The TIME
values were always stored on 3 bytes in MySQL. But the format changed on version 5.6.4. I suspect this was not the first time when it changed. But the other change, if there was one, happened long time ago and there is no public evidence of it. The MySQL source code history on GitHub starts with version 5.5 (the oldest commit is from May 2008) but the change I am looking for happened somewhere around 2001-2002 (MySQL 4 was launched in 2003)
The current format, as described in the documentation, uses 6 bits for seconds (possible values: 0
to 63
), 6 bits for minutes, 10 bits for hours (possible values: 0
to 1023
), 1 bit for sign (add the negative values of the already mentioned intervals) and 1 bit is unused and labelled "reserved for future extensions".
It is optimized for working with time components (hours, minutes, seconds) and doesn't waste much space. Using this format it's possible to store values between -1023:59:59
and +1023:59:59
. However MySQL limits the number of hours to 838
, probably for backward compatibility with applications that were written a while ago, when I think this was the limit.
Until version 5.6.4, the TIME
values were also stored on 3 bytes and the components were packed as days * 24 * 3600 + hours * 3600 + minutes * 60 + seconds
. This format was optimized for working with timestamps (because it was, in fact, a timestamp). Using this format it would be possible to store values in the range of about -2330
to +2330
hours. While having this big range of values available, MySQL was still limiting the values to -838
to +838
hours.
There was bug #11655 on MySQL 4. It was possible to return TIME
values outside the -838..+838
range using nested SELECT
statements. It was not a feature but a bug and it was fixed.
The only reason to limit the values to this range and to actively change any piece of code that produces TIME
values outside it was backward compatibility.
I suspect MySQL 3 used a different format that, due to the way the data was packed, limited the valid values to the range -838..+838
hours.
By looking into the current MySQL's source code I found this interesting formula:
#define TIME_MAX_VALUE (TIME_MAX_HOUR*10000 + TIME_MAX_MINUTE*100 + TIME_MAX_SECOND)
Let's ignore for the moment the MAX
part of the names used above and let's remember only that TIME_MAX_MINUTE
and TIME_MAX_SECOND
are numbers between 00
and 59
. The formula just concatenates the hours, minutes and seconds in a single integer number. For example, the value 170:29:45
becomes 1702945
.
This formula raises the following question: given that the TIME
values are stored on 3 bytes with sign, what is the maximum positive value that can be represented this way?
The value we are looking for is 0x7FFFFF
that in decimal notation is 8388607
. Since the last four digits (8607
) should be read as minutes (86
) and seconds (07
) and their maximum valid values is 59
, the greatest value that can be stored on 3 bytes with sign using the formula above is 8385959
. Which, as TIME
is +838:59:59
. Ta-da!
Guess what? The fragment of C
code listed above was extracted from this:
/* Limits for the TIME data type */
#define TIME_MAX_HOUR 838
#define TIME_MAX_MINUTE 59
#define TIME_MAX_SECOND 59
#define TIME_MAX_VALUE (TIME_MAX_HOUR*10000 + TIME_MAX_MINUTE*100 + TIME_MAX_SECOND)
I am sure this is how MySQL 3 used to keep the TIME
values internally. This format imposed the limitation of the range, and the backward compatibility requirement on the subsequent versions propagated the limitation to our days.