When passed a local time that was on the boundary of a DST change,
get_tz_offset returned a GMT offset that was incorrect (off by one
hour). This is because the time was converted to GMT and then back to
a time stamp via timelocal() which cannot disambiguate boundary cases
as noted in its documentation.
Modify this algorithm, using an approach suggested in
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.comp.version-control.git/213871
to first convert the timestamp in question to two broken down forms
with localtime() and gmtime(), and then compute what timestamps
these two broken down forms would represent in GMT (i.e. a timezone
that does not have DST issues) by applying timegm() on them. The
difference between the resulting timestamps is the timezone offset.
This avoids the ambigious conversion and allows a correct time to be
returned on every occassion.
Signed-off-by: Ben Walton <bdwalton@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Junio C Hamano <gitster@pobox.com>
use Cwd qw(abs_path cwd);
use IPC::Open2 qw(open2);
use Fcntl qw(SEEK_SET SEEK_CUR);
-use Time::Local qw(timelocal);
+use Time::Local qw(timegm);
}
sub get_tz_offset {
# some systmes don't handle or mishandle %z, so be creative.
my $t = shift || time;
- my $gm = timelocal(gmtime($t));
- my $sign = qw( + + - )[ $t <=> $gm ];
+ my $gm = timegm(localtime($t));
+ my $sign = qw( + + - )[ $gm <=> $t ];
return sprintf("%s%02d%02d", $sign, (gmtime(abs($t - $gm)))[2,1]);
}