GMT/BST/IST/BDST Greenwich, 454 EAT East Africa, 455 EST/EDT/EWT/EPT Eastern [North America], 456 EET/EEST Eastern European, 457 GST/GDT Guam, 458 HST/HDT/HWT/HPT Hawaii, 459 HKT/HKST/HKWT Hong Kong, 460 IST India, 461 IST/GMT Irish, 462 IST/IDT/IDDT Israel, 463 JST/JDT Japan, 464 KST/KDT Korea, 465 MET/MEST Middle European (a backward-compatibility alias for 466 Central European), 467 MSK/MSD Moscow, 468 MST/MDT/MWT/MPT Mountain, 469 NST/NDT/NWT/NPT/NDDT Newfoundland, 470 NST/NDT/NWT/NPT Nome, 471 NZMT/NZST New Zealand through 1945, 472 NZST/NZDT New Zealand 1946–present, 473 PKT/PKST Pakistan, 474 PST/PDT/PWT/PPT Pacific, 475 PST/PDT Philippine, 476 SAST South Africa, 477 SST Samoa, 478 UTC Universal, 479 WAT/WAST West Africa, 480 WET/WEST/WEMT Western European, 481 WIB Waktu Indonesia Barat, 482 WIT Waktu Indonesia Timur, 483 WITA Waktu Indonesia Tengah, 484 YST/YDT/YWT/YPT/YDDT Yukon</small>. 485 </p> 486 </li> 487 <li> 488 <p> 489 For times taken from a city's longitude, use the 490 traditional <var>x</var>MT notation. 491 The only abbreviation like this in current use is '<abbr>GMT</abbr>'. 492 The others are for timestamps before 1960, 493 except that Monrovia Mean Time persisted until 1972. 494 Typically, numeric abbreviations (e.g., '<code>-</code>004430' for 495 MMT) would cause trouble here, as the numeric strings would exceed 496 the POSIX length limit. 497 </p> 498 499 <p> 500 <small>These abbreviations are: 501 AMT Asunción, Athens; 502 BMT Baghdad, Bangkok, Batavia, Bermuda, Bern, Bogotá, 503 Brussels, Bucharest; 504 CMT Calamarca, Caracas, Chisinau, Colón, Córdoba; 505 DMT Dublin/Dunsink; 506 EMT Easter; 507 FFMT Fort-de-France; 508 FMT Funchal; 509 GMT Greenwich; 510 HMT Havana, Helsinki, Horta, Howrah; 511 IMT Irkutsk, Istanbul; 512 JMT Jerusalem; 513 KMT Kaunas, Kyiv, Kingston; 514 LMT Lima, Lisbon, local; 515 MMT Macassar, Madras, Malé, Managua, Minsk, Monrovia, Montevideo, 516 Moratuwa, Moscow; 517 PLMT Phù Liễn; 518 PMT Paramaribo, Paris, Perm, Pontianak, Prague; 519 PMMT Port Moresby; 520 PPMT Port-au-Prince; 521 QMT Quito; 522 RMT Rangoon, Riga, Rome; 523 SDMT Santo Domingo; 524 SJMT San José; 525 SMT Santiago, Simferopol, Singapore, Stanley; 526 TBMT Tbilisi; 527 TMT Tallinn, Tehran; 528 WMT Warsaw.</small> 529 </p> 530 531 <p> 532 <small>A few abbreviations also follow the pattern that 533 <abbr>GMT</abbr>/<abbr>BST</abbr> established for time in the UK. 534 They are: 535 BMT/BST for Bermuda 1890–1930, 536 CMT/BST for Calamarca Mean Time and Bolivian Summer Time 537 1890–1932, 538 DMT/IST for Dublin/Dunsink Mean Time and Irish Summer Time 539 1880–1916, 540 MMT/MST/MDST for Moscow 1880–1919, and 541 RMT/LST for Riga Mean Time and Latvian Summer time 1880–1926. 542 </small> 543 </p> 544 </li> 545 <li> 546 Use '<abbr>LMT</abbr>' for local mean time of locations before the 547 introduction of standard time; see "<a href="#scope">Scope of the 548 <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a>". 549 </li> 550 <li> 551 If there is no common English abbreviation, use numeric offsets like 552 <code>-</code>05 and <code>+</code>0530 that are generated 553 by <code>zic</code>'s <code>%z</code> notation. 554 </li> 555 <li> 556 Use current abbreviations for older timestamps to avoid confusion. 557 For example, in 1910 a common English abbreviation for time 558 in central Europe was 'MEZ' (short for both "Middle European 559 Zone" and for "Mitteleuropäische Zeit" in German). 560 Nowadays 'CET' ("Central European Time") is more common in 561 English, and the database uses 'CET' even for circa-1910 562 timestamps as this is less confusing for modern users and avoids 563 the need for determining when 'CET' supplanted 'MEZ' in common 564 usage. 565 </li> 566 <li> 567 Use a consistent style in a timezone's history. 568 For example, if a history tends to use numeric 569 abbreviations and a particular entry could go either way, use a 570 numeric abbreviation. 571 </li> 572 <li> 573 Use 574 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Time">Universal Time</a> 575 (<abbr>UT</abbr>) (with time zone abbreviation '<code>-</code>00') for 576 locations while uninhabited. 577 The leading '<code>-</code>' is a flag that the <abbr>UT</abbr> offset is in 578 some sense undefined; this notation is derived 579 from <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3339">Internet 580 <abbr title="Request For Comments">RFC</abbr> 3339</a>. 581 </li> 582</ul> 583 584<p> 585Application writers should note that these abbreviations are ambiguous 586in practice: e.g., 'CST' means one thing in China and something else 587in North America, and 'IST' can refer to time in India, Ireland or 588Israel. 589To avoid ambiguity, use numeric <abbr>UT</abbr> offsets like 590'<code>-</code>0600' instead of time zone abbreviations like 'CST'. 591</p> 592</section> 593 594<section> 595 <h2 id="accuracy">Accuracy of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 596<p> 597The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database is not authoritative, and it 598surely has errors. 599Corrections are welcome and encouraged; see the file <code>CONTRIBUTING</code>. 600Users requiring authoritative data should consult national standards 601bodies and the references cited in the database's comments. 602</p> 603 604<p> 605Errors in the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database arise from many sources: 606</p> 607 608<ul> 609 <li> 610 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database predicts future 611 timestamps, and current predictions 612 will be incorrect after future governments change the rules. 613 For example, if today someone schedules a meeting for 13:00 next 614 October 1, Casablanca time, and tomorrow Morocco changes its 615 daylight saving rules, software can mess up after the rule change 616 if it blithely relies on conversions made before the change. 617 </li> 618 <li> 619 The pre-1970 entries in this database cover only a tiny sliver of how 620 clocks actually behaved; the vast majority of the necessary 621 information was lost or never recorded. 622 Thousands more timezones would be needed if 623 the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database's scope were extended to 624 cover even just the known or guessed history of standard time; for 625 example, the current single entry for France would need to split 626 into dozens of entries, perhaps hundreds. 627 And in most of the world even this approach would be misleading 628 due to widespread disagreement or indifference about what times 629 should be observed. 630 In her 2015 book 631 <cite><a 632 href="https://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog.php?isbn=9780674286146">The 633 Global Transformation of Time, 1870–1950</a></cite>, 634 Vanessa Ogle writes 635 "Outside of Europe and North America there was no system of time 636 zones at all, often not even a stable landscape of mean times, 637 prior to the middle decades of the twentieth century". 638 See: Timothy Shenk, <a 639href="https://www.dissentmagazine.org/blog/booked-a-global-history-of-time-vanessa-ogle">Booked: 640 A Global History of Time</a>. <cite>Dissent</cite> 2015-12-17. 641 </li> 642 <li> 643 Most of the pre-1970 data entries come from unreliable sources, often 644 astrology books that lack citations and whose compilers evidently 645 invented entries when the true facts were unknown, without 646 reporting which entries were known and which were invented. 647 These books often contradict each other or give implausible entries, 648 and on the rare occasions when they are checked they are 649 typically found to be incorrect. 650 </li> 651 <li> 652 For the UK the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database relies on 653 years of first-class work done by 654 Joseph Myers and others; see 655 "<a href="https://www.polyomino.org.uk/british-time/">History of 656 legal time in Britain</a>". 657 Other countries are not done nearly as well. 658 </li> 659 <li> 660 Sometimes, different people in the same city maintain clocks 661 that differ significantly. 662 Historically, railway time was used by railroad companies (which 663 did not always 664 agree with each other), church-clock time was used for birth 665 certificates, etc. 666 More recently, competing political groups might disagree about 667 clock settings. Often this is merely common practice, but 668 sometimes it is set by law. 669 For example, from 1891 to 1911 the <abbr>UT</abbr> offset in France 670 was legally <abbr>UT</abbr> +00:09:21 outside train stations and 671 <abbr>UT</abbr> +00:04:21 inside. Other examples include 672 Chillicothe in 1920, Palm Springs in 1946/7, and Jerusalem and 673 Ürümqi to this day. 674 </li> 675 <li> 676 Although a named location in the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 677 database stands for the containing region, its pre-1970 data 678 entries are often accurate for only a small subset of that region. 679 For example, <code>Europe/London</code> stands for the United 680 Kingdom, but its pre-1847 times are valid only for locations that 681 have London's exact meridian, and its 1847 transition 682 to <abbr>GMT</abbr> is known to be valid only for the L&NW and 683 the Caledonian railways. 684 </li> 685 <li> 686 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database does not record the 687 earliest time for which a timezone's 688 data entries are thereafter valid for every location in the region. 689 For example, <code>Europe/London</code> is valid for all locations 690 in its region after <abbr>GMT</abbr> was made the standard time, 691 but the date of standardization (1880-08-02) is not in the 692 <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database, other than in commentary. 693 For many timezones the earliest time of 694 validity is unknown. 695 </li> 696 <li> 697 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database does not record a 698 region's boundaries, and in many cases the boundaries are not known. 699 For example, the timezone 700 <code>America/Kentucky/Louisville</code> represents a region 701 around the city of Louisville, the boundaries of which are 702 unclear. 703 </li> 704 <li> 705 Changes that are modeled as instantaneous transitions in the 706 <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 707 database were often spread out over hours, days, or even decades. 708 </li> 709 <li> 710 Even if the time is specified by law, locations sometimes 711 deliberately flout the law. 712 </li> 713 <li> 714 Early timekeeping practices, even assuming perfect clocks, were 715 often not specified to the accuracy that the 716 <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database requires. 717 </li> 718 <li> 719 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database cannot represent stopped clocks. 720 However, on 1911-03-11 at 00:00, some public-facing French clocks 721 were changed by stopping them for a few minutes to effect a transition. 722 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database models this via a 723 backward transition; the relevant French legislation does not 724 specify exactly how the transition was to occur. 725 </li> 726 <li> 727 Sometimes historical timekeeping was specified more precisely 728 than what the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code can handle. 729 For example, from 1880 to 1916 clocks in Ireland observed Dublin Mean 730 Time (estimated to be <abbr>UT</abbr> 731 −00:25:21.1); although the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 732 source data can represent the .1 second, TZif files and the code cannot. 733 In practice these old specifications were rarely if ever 734 implemented to subsecond precision. 735 </li> 736 <li> 737 Even when all the timestamp transitions recorded by the 738 <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database are correct, the 739 <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> rules that generate them may not 740 faithfully reflect the historical rules. 741 For example, from 1922 until World War II the UK moved clocks 742 forward the day following the third Saturday in April unless that 743 was Easter, in which case it moved clocks forward the previous 744 Sunday. 745 Because the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database has no 746 way to specify Easter, these exceptional years are entered as 747 separate <code><abbr>tz</abbr> Rule</code> lines, even though the 748 legal rules did not change. 749 When transitions are known but the historical rules behind them are not, 750 the database contains <code>Zone</code> and <code>Rule</code> 751 entries that are intended to represent only the generated 752 transitions, not any underlying historical rules; however, this 753 intent is recorded at best only in commentary. 754 </li> 755 <li> 756 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database models time 757 using the <a 758 href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proleptic_Gregorian_calendar">proleptic 759 Gregorian calendar</a> with days containing 24 equal-length hours 760 numbered 00 through 23, except when clock transitions occur. 761 Pre-standard time is modeled as local mean time. 762 However, historically many people used other calendars and other timescales. 763 For example, the Roman Empire used 764 the <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_calendar">Julian 765 calendar</a>, 766 and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_timekeeping">Roman 767 timekeeping</a> had twelve varying-length daytime hours with a 768 non-hour-based system at night. 769 And even today, some local practices diverge from the Gregorian 770 calendar with 24-hour days. These divergences range from 771 relatively minor, such as Japanese bars giving times like "24:30" for the 772 wee hours of the morning, to more-significant differences such as <a 773 href="https://theworld.org/stories/2015-01-30/if-you-have-meeting-ethiopia-you-better-double-check-time">the 774 east African practice of starting the day at dawn</a>, renumbering 775 the Western 06:00 to be 12:00. These practices are largely outside 776 the scope of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data, which 777 provide only limited support for date and time localization 778 such as that required by POSIX.1-2017. 779 If <abbr>DST</abbr> is not used a different time zone 780 can often do the trick; for example, in Kenya a <code>TZ</code> setting 781 like <code><-03>3</code> or <code>America/Cayenne</code> starts 782 the day six hours later than <code>Africa/Nairobi</code> does. 783 </li> 784 <li> 785 Early clocks were less reliable, and data entries do not represent 786 clock error. 787 </li> 788 <li> 789 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database assumes Universal Time 790 (<abbr>UT</abbr>) as an origin, even though <abbr>UT</abbr> is not 791 standardized for older timestamps. 792 In the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database commentary, 793 <abbr>UT</abbr> denotes a family of time standards that includes 794 Coordinated Universal Time (<abbr>UTC</abbr>) along with other 795 variants such as <abbr>UT1</abbr> and <abbr>GMT</abbr>, 796 with days starting at midnight. 797 Although <abbr>UT</abbr> equals <abbr>UTC</abbr> for modern 798 timestamps, <abbr>UTC</abbr> was not defined until 1960, so 799 commentary uses the more general abbreviation <abbr>UT</abbr> for 800 timestamps that might predate 1960. 801 Since <abbr>UT</abbr>, <abbr>UT1</abbr>, etc. disagree slightly, 802 and since pre-1972 <abbr>UTC</abbr> seconds varied in length, 803 interpretation of older timestamps can be problematic when 804 subsecond accuracy is needed. 805 </li> 806 <li> 807 Civil time was not based on atomic time before 1972, and we do not 808 know the history of 809 <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth's_rotation">earth's 810 rotation</a> accurately enough to map <a 811 href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_System_of_Units"><abbr 812 title="International System of Units">SI</abbr></a> seconds to 813 historical <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_time">solar time</a> 814 to more than about one-hour accuracy. 815 See: Stephenson FR, Morrison LV, Hohenkerk CY. 816 <a href="https://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2016.0404">Measurement of 817 the Earth's rotation: 720 BC to AD 2015</a>. 818 <cite>Proc Royal Soc A</cite>. 2016;472:20160404. 819 Also see: Espenak F. <a 820 href="https://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEhelp/uncertainty2004.html">Uncertainty 821 in Delta T (ΔT)</a>. 822 </li> 823 <li> 824 The relationship between POSIX time (that is, <abbr>UTC</abbr> but 825 ignoring <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_second">leap 826 seconds</a>) and <abbr>UTC</abbr> is not agreed upon. 827 This affects time stamps during the leap second era (1972–2035). 828 Although the POSIX 829 clock officially stops during an inserted leap second, at least one 830 proposed standard has it jumping back a second instead; and in 831 practice POSIX clocks more typically either progress glacially during 832 a leap second, or are slightly slowed while near a leap second. 833 </li> 834 <li> 835 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database does not represent how 836 uncertain its information is. 837 Ideally it would contain information about when data entries are 838 incomplete or dicey. 839 Partial temporal knowledge is a field of active research, though, 840 and it is not clear how to apply it here. 841 </li> 842</ul> 843 844<p> 845In short, many, perhaps most, of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 846database's pre-1970 and future timestamps are either wrong or 847misleading. 848Any attempt to pass the 849<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database off as the definition of time 850should be unacceptable to anybody who cares about the facts. 851In particular, the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database's 852<abbr>LMT</abbr> offsets should not be considered meaningful, and 853should not prompt creation of timezones 854merely because two locations 855differ in <abbr>LMT</abbr> or transitioned to standard time at 856different dates. 857</p> 858</section> 859 860<section> 861 <h2 id="functions">Time and date functions</h2> 862<p> 863The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code contains time and date functions 864that are upwards compatible with those of POSIX. 865Code compatible with this package is already 866<a href="tz-link.html#tzdb">part of many platforms</a>, where the 867primary use of this package is to update obsolete time-related files. 868To do this, you may need to compile the time zone compiler 869'<code>zic</code>' supplied with this package instead of using the 870system '<code>zic</code>', since the format of <code>zic</code>'s 871input is occasionally extended, and a platform may still be shipping 872an older <code>zic</code>. 873</p> 874 875<h3 id="POSIX">POSIX.1-2017 properties and limitations</h3> 876<ul> 877 <li> 878 <p> 879 In POSIX.1-2017, time display in a process is controlled by the 880 environment variable <code>TZ</code>. 881 Unfortunately, the POSIX.1-2017 882 <code>TZ</code> string takes a form that is hard to describe and 883 is error-prone in practice. 884 Also, POSIX.1-2017 <code>TZ</code> strings cannot deal with daylight 885 saving time rules not based on the Gregorian calendar (as in 886 Morocco), or with situations where more than two time zone 887 abbreviations or <abbr>UT</abbr> offsets are used in an area. 888 </p> 889 890 <p> 891 The POSIX.1-2017 <code>TZ</code> string takes the following form: 892 </p> 893 894 <p> 895 <var>stdoffset</var>[<var>dst</var>[<var>offset</var>][<code>,</code><var>date</var>[<code>/</code><var>time</var>]<code>,</code><var>date</var>[<code>/</code><var>time</var>]]] 896 </p> 897 898 <p> 899 where: 900 </p> 901 902 <dl> 903 <dt><var>std</var> and <var>dst</var></dt><dd> 904 are 3 or more characters specifying the standard 905 and daylight saving time (<abbr>DST</abbr>) zone abbreviations. 906 Starting with POSIX.1-2001, <var>std</var> and <var>dst</var> 907 may also be in a quoted form like '<code><+09></code>'; 908 this allows "<code>+</code>" and "<code>-</code>" in the names. 909 </dd> 910 <dt><var>offset</var></dt><dd> 911 is of the form 912 '<code>[±]<var>hh</var>:[<var>mm</var>[:<var>ss</var>]]</code>' 913 and specifies the offset west of <abbr>UT</abbr>. 914 '<var>hh</var>' may be a single digit; 915 0≤<var>hh</var>≤24. 916 The default <abbr>DST</abbr> offset is one hour ahead of 917 standard time. 918 </dd> 919 <dt><var>date</var>[<code>/</code><var>time</var>]<code>,</code><var>date</var>[<code>/</code><var>time</var>]</dt><dd> 920 specifies the beginning and end of <abbr>DST</abbr>. 921 If this is absent, the system supplies its own ruleset 922 for <abbr>DST</abbr>, typically current <abbr>US</abbr> 923 <abbr>DST</abbr> rules. 924 </dd> 925 <dt><var>time</var></dt><dd> 926 takes the form 927 '<var>hh</var><code>:</code>[<var>mm</var>[<code>:</code><var>ss</var>]]' 928 and defaults to 02:00. 929 This is the same format as the offset, except that a 930 leading '<code>+</code>' or '<code>-</code>' is not allowed. 931 </dd> 932 <dt><var>date</var></dt><dd> 933 takes one of the following forms: 934 <dl> 935 <dt>J<var>n</var> (1≤<var>n</var>≤365)</dt><dd> 936 origin-1 day number not counting February 29 937 </dd> 938 <dt><var>n</var> (0≤<var>n</var>≤365)</dt><dd> 939 origin-0 day number counting February 29 if present 940 </dd> 941 <dt><code>M</code><var>m</var><code>.</code><var>n</var><code>.</code><var>d</var> 942 (0[Sunday]≤<var>d</var>≤6[Saturday], 1≤<var>n</var>≤5, 943 1≤<var>m</var>≤12)</dt><dd> 944 for the <var>d</var>th day of week <var>n</var> of 945 month <var>m</var> of the year, where week 1 is the first 946 week in which day <var>d</var> appears, and 947 '<code>5</code>' stands for the last week in which 948 day <var>d</var> appears (which may be either the 4th or 949 5th week). 950 Typically, this is the only useful form; the <var>n</var> 951 and <code>J</code><var>n</var> forms are rarely used. 952 </dd> 953 </dl> 954 </dd> 955 </dl> 956 957 <p> 958 Here is an example POSIX.1-2017 <code>TZ</code> string for New 959 Zealand after 2007. 960 It says that standard time (<abbr>NZST</abbr>) is 12 hours ahead 961 of <abbr>UT</abbr>, and that daylight saving time 962 (<abbr>NZDT</abbr>) is observed from September's last Sunday at 963 02:00 until April's first Sunday at 03:00: 964 </p> 965 966 <pre><code>TZ='NZST-12NZDT,M9.5.0,M4.1.0/3'</code></pre> 967 968 <p> 969 This POSIX.1-2017 <code>TZ</code> string is hard to remember, and 970 mishandles some timestamps before 2008. 971 With this package you can use this instead: 972 </p> 973 974 <pre><code>TZ='Pacific/Auckland'</code></pre> 975 </li> 976 <li> 977 POSIX does not define the <abbr>DST</abbr> transitions 978 for <code>TZ</code> values like 979 "<code>EST5EDT</code>". 980 Traditionally the current <abbr>US</abbr> <abbr>DST</abbr> rules 981 were used to interpret such values, but this meant that the 982 <abbr>US</abbr> <abbr>DST</abbr> rules were compiled into each 983 time conversion package, and when 984 <abbr>US</abbr> time conversion rules changed (as in the United 985 States in 1987 and again in 2007), all packages that 986 interpreted <code>TZ</code> values had to be updated 987 to ensure proper results. 988 </li> 989 <li> 990 The <code>TZ</code> environment variable is process-global, which 991 makes it hard to write efficient, thread-safe applications that 992 need access to multiple timezones. 993 </li> 994 <li> 995 In POSIX, there is no tamper-proof way for a process to learn the 996 system's best idea of local (wall clock) time. 997 This is important for applications that an administrator wants 998 used only at certain times – without regard to whether the 999 user has fiddled the 1000 <code>TZ</code> environment variable. 1001 While an administrator can "do everything in <abbr>UT</abbr>" to 1002 get around the problem, doing so is inconvenient and precludes 1003 handling daylight saving time shifts – as might be required to 1004 limit phone calls to off-peak hours. 1005 </li> 1006 <li> 1007 POSIX.1-2017 provides no convenient and efficient way to determine 1008 the <abbr>UT</abbr> offset and time zone abbreviation of arbitrary 1009 timestamps, particularly for timezones 1010 that do not fit into the POSIX model. 1011 </li> 1012 <li> 1013 POSIX requires that <code>time_t</code> clock counts exclude leap 1014 seconds. 1015 </li> 1016 <li> 1017 The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code attempts to support all the 1018 <code>time_t</code> implementations allowed by POSIX. 1019 The <code>time_t</code> type represents a nonnegative count of seconds 1020 since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 <abbr>UTC</abbr>, ignoring leap seconds. 1021 In practice, <code>time_t</code> is usually a signed 64- or 32-bit 1022 integer; 32-bit signed <code>time_t</code> values stop working after 1023 2038-01-19 03:14:07 <abbr>UTC</abbr>, so new implementations these 1024 days typically use a signed 64-bit integer. 1025 Unsigned 32-bit integers are used on one or two platforms, and 36-bit 1026 and 40-bit integers are also used occasionally. 1027 Although earlier POSIX versions allowed <code>time_t</code> to be a 1028 floating-point type, this was not supported by any practical system, 1029 and POSIX.1-2013 and the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code both 1030 require <code>time_t</code> to be an integer type. 1031 </li> 1032</ul> 1033 1034<h3 id="POSIX-extensions">Extensions to POSIX.1-2017 in the 1035<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code</h3> 1036<ul> 1037 <li> 1038 <p> 1039 The <code>TZ</code> environment variable is used in generating 1040 the name of a file from which time-related information is read 1041 (or is interpreted à la POSIX.1-2017); <code>TZ</code> is no longer 1042 constrained to be a string containing abbreviations 1043 and numeric data as described <a href="#POSIX">above</a>. 1044 The file's format is <dfn><abbr>TZif</abbr></dfn>, 1045 a timezone information format that contains binary data; see 1046 <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/8536">Internet 1047 <abbr>RFC</abbr> 8536</a>. 1048 The daylight saving time rules to be used for a 1049 particular timezone are encoded in the 1050 <abbr>TZif</abbr> file; the format of the file allows <abbr>US</abbr>, 1051 Australian, and other rules to be encoded, and 1052 allows for situations where more than two time zone 1053 abbreviations are used. 1054 </p> 1055 <p> 1056 It was recognized that allowing the <code>TZ</code> environment 1057 variable to take on values such as '<code>America/New_York</code>' 1058 might cause "old" programs (that expect <code>TZ</code> to have a 1059 certain form) to operate incorrectly; consideration was given to using 1060 some other environment variable (for example, <code>TIMEZONE</code>) 1061 to hold the string used to generate the <abbr>TZif</abbr> file's name. 1062 In the end, however, it was decided to continue using 1063 <code>TZ</code>: it is widely used for time zone purposes; 1064 separately maintaining both <code>TZ</code> 1065 and <code>TIMEZONE</code> seemed a nuisance; and systems where 1066 "new" forms of <code>TZ</code> might cause problems can simply 1067 use legacy <code>TZ</code> values such as "<code>EST5EDT</code>" which 1068 can be used by "new" programs as well as by "old" programs that 1069 assume pre-POSIX <code>TZ</code> values. 1070 </p> 1071 </li> 1072 <li> 1073 The code supports platforms with a <abbr>UT</abbr> offset member 1074 in <code>struct tm</code>, e.g., <code>tm_gmtoff</code>, 1075 or with a time zone abbreviation member in 1076 <code>struct tm</code>, e.g., <code>tm_zone</code>. As noted 1077 in <a href="https://austingroupbugs.net/view.php?id=1533">Austin 1078 Group defect 1533</a>, a future version of POSIX is planned to 1079 require <code>tm_gmtoff</code> and <code>tm_zone</code>. 1080 </li> 1081 <li> 1082 Functions <code>tzalloc</code>, <code>tzfree</code>, 1083 <code>localtime_rz</code>, and <code>mktime_z</code> for 1084 more-efficient thread-safe applications that need to use multiple 1085 timezones. 1086 The <code>tzalloc</code> and <code>tzfree</code> functions 1087 allocate and free objects of type <code>timezone_t</code>, 1088 and <code>localtime_rz</code> and <code>mktime_z</code> are 1089 like <code>localtime_r</code> and <code>mktime</code> with an 1090 extra <code>timezone_t</code> argument. 1091 The functions were inspired by <a href="https://netbsd.org/">NetBSD</a>. 1092 </li> 1093 <li> 1094 Negative <code>time_t</code> values are supported, on systems 1095 where <code>time_t</code> is signed. 1096 </li> 1097 <li> 1098 These functions can account for leap seconds; 1099 see <a href="#leapsec">Leap seconds</a> below. 1100 </li> 1101</ul> 1102 1103<h3 id="vestigial">POSIX features no longer needed</h3> 1104<p> 1105POSIX and <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_C"><abbr>ISO</abbr> C</a> 1106define some <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/API"><abbr 1107title="application programming interface">API</abbr>s</a> that are vestigial: 1108they are not needed, and are relics of a too-simple model that does 1109not suffice to handle many real-world timestamps. 1110Although the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code supports these 1111vestigial <abbr>API</abbr>s for backwards compatibility, they should 1112be avoided in portable applications. 1113The vestigial <abbr>API</abbr>s are: 1114</p> 1115<ul> 1116 <li> 1117 The POSIX <code>tzname</code> variable does not suffice and is no 1118 longer needed. 1119 To get a timestamp's time zone abbreviation, consult 1120 the <code>tm_zone</code> member if available; otherwise, 1121 use <code>strftime</code>'s <code>"%Z"</code> conversion 1122 specification. 1123 </li> 1124 <li> 1125 The POSIX <code>daylight</code> and <code>timezone</code> 1126 variables do not suffice and are no longer needed. 1127 To get a timestamp's <abbr>UT</abbr> offset, consult 1128 the <code>tm_gmtoff</code> member if available; otherwise, 1129 subtract values returned by <code>localtime</code> 1130 and <code>gmtime</code> using the rules of the Gregorian calendar, 1131 or use <code>strftime</code>'s <code>"%z"</code> conversion 1132 specification if a string like <code>"+0900"</code> suffices. 1133 </li> 1134 <li> 1135 The <code>tm_isdst</code> member is almost never needed and most of 1136 its uses should be discouraged in favor of the abovementioned 1137 <abbr>API</abbr>s. 1138 Although it can still be used in arguments to 1139 <code>mktime</code> to disambiguate timestamps near 1140 a <abbr>DST</abbr> transition when the clock jumps back on 1141 platforms lacking <code>tm_gmtoff</code>, this 1142 disambiguation does not work when standard time itself jumps back, 1143 which can occur when a location changes to a time zone with a 1144 lesser <abbr>UT</abbr> offset. 1145 </li> 1146</ul> 1147 1148<h3 id="other-portability">Other portability notes</h3> 1149<ul> 1150 <li> 1151 The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Version_7_Unix">7th Edition 1152 UNIX</a> <code>timezone</code> function is not present in this 1153 package; it is impossible to reliably map <code>timezone</code>'s 1154 arguments (a "minutes west of <abbr>GMT</abbr>" value and a 1155 "daylight saving time in effect" flag) to a time zone 1156 abbreviation, and we refuse to guess. 1157 Programs that in the past used the <code>timezone</code> function 1158 may now examine <code>localtime(&clock)->tm_zone</code> 1159 (if <code>TM_ZONE</code> is defined) or 1160 <code>tzname[localtime(&clock)->tm_isdst]</code> 1161 (if <code>HAVE_TZNAME</code> is nonzero) to learn the correct time 1162 zone abbreviation to use. 1163 </li> 1164 <li> 1165 The <a 1166 href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Berkeley_Software_Distribution#4.2BSD"><abbr>4.2BSD</abbr></a> 1167 <code>gettimeofday</code> function is not 1168 used in this package. 1169 This formerly let users obtain the current <abbr>UTC</abbr> offset 1170 and <abbr>DST</abbr> flag, but this functionality was removed in 1171 later versions of <abbr>BSD</abbr>. 1172 </li> 1173 <li> 1174 In <abbr>SVR2</abbr>, time conversion fails for near-minimum or 1175 near-maximum <code>time_t</code> values when doing conversions 1176 for places that do not use <abbr>UT</abbr>. 1177 This package takes care to do these conversions correctly. 1178 A comment in the source code tells how to get compatibly wrong 1179 results. 1180 </li> 1181 <li> 1182 The functions that are conditionally compiled 1183 if <code>STD_INSPIRED</code> is nonzero should, at this point, be 1184 looked on primarily as food for thought. 1185 They are not in any sense "standard compatible" – some are 1186 not, in fact, specified in <em>any</em> standard. 1187 They do, however, represent responses of various authors to 1188 standardization proposals. 1189 </li> 1190 <li> 1191 Other time conversion proposals, in particular those supported by the 1192 <a href="https://howardhinnant.github.io/date/tz.html">Time Zone 1193 Database Parser</a>, offer a wider selection of functions 1194 that provide capabilities beyond those provided here. 1195 The absence of such functions from this package is not meant to 1196 discourage the development, standardization, or use of such 1197 functions. 1198 Rather, their absence reflects the decision to make this package 1199 contain valid extensions to POSIX, to ensure its broad 1200 acceptability. 1201 If more powerful time conversion functions can be standardized, so 1202 much the better. 1203 </li> 1204</ul> 1205</section> 1206 1207<section> 1208 <h2 id="stability">Interface stability</h2> 1209<p> 1210The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data supply the following interfaces: 1211</p> 1212 1213<ul> 1214 <li> 1215 A set of timezone names as per 1216 "<a href="#naming">Timezone identifiers</a>" above. 1217 </li> 1218 <li> 1219 Library functions described in "<a href="#functions">Time and date 1220 functions</a>" above. 1221 </li> 1222 <li> 1223 The programs <code>tzselect</code>, <code>zdump</code>, 1224 and <code>zic</code>, documented in their man pages. 1225 </li> 1226 <li> 1227 The format of <code>zic</code> input files, documented in 1228 the <code>zic</code> man page. 1229 </li> 1230 <li> 1231 The format of <code>zic</code> output files, documented in 1232 the <code>tzfile</code> man page. 1233 </li> 1234 <li> 1235 The format of zone table files, documented in <code>zone1970.tab</code>. 1236 </li> 1237 <li> 1238 The format of the country code file, documented in <code>iso3166.tab</code>. 1239 </li> 1240 <li> 1241 The version number of the code and data, as the first line of 1242 the text file '<code>version</code>' in each release. 1243 </li> 1244</ul> 1245 1246<p> 1247Interface changes in a release attempt to preserve compatibility with 1248recent releases. 1249For example, <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data files typically do not 1250rely on recently added <code>zic</code> features, so that users can 1251run older <code>zic</code> versions to process newer data files. 1252<a href="tz-link.html#download">Downloading 1253the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a> describes how releases 1254are tagged and distributed. 1255</p> 1256 1257<p> 1258Interfaces not listed above are less stable. 1259For example, users should not rely on particular <abbr>UT</abbr> 1260offsets or abbreviations for timestamps, as data entries are often 1261based on guesswork and these guesses may be corrected or improved. 1262</p> 1263 1264<p> 1265Timezone boundaries are not part of the stable interface. 1266For example, even though the <samp>Asia/Bangkok</samp> timezone 1267currently includes Chang Mai, Hanoi, and Phnom Penh, this is not part 1268of the stable interface and the timezone can split at any time. 1269If a calendar application records a future event in some location other 1270than Bangkok by putting "<samp>Asia/Bangkok</samp>" in the event's record, 1271the application should be robust in the presence of timezone splits 1272between now and the future time. 1273</p> 1274</section> 1275 1276<section> 1277 <h2 id="leapsec">Leap seconds</h2> 1278<p> 1279Leap seconds were introduced in 1972 to accommodate the 1280difference between atomic time and the less regular rotation of the earth. 1281Unfortunately they caused so many problems with civil 1282timekeeping that they 1283are <a href="https://www.bipm.org/en/cgpm-2022/resolution-4">planned 1284to be discontinued by 2035</a>, with some as-yet-undetermined 1285mechanism replacing them, perhaps after the year 2135. 1286Despite their impending obsolescence, a record of leap seconds is still 1287needed to resolve timestamps from 1972 through 2035. 1288</p> 1289 1290<p> 1291The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data can account for leap seconds, 1292thanks to code contributed by Bradley White. 1293However, the leap second support of this package is rarely used directly 1294because POSIX requires leap seconds to be excluded and many 1295software packages would mishandle leap seconds if they were present. 1296Instead, leap seconds are more commonly handled by occasionally adjusting 1297the operating system kernel clock as described in 1298<a href="tz-link.html#precision">Precision timekeeping</a>, 1299and this package by default installs a <samp>leapseconds</samp> file 1300commonly used by 1301<a href="https://www.ntp.org"><abbr title="Network Time Protocol">NTP</abbr></a> 1302software that adjusts the kernel clock. 1303However, kernel-clock twiddling approximates UTC only roughly, 1304and systems needing more precise UTC can use this package's leap 1305second support directly. 1306</p> 1307 1308<p> 1309The directly supported mechanism assumes that <code>time_t</code> 1310counts of seconds since the POSIX epoch normally include leap seconds, 1311as opposed to POSIX <code>time_t</code> counts which exclude leap seconds. 1312This modified timescale is converted to <abbr>UTC</abbr> 1313at the same point that time zone and <abbr>DST</abbr> 1314adjustments are applied – 1315namely, at calls to <code>localtime</code> and analogous functions – 1316and the process is driven by leap second information 1317stored in alternate versions of the <abbr>TZif</abbr> files. 1318Because a leap second adjustment may be needed even 1319if no time zone correction is desired, 1320calls to <code>gmtime</code>-like functions 1321also need to consult a <abbr>TZif</abbr> file, 1322conventionally named <samp><abbr>Etc/UTC</abbr></samp> 1323(<samp><abbr>GMT</abbr></samp> in previous versions), 1324to see whether leap second corrections are needed. 1325To convert an application's <code>time_t</code> timestamps to or from 1326POSIX <code>time_t</code> timestamps (for use when, say, 1327embedding or interpreting timestamps in portable 1328<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tar_(computing)"><code>tar</code></a> 1329files), 1330the application can call the utility functions 1331<code>time2posix</code> and <code>posix2time</code> 1332included with this package. 1333</p> 1334 1335<p> 1336If the POSIX-compatible <abbr>TZif</abbr> file set is installed 1337in a directory whose basename is <samp>zoneinfo</samp>, the 1338leap-second-aware file set is by default installed in a separate 1339directory <samp>zoneinfo-leaps</samp>. 1340Although each process can have its own time zone by setting 1341its <code>TZ</code> environment variable, there is no support for some 1342processes being leap-second aware while other processes are 1343POSIX-compatible; the leap-second choice is system-wide. 1344So if you configure your kernel to count leap seconds, you should also 1345discard <samp>zoneinfo</samp> and rename <samp>zoneinfo-leaps</samp> 1346to <samp>zoneinfo</samp>. 1347Alternatively, you can install just one set of <abbr>TZif</abbr> files 1348in the first place; see the <code>REDO</code> variable in this package's 1349<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Makefile">makefile</a>. 1350</p> 1351</section> 1352 1353<section> 1354 <h2 id="calendar">Calendrical issues</h2> 1355<p> 1356Calendrical issues are a bit out of scope for a time zone database, 1357but they indicate the sort of problems that we would run into if we 1358extended the time zone database further into the past. 1359An excellent resource in this area is Edward M. Reingold 1360and Nachum Dershowitz, <cite><a 1361href="https://www.cambridge.org/fr/academic/subjects/computer-science/computing-general-interest/calendrical-calculations-ultimate-edition-4th-edition">Calendrical 1362Calculations: The Ultimate Edition</a></cite>, Cambridge University Press (2018). 1363Other information and sources are given in the file '<code>calendars</code>' 1364in the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> distribution. 1365They sometimes disagree. 1366</p> 1367</section> 1368 1369<section> 1370 <h2 id="planets">Time and time zones off Earth</h2> 1371<p> 1372The European Space Agency is <a 1373href='https://www.esa.int/Applications/Navigation/Telling_time_on_the_Moon'>considering</a> 1374the establishment of a reference timescale for the Moon, which has 1375days roughly equivalent to 29.5 Earth days, and where relativistic 1376effects cause clocks to tick slightly faster than on Earth. 1377</p> 1378 1379<p> 1380Some people's work schedules have used 1381<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timekeeping_on_Mars">Mars time</a>. 1382Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) coordinators kept Mars time on 1383and off during the 1384<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Pathfinder">Mars 1385Pathfinder</a> mission (1997). 1386Some of their family members also adapted to Mars time. 1387Dozens of special Mars watches were built for JPL workers who kept 1388Mars time during the 1389<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mars_Exploration_Rover">Mars 1390Exploration Rovers (MER)</a> mission (2004–2018). 1391These timepieces looked like normal Seikos and Citizens but were adjusted 1392to use Mars seconds rather than terrestrial seconds, although 1393unfortunately the adjusted watches were unreliable and appear to have 1394had only limited use. 1395</p> 1396 1397<p> 1398A Mars solar day is called a "sol" and has a mean period equal to 1399about 24 hours 39 minutes 35.244 seconds in terrestrial time. 1400It is divided into a conventional 24-hour clock, so each Mars second 1401equals about 1.02749125 terrestrial seconds. 1402(One MER worker noted, "If I am working Mars hours, and Mars hours are 14032.5% more than Earth hours, shouldn't I get an extra 2.5% pay raise?") 1404</p> 1405 1406<p> 1407The <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_meridian">prime 1408meridian</a> of Mars goes through the center of the crater 1409<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airy-0">Airy-0</a>, named in 1410honor of the British astronomer who built the Greenwich telescope that 1411defines Earth's prime meridian. 1412Mean solar time on the Mars prime meridian is 1413called Mars Coordinated Time (<abbr>MTC</abbr>). 1414</p> 1415 1416<p> 1417Each landed mission on Mars has adopted a different reference for 1418solar timekeeping, so there is no real standard for Mars time zones. 1419For example, the MER mission defined two time zones "Local 1420Solar Time A" and "Local Solar Time B" for its two missions, each zone 1421designed so that its time equals local true solar time at 1422approximately the middle of the nominal mission. 1423The A and B zones differ enough so that an MER worker assigned to 1424the A zone might suffer "Mars lag" when switching to work in the B zone. 1425Such a "time zone" is not particularly suited for any application 1426other than the mission itself. 1427</p> 1428 1429<p> 1430Many calendars have been proposed for Mars, but none have achieved 1431wide acceptance. 1432Astronomers often use Mars Sol Date (<abbr>MSD</abbr>) which is a 1433sequential count of Mars solar days elapsed since about 1873-12-29 143412:00 <abbr>GMT</abbr>. 1435</p> 1436 1437<p> 1438In our solar system, Mars is the planet with time and calendar most 1439like Earth's. 1440On other planets, Sun-based time and calendars would work quite 1441differently. 1442For example, although Mercury's 1443<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotation_period">sidereal 1444rotation period</a> is 58.646 Earth days, Mercury revolves around the 1445Sun so rapidly that an observer on Mercury's equator would see a 1446sunrise only every 175.97 Earth days, i.e., a Mercury year is 0.5 of a 1447Mercury day. 1448Venus is more complicated, partly because its rotation is slightly 1449<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retrograde_motion">retrograde</a>: 1450its year is 1.92 of its days. 1451Gas giants like Jupiter are trickier still, as their polar and 1452equatorial regions rotate at different rates, so that the length of a 1453day depends on latitude. 1454This effect is most pronounced on Neptune, where the day is about 12 1455hours at the poles and 18 hours at the equator. 1456</p> 1457 1458<p> 1459Although the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database does not support 1460time on other planets, it is documented here in the hopes that support 1461will be added eventually. 1462</p> 1463 1464<p> 1465Sources for time on other planets: 1466</p> 1467 1468<ul> 1469 <li> 1470 Michael Allison and Robert Schmunk, 1471 "<a href="https://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/mars24/help/notes.html">Technical 1472 Notes on Mars Solar Time as Adopted by the Mars24 Sunclock</a>" 1473 (2020-03-08). 1474 </li> 1475 <li> 1476 Zara Mirmalek, 1477 <em><a href="https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/making-time-mars">Making 1478 Time on Mars</a></em>, MIT Press (March 2020), ISBN 978-0262043854. 1479 </li> 1480 <li> 1481 Jia-Rui Chong, 1482 "<a href="https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-jan-14-sci-marstime14-story.html">Workdays 1483 Fit for a Martian</a>", <cite>Los Angeles Times</cite> 1484 (2004-01-14), pp A1, A20–A21. 1485 </li> 1486 <li> 1487 Tom Chmielewski, 1488 "<a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2015/02/jet-lag-is-worse-on-mars/386033/">Jet 1489 Lag Is Worse on Mars</a>", <cite>The Atlantic</cite> (2015-02-26) 1490 </li> 1491 <li> 1492 Matt Williams, 1493 "<a href="https://www.universetoday.com/37481/days-of-the-planets/">How 1494 long is a day on the other planets of the solar system?</a>" 1495 (2016-01-20). 1496 </li> 1497</ul> 1498</section> 1499 1500<footer> 1501 <hr> 1502 This file is in the public domain, so clarified as of 2009-05-17 by 1503 Arthur David Olson. 1504</footer> 1505</body> 1506</html> 1507