So I'm working on migrating a database that has been created for keeping track of times and dates. The way that these were stored can be a little wonky from database to database (I was not the original author so I'm not sure of the reasoning for storing the information in the way that the person did, but I'm sure they had their reasons).
So the first issue I have is that I have to merge three columns into one column for over 6000 rows of data, while also converting it to UNIX time. I've googled and searched around the Internet and can't find a good set of documentation explaining how to do this.
I finally was able to get the columns to concatenate by using
SELECT CONCAT(startHour,':',startMinute, ' ', startTime) AS startingTime FROM events;
But I haven't been able to get the time to successfully go to unix time. I also haven't been able to use that when dynamically inserting the concatenated rows into another db.
Here is the SUDO code (meaning I've changed table names and column names slightly).
INSERT INTO `tableName` (`id`, `label`, `startDate`, `endDate`, `startTime`, `endTime`)
SELECT `id`, `tag`, CONCAT(startHour,':',startMinute, ' ', startTime) AS startingTime, CONCAT(endHour,':',endMinute, ' ', endTime) AS endingTime
FROM `oldTable`;
Also having an issue with NULL, NULL times still get converted, event though the conversion isn't a correct time.
Update
This is what pulls from the DB when using the concat
SELECT CONCAT(startHour,':',startMinute, ' ', startTime) AS startingTime FROM events LIMIT 10;
+--------------+
| startingTime |
+--------------+
| NULL |
| NULL |
| NULL |
| NULL |
| NULL |
| 8:0 am |
| 8:0 am |
| 8:0 am |
| 8:0 am |
| 1:0 pm |
+--------------+
UPDATE 2
I was able to get some proper 24:00 time formatting using this, but still can't get it to format into Unix time.
STR_TO_DATE(CONCAT(endHour,':',endMinute, ' ', endTime)) AS endingTime
UPDATE 3
STR_TO_DATE(CONCAT('Apr 13 1980 ', endHour,':',endMinute, ' ', endTime),'%M %d %Y %h:%i%p') AS endingTime
+---------------------+
| endingTime |
+---------------------+
| NULL |
| NULL |
| NULL |
| NULL |
| NULL |
| 1980-04-13 17:00:00 |
| 1980-04-13 17:00:00 |
| 1980-04-13 17:00:00 |
| 1980-04-13 17:00:00 |
| 1980-04-13 17:00:00 |
+---------------------+
I had some luck with this, but it doesn't format the time correctly. The unix timestamp is off, it keeps giving me the time as 12:00. Instead of 5:00pm as it is supposed to, but he str to time is reporting the correct 24 hour time.
Update 4
The time appears off every time I convert something to UNIX_Timestamp and I'm not quite sure why. Is there anything to do with timezone correction that could be causing this?
Just to test my hypothesis I did an example I found on MySQL. The website shows a simple way to create a UNIX_TIMESTAMP
The documentation code and result
mysql> SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 03:00:00');
+---------------------------------------+
| UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 03:00:00') |
+---------------------------------------+
| 1111885200 |
+---------------------------------------+
My code and Result
SELECT UNIX_TIMESTAMP('2005-03-27 03:00:00');
//in mysql Yeilds this timestamp 1111892400
// in php Sat, 26 Mar 2005 22:00:00 -0500
UPDATE 5 (FINAL UPDATE)
I couldn't afford the time in trying to figure out a solid answer on formatting correct times through mysql, so I created a migration script using PHP that is manually run once. It made a nice way to grab the data, format it, and insert it into the new tables.