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When you assign a date to a named SQL parameter Hibernate automatically converts it to GMT time. How do you make it use the current server timezone for all dates?

Lets say you have a query:

Query q = session.createQuery("from Table where date_field < :now");
q.setDate("now", new java.util.Date());

"now" will be set to GMT time, while "new Date()" gets your current server time.

Thanks.

6 Answers 6

69

As it turned out Hibernate doesn't convert dates to GMT automatically, it just cuts off time if you use query.setDate(), so if you pass "2009-01-16 12:13:14" it becomes "2009-01-16 00:00:00".

To take time into consideration you need to use query.setTimestamp("date", dateObj) instead.

3
  • 1
    This just bit me, too. It doesn't help that in Oracle DATE is a date and time which matches Java's Date while TIMESTAMP is a date and time with microseconds. Feb 29, 2012 at 23:05
  • Now the method setTimestamp(String, Date) from the type Query<Long> is deprecated
    – Maske
    Nov 29, 2016 at 21:57
  • Note that this is because it can't - the java.util.Date structure doesn't contain any time zone information, it's just milliseconds since epoch. So if you wanted Hibernate to convert your time-zone-less Date to GMT, you would also need to tell it how far off the UTC epoch your date really is.
    – Craig Otis
    Oct 19, 2017 at 14:57
2

Hibernate is ignorant of timezones. Any timezone conversion should be done prior to executing the query.

E.g., if your database server is set to CST, but the user is on EST, you'll need to add 1 hour to any timestamps which are the input to a query.

2

We use a custom Hibernate date type. Any time we set a parameter on a query we use a base class or utility method so we can pass the user's timezone into the custom type parameter.

You could get by with just manually adjusting the time in the utility method for queries, but this way dates that are read in or written to the database are also correctly converted. This method also handles the situation where the database stores the date in its local time zone. So even if you have a user in one time zone, a database server in another, and Java using GMT, it can get everything straight. It ends up looking like:

Properties properties = new Properties();
properties.setProperty("timeZone", databaseTimeZone);
query.setParameter("from", dateEnteredByUser, Hibernate.custom(LocalizedDateType.class, properties));

As an added bonus, we use this to deal with the fact that SQL Server converts 23:59:59.999 to the next day. In the custom type we check for that and back it off.

2

If you need a timeZone synchronized value you can use now() in your HQL. Also I suggest you to use the Joda library. It has a hibernate-plugin module.

2

Hibernate team has deprecated setTimestamp(String name, Date val) method as well as org.hibernate.Query interface since version 5.2:

 /* @deprecated (since 5.2) use {@link #setParameter(int, Object)} or
    {@link #setParameter(int, Object, Type)}  instead
 */

So you can use below code:

import org.hibernate.query.Query;
...
Query query = session.createQuery("from Table where date_field < :now");
query.setParameter("now", new Date(), TimestampType.INSTANCE );

It's notable that setDate method which cuts down time portion is also deprecated and can be replaced with this option(from the same interface org.hibernate.query.Query):

query.setParameter("firstMomentOfToday", new Date(), DateType.INSTANCE);

If you are going to use it with java 8 and the relevent jdbc drivers like Oracle 'ojdbc8.jar' and supported hibernate versions this might not work as expected, so it's wise to use new java.time.LocalDate and LocalDateTime instead.

0

In Hibernate 6, using jakarta.persistence, it is

query.setParameter("now", new Date(), TemporalType.DATE );

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