NetBSD/lib/libc/time/tzselect.ksh
christos 33d9f9e08d Welcome to tzcode 2013e:
Changes affecting API

    The 'zic' command now outputs a dummy transition when far-future
    data can't be summarized using a TZ string, and uses a 402-year
    window rather than a 400-year window.  For the current data, this
    affects only the Asia/Tehran file.  It does not affect any of the
    time stamps that this file represents, so zdump outputs the same
    information as before.  (Thanks to Andrew Main (Zefram).)

    The 'date' command has a new '-r' option, which lets you specify
    the integer time to display, a la FreeBSD.

    The 'tzselect' command has two new options '-c' and '-n', which lets you
    select a zone based on latitude and longitude.

    The 'zic' command's '-v' option now warns about constructs that
    require the new version-3 binary file format.  (Thanks to Arthur
    David Olson for the suggestion.)

    Support for floating-point time_t has been removed.
    It was always dicey, and POSIX no longer requires it.
    (Thanks to Eric Blake for suggesting to the POSIX committee to
    remove it, and thanks to Alan Barrett, Clive D.W. Feather, Andy
    Heninger, Arthur David Olson, and Alois Treindl, for reporting
    bugs and elucidating some of the corners of the old floating-point
    implementation.)

    The signatures of 'offtime', 'timeoff', and 'gtime' have been
    changed back to the old practice of using 'long' to represent UT
    offsets.  This had been inadvertently and mistakenly changed to
    'int_fast32_t'.  (Thanks to Christos Zoulos.)

    The code avoids undefined behavior on integer overflow in some
    more places, including gmtime, localtime, mktime and zdump.

  Changes affecting the zdump utility

    zdump now outputs "UT" when referring to Universal Time, not "UTC".
    "UTC" does not make sense for time stamps that predate the introduction
    of UTC, whereas "UT", a more-generic term, does.  (Thanks to Steve Allen
    for clarifying UT vs UTC.)

  Data changes affecting behavior of tzselect and similar programs

    Country code BQ is now called the more-common name "Caribbean Netherlands"
    rather than the more-official "Bonaire, St Eustatius & Saba".

    Remove from zone.tab the names America/Montreal, America/Shiprock,
    and Antarctica/South_Pole, as they are equivalent to existing
    same-country-code zones for post-1970 time stamps.  The data for
    these names are unchanged, so the names continue to work as before.

  Changes affecting code internals

    zic -c now runs way faster on 64-bit hosts when given large numbers.

    zic now uses vfprintf to avoid allocating and freeing some memory.

    tzselect now computes the list of continents from the data,
    rather than have it hard-coded.

    Minor changes pacify GCC 4.7.3 and GCC 4.8.1.

  Changes affecting the build procedure

    The 'leapseconds' file is now generated automatically from a
    new file 'leap-seconds.list', which is a copy of
    <ftp://time.nist.gov/pub/leap-seconds.list>.
    A new source file 'leapseconds.awk' implements this.
    The goal is simplification of the future maintenance of 'leapseconds'.

    When building the 'posix' or 'right' subdirectories, if the
    subdirectory would be a copy of the default subdirectory, it is
    now made a symbolic link if that is supported.  This saves about
    2 MB of file system space.

    The links America/Shiprock and Antarctica/South_Pole have been
    moved to the 'backward' file.  This affects only nondefault builds
    that omit 'backward'.

  Changes affecting documentation and commentary

    Changes to the 'tzfile' man page

      It now mentions that the binary file format may be extended in
      future versions by appending data.

      It now refers to the 'zdump' and 'zic' man pages.

    Changes to the 'zic' man page

      It lists conditions that elicit a warning with '-v'.

      It says that the behavior is unspecified when duplicate names
      are given, or if the source of one link is the target of another.

      Its examples are updated to match the latest data.

      The definition of white space has been clarified slightly.
      (Thanks to Michael Deckers.)

    Changes to the 'Theory' file

      There is a new section about the accuracy of the tz database,
      describing the many ways that errors can creep in, and
      explaining why so many of the pre-1970 time stamps are wrong or
      misleading (thanks to Steve Allen, Lester Caine, and Garrett
      Wollman for discussions that contributed to this).

      The 'Theory' file describes LMT better (this follows a
      suggestion by Guy Harris).

      It refers to the 2013 edition of POSIX rather than the 2004 edition.

      It's mentioned that excluding 'backward' should not affect the
      other data, and it suggests at least one zone.tab name per
      inhabited country (thanks to Stephen Colebourne).

      Some longstanding restrictions on names are documented, e.g.,
      'America/New_York' precludes 'America/New_York/Bronx'.

      It gives more reasons for the 1970 cutoff.

      It now mentions which time_t variants are supported, such as
      signed integer time_t.  (Thanks to Paul Goyette for reporting
      typos in an experimental version of this change.)

      (Thanks to Philip Newton for correcting typos in these changes.)

    Documentation and commentary is more careful to distinguish UT in
    general from UTC in particular.  (Thanks to Steve Allen.)

    Add a better source for the Zurich 1894 transition.
    (Thanks to Pierre-Yves Berger.)

    Update shapefile citations in tz-link.htm.  (Thanks to Guy Harris.)
2013-09-20 19:06:54 +00:00

474 lines
12 KiB
Bash

#! /bin/bash
#
# $NetBSD: tzselect.ksh,v 1.9 2013/09/20 19:06:54 christos Exp $
#
PKGVERSION='(tzcode) '
TZVERSION=see_Makefile
REPORT_BUGS_TO=tz@iana.org
# Ask the user about the time zone, and output the resulting TZ value to stdout.
# Interact with the user via stderr and stdin.
# Contributed by Paul Eggert.
# Porting notes:
#
# This script requires a Posix-like shell with the extension of a
# 'select' statement. The 'select' statement was introduced in the
# Korn shell and is available in Bash and other shell implementations.
# If your host lacks both Bash and the Korn shell, you can get their
# source from one of these locations:
#
# Bash <http://www.gnu.org/software/bash/bash.html>
# Korn Shell <http://www.kornshell.com/>
# Public Domain Korn Shell <http://www.cs.mun.ca/~michael/pdksh/>
#
# This script also uses several features of modern awk programs.
# If your host lacks awk, or has an old awk that does not conform to Posix,
# you can use either of the following free programs instead:
#
# Gawk (GNU awk) <http://www.gnu.org/software/gawk/>
# mawk <http://invisible-island.net/mawk/>
# Specify default values for environment variables if they are unset.
: ${AWK=awk}
: ${TZDIR=$(pwd)}
# Check for awk Posix compliance.
($AWK -v x=y 'BEGIN { exit 123 }') </dev/null >/dev/null 2>&1
[ $? = 123 ] || {
echo >&2 "$0: Sorry, your \`$AWK' program is not Posix compatible."
exit 1
}
coord=
location_limit=10
usage="Usage: tzselect [--version] [--help] [-c COORD] [-n LIMIT]
Select a time zone interactively.
Options:
-c COORD
Instead of asking for continent and then country and then city,
ask for selection from time zones whose largest cities
are closest to the location with geographical coordinates COORD.
COORD should use ISO 6709 notation, for example, '-c +4852+00220'
for Paris (in degrees and minutes, North and East), or
'-c -35-058' for Buenos Aires (in degrees, South and West).
-n LIMIT
Display at most LIMIT locations when -c is used (default $location_limit).
--version
Output version information.
--help
Output this help.
Report bugs to $REPORT_BUGS_TO."
while getopts c:n:-: opt
do
case $opt$OPTARG in
c*)
coord=$OPTARG ;;
n*)
location_limit=$OPTARG ;;
-help)
exec echo "$usage" ;;
-version)
exec echo "tzselect $PKGVERSION$TZVERSION" ;;
-*)
echo >&2 "$0: -$opt$OPTARG: unknown option; try '$0 --help'"; exit 1 ;;
*)
echo >&2 "$0: try '$0 --help'"; exit 1 ;;
esac
done
shift $((OPTIND-1))
case $# in
0) ;;
*) echo >&2 "$0: $1: unknown argument"; exit 1 ;;
esac
# Make sure the tables are readable.
TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE=$TZDIR/iso3166.tab
TZ_ZONE_TABLE=$TZDIR/zone.tab
for f in $TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE $TZ_ZONE_TABLE
do
<$f || {
echo >&2 "$0: time zone files are not set up correctly"
exit 1
}
done
newline='
'
IFS=$newline
# Work around a bug in bash 1.14.7 and earlier, where $PS3 is sent to stdout.
case $(echo 1 | (select x in x; do break; done) 2>/dev/null) in
?*) PS3=
esac
# Awk script to read a time zone table and output the same table,
# with each column preceded by its distance from 'here'.
output_distances='
BEGIN {
FS = "\t"
while (getline <TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE)
if ($0 ~ /^[^#]/)
country[$1] = $2
country["US"] = "US" # Otherwise the strings get too long.
}
function convert_coord(coord, deg, min, ilen, sign, sec) {
if (coord ~ /^[-+]?[0-9]?[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]([^0-9]|$)/) {
degminsec = coord
intdeg = degminsec < 0 ? -int(-degminsec / 10000) : int(degminsec / 10000)
minsec = degminsec - intdeg * 10000
intmin = minsec < 0 ? -int(-minsec / 100) : int(minsec / 100)
sec = minsec - intmin * 100
deg = (intdeg * 3600 + intmin * 60 + sec) / 3600
} else if (coord ~ /^[-+]?[0-9]?[0-9][0-9][0-9][0-9]([^0-9]|$)/) {
degmin = coord
intdeg = degmin < 0 ? -int(-degmin / 100) : int(degmin / 100)
min = degmin - intdeg * 100
deg = (intdeg * 60 + min) / 60
} else
deg = coord
return deg * 0.017453292519943296
}
function convert_latitude(coord) {
match(coord, /..*[-+]/)
return convert_coord(substr(coord, 1, RLENGTH - 1))
}
function convert_longitude(coord) {
match(coord, /..*[-+]/)
return convert_coord(substr(coord, RLENGTH))
}
# Great-circle distance between points with given latitude and longitude.
# Inputs and output are in radians. This uses the great-circle special
# case of the Vicenty formula for distances on ellipsoids.
function dist(lat1, long1, lat2, long2, dlong, x, y, num, denom) {
dlong = long2 - long1
x = cos (lat2) * sin (dlong)
y = cos (lat1) * sin (lat2) - sin (lat1) * cos (lat2) * cos (dlong)
num = sqrt (x * x + y * y)
denom = sin (lat1) * sin (lat2) + cos (lat1) * cos (lat2) * cos (dlong)
return atan2(num, denom)
}
BEGIN {
coord_lat = convert_latitude(coord)
coord_long = convert_longitude(coord)
}
/^[^#]/ {
here_lat = convert_latitude($2)
here_long = convert_longitude($2)
line = $1 "\t" $2 "\t" $3 "\t" country[$1]
if (NF == 4)
line = line " - " $4
printf "%g\t%s\n", dist(coord_lat, coord_long, here_lat, here_long), line
}
'
# Begin the main loop. We come back here if the user wants to retry.
while
echo >&2 'Please identify a location' \
'so that time zone rules can be set correctly.'
continent=
country=
region=
case $coord in
?*)
continent=coord;;
'')
# Ask the user for continent or ocean.
echo >&2 'Please select a continent, ocean, "coord", or "TZ".'
quoted_continents=$(
$AWK -F'\t' '
/^[^#]/ {
entry = substr($3, 1, index($3, "/") - 1)
if (entry == "America")
entry = entry "s"
if (entry ~ /^(Arctic|Atlantic|Indian|Pacific)$/)
entry = entry " Ocean"
printf "'\''%s'\''\n", entry
}
' $TZ_ZONE_TABLE |
sort -u |
tr '\n' ' '
echo ''
)
eval '
select continent in '"$quoted_continents"' \
"coord - I want to use geographical coordinates." \
"TZ - I want to specify the time zone using the Posix TZ format."
do
case $continent in
"")
echo >&2 "Please enter a number in range.";;
?*)
case $continent in
Americas) continent=America;;
*" "*) continent=$(expr "$continent" : '\''\([^ ]*\)'\'')
esac
break
esac
done
'
esac
case $continent in
'')
exit 1;;
TZ)
# Ask the user for a Posix TZ string. Check that it conforms.
while
echo >&2 'Please enter the desired value' \
'of the TZ environment variable.'
echo >&2 'For example, GST-10 is a zone named GST' \
'that is 10 hours ahead (east) of UTC.'
read TZ
$AWK -v TZ="$TZ" 'BEGIN {
tzname = "[^-+,0-9][^-+,0-9][^-+,0-9]+"
time = "[0-2]?[0-9](:[0-5][0-9](:[0-5][0-9])?)?"
offset = "[-+]?" time
date = "(J?[0-9]+|M[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]+)"
datetime = "," date "(/" time ")?"
tzpattern = "^(:.*|" tzname offset "(" tzname \
"(" offset ")?(" datetime datetime ")?)?)$"
if (TZ ~ tzpattern) exit 1
exit 0
}'
do
echo >&2 "\`$TZ' is not a conforming" \
'Posix time zone string.'
done
TZ_for_date=$TZ;;
*)
case $continent in
coord)
case $coord in
'')
echo >&2 'Please enter coordinates' \
'in ISO 6709 notation.'
echo >&2 'For example, +4042-07403 stands for'
echo >&2 '40 degrees 42 minutes north,' \
'74 degrees 3 minutes west.'
read coord;;
esac
distance_table=$($AWK \
-v coord="$coord" \
-v TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE="$TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE" \
"$output_distances" <$TZ_ZONE_TABLE |
sort -n |
sed "${location_limit}q"
)
regions=$(echo "$distance_table" | $AWK '
BEGIN { FS = "\t" }
{ print $NF }
')
echo >&2 'Please select one of the following' \
'time zone regions,'
echo >&2 'listed roughly in increasing order' \
"of distance from $coord".
select region in $regions
do
case $region in
'') echo >&2 'Please enter a number in range.';;
?*) break;;
esac
done
TZ=$(echo "$distance_table" | $AWK -v region="$region" '
BEGIN { FS="\t" }
$NF == region { print $4 }
')
;;
*)
# Get list of names of countries in the continent or ocean.
countries=$($AWK -F'\t' \
-v continent="$continent" \
-v TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE="$TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE" \
'
/^#/ { next }
$3 ~ ("^" continent "/") {
if (!cc_seen[$1]++) cc_list[++ccs] = $1
}
END {
while (getline <TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE) {
if ($0 !~ /^#/) cc_name[$1] = $2
}
for (i = 1; i <= ccs; i++) {
country = cc_list[i]
if (cc_name[country]) {
country = cc_name[country]
}
print country
}
}
' <$TZ_ZONE_TABLE | sort -f)
# If there's more than one country, ask the user which one.
case $countries in
*"$newline"*)
echo >&2 'Please select a country' \
'whose clocks agree with yours.'
select country in $countries
do
case $country in
'') echo >&2 'Please enter a number in range.';;
?*) break
esac
done
case $country in
'') exit 1
esac;;
*)
country=$countries
esac
# Get list of names of time zone rule regions in the country.
regions=$($AWK -F'\t' \
-v country="$country" \
-v TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE="$TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE" \
'
BEGIN {
cc = country
while (getline <TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE) {
if ($0 !~ /^#/ && country == $2) {
cc = $1
break
}
}
}
$1 == cc { print $4 }
' <$TZ_ZONE_TABLE)
# If there's more than one region, ask the user which one.
case $regions in
*"$newline"*)
echo >&2 'Please select one of the following' \
'time zone regions.'
select region in $regions
do
case $region in
'') echo >&2 'Please enter a number in range.';;
?*) break
esac
done
case $region in
'') exit 1
esac;;
*)
region=$regions
esac
# Determine TZ from country and region.
TZ=$($AWK -F'\t' \
-v country="$country" \
-v region="$region" \
-v TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE="$TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE" \
'
BEGIN {
cc = country
while (getline <TZ_COUNTRY_TABLE) {
if ($0 !~ /^#/ && country == $2) {
cc = $1
break
}
}
}
$1 == cc && $4 == region { print $3 }
' <$TZ_ZONE_TABLE)
esac
# Make sure the corresponding zoneinfo file exists.
TZ_for_date=$TZDIR/$TZ
<$TZ_for_date || {
echo >&2 "$0: time zone files are not set up correctly"
exit 1
}
esac
# Use the proposed TZ to output the current date relative to UTC.
# Loop until they agree in seconds.
# Give up after 8 unsuccessful tries.
extra_info=
for i in 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
do
TZdate=$(LANG=C TZ="$TZ_for_date" date)
UTdate=$(LANG=C TZ=UTC0 date)
TZsec=$(expr "$TZdate" : '.*:\([0-5][0-9]\)')
UTsec=$(expr "$UTdate" : '.*:\([0-5][0-9]\)')
case $TZsec in
$UTsec)
extra_info="
Local time is now: $TZdate.
Universal Time is now: $UTdate."
break
esac
done
# Output TZ info and ask the user to confirm.
echo >&2 ""
echo >&2 "The following information has been given:"
echo >&2 ""
case $country%$region%$coord in
?*%?*%) echo >&2 " $country$newline $region";;
?*%%) echo >&2 " $country";;
%?*%?*) echo >&2 " coord $coord$newline $region";;
%%?*) echo >&2 " coord $coord";;
+) echo >&2 " TZ='$TZ'"
esac
echo >&2 ""
echo >&2 "Therefore TZ='$TZ' will be used.$extra_info"
echo >&2 "Is the above information OK?"
ok=
select ok in Yes No
do
case $ok in
'') echo >&2 'Please enter 1 for Yes, or 2 for No.';;
?*) break
esac
done
case $ok in
'') exit 1;;
Yes) break
esac
do coord=
done
case $SHELL in
*csh) file=.login line="setenv TZ '$TZ'";;
*) file=.profile line="TZ='$TZ'; export TZ"
esac
echo >&2 "
You can make this change permanent for yourself by appending the line
$line
to the file '$file' in your home directory; then log out and log in again.
Here is that TZ value again, this time on standard output so that you
can use the $0 command in shell scripts:"
echo "$TZ"