I'm struggling to understand how "AT TIME ZONE 'localtime'"
exactly work? By playing with it, I found out that it acts exactly as "AT TIME ZONE 'UTC'"
... But why? Is "localtime"
a synonym of "UTC"
in postgres? Or it comes from some setting (environment? connection timezone? although checked both, seems they are not related)...
There's "localtime"
function but I think it is not involved here.
Sample SQLs:
# date
Thu Dec 8 12:00:05 AEDT 2016
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP;
----------------------------
2016-12-08 01:13:29.444725
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP AT TIME ZONE 'America/New_York';
-------------------------------
2016-12-08 06:08:31.183103+00
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP AT TIME ZONE'localtime';
------------------------------
2016-12-08 01:09:25.294063+00
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP AT TIME ZONE 'utc';
-------------------------------
2016-12-08 01:09:44.32587+00 -- SAME AS ABOVE
# SET TIME ZONE 'America/New_York';
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP;
----------------------------
2016-12-07 20:13:34.924647
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP AT TIME ZONE 'localtime';
------------------------------
2016-12-07 15:10:08.188197-05
# SELECT LOCALTIMESTAMP AT TIME ZONE 'utc';
------------------------------
2016-12-07 15:10:44.88332-05 -- SAME AS ABOVE
Any hint? Is it documented somewhere?
SHOW timezone
before using ` SET TIME ZONE. And do you have a non-default setting for
timezone_abbreviations`?