Make postgres_fdw request remote time zone 'GMT' not 'UTC'.

This should have the same results for all practical purposes.
The advantage of selecting 'GMT' is that it's guaranteed to work
even when the remote system's timezone database is missing
entries, because pg_tzset() hard-wires handling of that,
at least in 9.2 and later.

(It seems like it would be a good idea to similarly hard-wire
correct handling of 'UTC', but that'll be a little more invasive
than I want to consider back-patching.  Leave that for another
day when we're not in feature freeze.)

Per trouble report from Adnan Dautovic.  Back-patch to all
supported branches.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/465248.1712211585@sss.pgh.pa.us
This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2024-04-21 13:46:20 -04:00
parent f4fdc24aa3
commit a3021aafce
1 changed files with 5 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -671,10 +671,12 @@ configure_remote_session(PGconn *conn)
* anyway. However it makes the regression test outputs more predictable.
*
* We don't risk setting remote zone equal to ours, since the remote
* server might use a different timezone database. Instead, use UTC
* (quoted, because very old servers are picky about case).
* server might use a different timezone database. Instead, use GMT
* (quoted, because very old servers are picky about case). That's
* guaranteed to work regardless of the remote's timezone database,
* because pg_tzset() hard-wires it (at least in PG 9.2 and later).
*/
do_sql_command(conn, "SET timezone = 'UTC'");
do_sql_command(conn, "SET timezone = 'GMT'");
/*
* Set values needed to ensure unambiguous data output from remote. (This