I have a table with the following columns:
|start_date |TZ |
|Dec 2, 2012 |Eastern |
|Dec 2, 2012 |GMT |
Note 1: our server is in UTC time.
Note 2:The column start_date is a date field, not a timestamp field. Dec 2nd 2012 implicitly means "2012-12-02 00:00:00"
Note 3: The above table is actually multiple normalized tables, but for simplicity, I de-normalized it.
Note 4: I can put anything into the TZ table to make this easy.
I would like to select from my_table where start_date <= now()
However, this doesn't work because of timezone. If the current date/time is Dec 1st Eastern at 9PM (which is Dec 2nd 1AM UTC), the above query will return both results, but I really only want the 2nd one. This is further complicated by daylight savings.
Ideally, I would like a query that does the following:
select * from my_table where convert_to_utc_timestamp(start_date,tz) <= now()
The above method would convert start_date to a timestamp and then convert it to the right timezone.
How would I do this in SQL?