I've run into an interesting challenge using a PostgreSQL database with the PostgreSQL JDBC driver. It seems that the latest version of the driver, 9.2, uses the client time zone when performing date/time matches.
This becomes a problem when the server (JasperReports Server) is set to UTC and the database server is set to US/Eastern.
If I run the following query from a client set to the UTC time zone I get different results using the 9.0 JDBC driver and the 9.2 JDBC driver.
select now(), extract(timezone FROM now()), current_setting('TIMEZONE'), now()-interval '1 hour' as "1HourAgo"
Results using 9.0 JDBC driver:
now date_part current_setting 1HourAgo
2013-08-26 15:33:57.590089 -14,400 US/Eastern 2013-08-26 14:33:57.590089
Results using 9.2 JDBC driver:
now date_part current_setting 1HourAgo
2013-08-26 15:41:49.067903 0 UTC 2013-08-26 14:41:49.067903
This is causing a WHERE statement in a query to return incorrect results. For example,
WHERE end_time between now() - interval '1 hour' and now()
works as expected using the 9,0 driver but returns no results using the 9,2 driver as the driver appears to be offsetting the value of end_time to match UTC (the client's time zone). The following is a workaround, but an ugly one:
WHERE end_time at time zone 'EDT' between now() - interval '1 hour' and now()
Questions:
- Has anyone else run across this before?
- Is there an explanation for this change in behavior? I haven't been able to find anything in the JDBC release notes
- Any advice on how to work around this other than rolling back the driver to an older version?
Thanks!