1Theory and pragmatics of the tz code and data
2
3
4----- Outline -----
5
6	Scope of the tz database
7	Names of time zone rules
8	Time zone abbreviations
9	Accuracy of the tz database
10	Time and date functions
11	Interface stability
12	Calendrical issues
13	Time and time zones on Mars
14
15
16----- Scope of the tz database -----
17
18The tz database attempts to record the history and predicted future of
19all computer-based clocks that track civil time.  To represent this
20data, the world is partitioned into regions whose clocks all agree
21about time stamps that occur after the somewhat-arbitrary cutoff point
22of the POSIX Epoch (1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC).  For each such region,
23the database records all known clock transitions, and labels the region
24with a notable location.  Although 1970 is a somewhat-arbitrary
25cutoff, there are significant challenges to moving the cutoff earlier
26even by a decade or two, due to the wide variety of local practices
27before computer timekeeping became prevalent.
28
29Clock transitions before 1970 are recorded for each such location,
30because most systems support time stamps before 1970 and could
31misbehave if data entries were omitted for pre-1970 transitions.
32However, the database is not designed for and does not suffice for
33applications requiring accurate handling of all past times everywhere,
34as it would take far too much effort and guesswork to record all
35details of pre-1970 civil timekeeping.
36
37As described below, reference source code for using the tz database is
38also available.  The tz code is upwards compatible with POSIX, an
39international standard for UNIX-like systems.  As of this writing, the
40current edition of POSIX is:
41
42  The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 7
43  IEEE Std 1003.1-2008, 2016 Edition
44  <http://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/>
45
46
47
48----- Names of time zone rules -----
49
50Each of the database's time zone rules has a unique name.
51Inexperienced users are not expected to select these names unaided.
52Distributors should provide documentation and/or a simple selection
53interface that explains the names; for one example, see the 'tzselect'
54program in the tz code.  The Unicode Common Locale Data Repository
55<http://cldr.unicode.org/> contains data that may be useful for other
56selection interfaces.
57
58The time zone rule naming conventions attempt to strike a balance
59among the following goals:
60
61 * Uniquely identify every region where clocks have agreed since 1970.
62   This is essential for the intended use: static clocks keeping local
63   civil time.
64
65 * Indicate to experts where that region is.
66
67 * Be robust in the presence of political changes.  For example, names
68   of countries are ordinarily not used, to avoid incompatibilities
69   when countries change their name (e.g. Zaire->Congo) or when
70   locations change countries (e.g. Hong Kong from UK colony to
71   China).
72
73 * Be portable to a wide variety of implementations.
74
75 * Use a consistent naming conventions over the entire world.
76
77Names normally have the form AREA/LOCATION, where AREA is the name
78of a continent or ocean, and LOCATION is the name of a specific
79location within that region.  North and South America share the same
80area, 'America'.  Typical names are 'Africa/Cairo', 'America/New_York',
81and 'Pacific/Honolulu'.
82
83Here are the general rules used for choosing location names,
84in decreasing order of importance:
85
86	Use only valid POSIX file name components (i.e., the parts of
87		names other than '/').  Do not use the file name
88		components '.' and '..'.  Within a file name component,
89		use only ASCII letters, '.', '-' and '_'.  Do not use
90		digits, as that might create an ambiguity with POSIX
91		TZ strings.  A file name component must not exceed 14
92		characters or start with '-'.  E.g., prefer 'Brunei'
93		to 'Bandar_Seri_Begawan'.  Exceptions: see the discussion
94		of legacy names below.
95	A name must not be empty, or contain '//', or start or end with '/'.
96	Do not use names that differ only in case.  Although the reference
97		implementation is case-sensitive, some other implementations
98		are not, and they would mishandle names differing only in case.
99	If one name A is an initial prefix of another name AB (ignoring case),
100		then B must not start with '/', as a regular file cannot have
101		the same name as a directory in POSIX.  For example,
102		'America/New_York' precludes 'America/New_York/Bronx'.
103	Uninhabited regions like the North Pole and Bouvet Island
104		do not need locations, since local time is not defined there.
105	There should typically be at least one name for each ISO 3166-1
106		officially assigned two-letter code for an inhabited country
107		or territory.
108	If all the clocks in a region have agreed since 1970,
109		don't bother to include more than one location
110		even if subregions' clocks disagreed before 1970.
111		Otherwise these tables would become annoyingly large.
112	If a name is ambiguous, use a less ambiguous alternative;
113		e.g. many cities are named San Jos�� and Georgetown, so
114		prefer 'Costa_Rica' to 'San_Jose' and 'Guyana' to 'Georgetown'.
115	Keep locations compact.  Use cities or small islands, not countries
116		or regions, so that any future time zone changes do not split
117		locations into different time zones.  E.g. prefer 'Paris'
118		to 'France', since France has had multiple time zones.
119	Use mainstream English spelling, e.g. prefer 'Rome' to 'Roma', and
120		prefer 'Athens' to the Greek '����������' or the Romanized 'Ath��na'.
121		The POSIX file name restrictions encourage this rule.
122	Use the most populous among locations in a zone,
123		e.g. prefer 'Shanghai' to 'Beijing'.  Among locations with
124		similar populations, pick the best-known location,
125		e.g. prefer 'Rome' to 'Milan'.
126	Use the singular form, e.g. prefer 'Canary' to 'Canaries'.
127	Omit common suffixes like '_Islands' and '_City', unless that
128		would lead to ambiguity.  E.g. prefer 'Cayman' to
129		'Cayman_Islands' and 'Guatemala' to 'Guatemala_City',
130		but prefer 'Mexico_City' to 'Mexico' because the country
131		of Mexico has several time zones.
132	Use '_' to represent a space.
133	Omit '.' from abbreviations in names, e.g. prefer 'St_Helena'
134		to 'St._Helena'.
135	Do not change established names if they only marginally
136		violate the above rules.  For example, don't change
137		the existing name 'Rome' to 'Milan' merely because
138		Milan's population has grown to be somewhat greater
139		than Rome's.
140	If a name is changed, put its old spelling in the 'backward' file.
141		This means old spellings will continue to work.
142
143The file 'zone1970.tab' lists geographical locations used to name time
144zone rules.  It is intended to be an exhaustive list of names for
145geographic regions as described above; this is a subset of the names
146in the data.  Although a 'zone1970.tab' location's longitude
147corresponds to its LMT offset with one hour for every 15 degrees east
148longitude, this relationship is not exact.
149
150Older versions of this package used a different naming scheme,
151and these older names are still supported.
152See the file 'backward' for most of these older names
153(e.g., 'US/Eastern' instead of 'America/New_York').
154The other old-fashioned names still supported are
155'WET', 'CET', 'MET', and 'EET' (see the file 'europe').
156
157Older versions of this package defined legacy names that are
158incompatible with the first rule of location names, but which are
159still supported.  These legacy names are mostly defined in the file
160'etcetera'.  Also, the file 'backward' defines the legacy names
161'GMT0', 'GMT-0', 'GMT+0' and 'Canada/East-Saskatchewan', and the file
162'northamerica' defines the legacy names 'EST5EDT', 'CST6CDT',
163'MST7MDT', and 'PST8PDT'.
164
165Excluding 'backward' should not affect the other data.  If
166'backward' is excluded, excluding 'etcetera' should not affect the
167remaining data.
168
169
170----- Time zone abbreviations -----
171
172When this package is installed, it generates time zone abbreviations
173like 'EST' to be compatible with human tradition and POSIX.
174Here are the general rules used for choosing time zone abbreviations,
175in decreasing order of importance:
176
177	Use three or more characters that are ASCII alphanumerics or '+' or '-'.
178		Previous editions of this database also used characters like
179		' ' and '?', but these characters have a special meaning to
180		the shell and cause commands like
181			set `date`
182		to have unexpected effects.
183		Previous editions of this rule required upper-case letters,
184		but the Congressman who introduced Chamorro Standard Time
185		preferred "ChST", so lower-case letters are now allowed.
186		Also, POSIX from 2001 on relaxed the rule to allow '-', '+',
187		and alphanumeric characters from the portable character set
188		in the current locale.  In practice ASCII alphanumerics and
189		'+' and '-' are safe in all locales.
190
191		In other words, in the C locale the POSIX extended regular
192		expression [-+[:alnum:]]{3,} should match the abbreviation.
193		This guarantees that all abbreviations could have been
194		specified by a POSIX TZ string.
195
196	Use abbreviations that are in common use among English-speakers,
197		e.g. 'EST' for Eastern Standard Time in North America.
198		We assume that applications translate them to other languages
199		as part of the normal localization process; for example,
200		a French application might translate 'EST' to 'HNE'.
201
202	For zones whose times are taken from a city's longitude, use the
203		traditional xMT notation, e.g. 'PMT' for Paris Mean Time.
204		The only name like this in current use is 'GMT'.
205
206	Use 'LMT' for local mean time of locations before the introduction
207		of standard time; see "Scope of the tz database".
208
209	If there is no common English abbreviation, use numeric offsets like
210		-05 and +0830 that are generated by zic's %z notation.
211
212	Use current abbreviations for older timestamps to avoid confusion.
213		For example, in 1910 a common English abbreviation for UT +01
214		in central Europe was 'MEZ' (short for both "Middle European
215		Zone" and for "Mitteleurop��ische Zeit" in German).  Nowadays
216		'CET' ("Central European Time") is more common in English, and
217		the database uses 'CET' even for circa-1910 timestamps as this
218		is less confusing for modern users and avoids the need for
219		determining when 'CET' supplanted 'MEZ' in common usage.
220
221	Use a consistent style in a zone's history.  For example, if a zone's
222		history tends to use numeric abbreviations and a particular
223		entry could go either way, use a numeric abbreviation.
224
225    [The remaining guidelines predate the introduction of %z.
226    They are problematic as they mean tz data entries invent
227    notation rather than record it.  These guidelines are now
228    deprecated and the plan is to gradually move to %z for
229    inhabited locations and to "-00" for uninhabited locations.]
230
231	If there is no common English abbreviation, abbreviate the English
232		translation of the usual phrase used by native speakers.
233		If this is not available or is a phrase mentioning the country
234		(e.g. "Cape Verde Time"), then:
235
236		When a country is identified with a single or principal zone,
237			append 'T' to the country's ISO	code, e.g. 'CVT' for
238			Cape Verde Time.  For summer time append 'ST';
239			for double summer time append 'DST'; etc.
240		Otherwise, take the first three letters of an English place
241			name identifying each zone and append 'T', 'ST', etc.
242			as before; e.g. 'CHAST' for CHAtham Summer Time.
243
244	Use UT (with time zone abbreviation '-00') for locations while
245		uninhabited.  The leading '-' is a flag that the time
246		zone is in some sense undefined; this notation is
247		derived from Internet RFC 3339.
248
249Application writers should note that these abbreviations are ambiguous
250in practice: e.g. 'CST' has a different meaning in China than
251it does in the United States.  In new applications, it's often better
252to use numeric UT offsets like '-0600' instead of time zone
253abbreviations like 'CST'; this avoids the ambiguity.
254
255
256----- Accuracy of the tz database -----
257
258The tz database is not authoritative, and it surely has errors.
259Corrections are welcome and encouraged; see the file CONTRIBUTING.
260Users requiring authoritative data should consult national standards
261bodies and the references cited in the database's comments.
262
263Errors in the tz database arise from many sources:
264
265 * The tz database predicts future time stamps, and current predictions
266   will be incorrect after future governments change the rules.
267   For example, if today someone schedules a meeting for 13:00 next
268   October 1, Casablanca time, and tomorrow Morocco changes its
269   daylight saving rules, software can mess up after the rule change
270   if it blithely relies on conversions made before the change.
271
272 * The pre-1970 entries in this database cover only a tiny sliver of how
273   clocks actually behaved; the vast majority of the necessary
274   information was lost or never recorded.  Thousands more zones would
275   be needed if the tz database's scope were extended to cover even
276   just the known or guessed history of standard time; for example,
277   the current single entry for France would need to split into dozens
278   of entries, perhaps hundreds.  And in most of the world even this
279   approach would be misleading due to widespread disagreement or
280   indifference about what times should be observed.  In her 2015 book
281   "The Global Transformation of Time, 1870-1950", Vanessa Ogle writes
282   "Outside of Europe and North America there was no system of time
283   zones at all, often not even a stable landscape of mean times,
284   prior to the middle decades of the twentieth century".  See:
285   Timothy Shenk, Booked: A Global History of Time. Dissent 2015-12-17
286   https://www.dissentmagazine.org/blog/booked-a-global-history-of-time-vanessa-ogle
287
288 * Most of the pre-1970 data entries come from unreliable sources, often
289   astrology books that lack citations and whose compilers evidently
290   invented entries when the true facts were unknown, without
291   reporting which entries were known and which were invented.
292   These books often contradict each other or give implausible entries,
293   and on the rare occasions when they are checked they are
294   typically found to be incorrect.
295
296 * For the UK the tz database relies on years of first-class work done by
297   Joseph Myers and others; see <http://www.polyomino.org.uk/british-time/>.
298   Other countries are not done nearly as well.
299
300 * Sometimes, different people in the same city would maintain clocks
301   that differed significantly.  Railway time was used by railroad
302   companies (which did not always agree with each other),
303   church-clock time was used for birth certificates, etc.
304   Often this was merely common practice, but sometimes it was set by law.
305   For example, from 1891 to 1911 the UT offset in France was legally
306   0:09:21 outside train stations and 0:04:21 inside.
307
308 * Although a named location in the tz database stands for the
309   containing region, its pre-1970 data entries are often accurate for
310   only a small subset of that region.  For example, Europe/London
311   stands for the United Kingdom, but its pre-1847 times are valid
312   only for locations that have London's exact meridian, and its 1847
313   transition to GMT is known to be valid only for the L&NW and the
314   Caledonian railways.
315
316 * The tz database does not record the earliest time for which a zone's
317   data entries are thereafter valid for every location in the region.
318   For example, Europe/London is valid for all locations in its
319   region after GMT was made the standard time, but the date of
320   standardization (1880-08-02) is not in the tz database, other than
321   in commentary.  For many zones the earliest time of validity is
322   unknown.
323
324 * The tz database does not record a region's boundaries, and in many
325   cases the boundaries are not known.  For example, the zone
326   America/Kentucky/Louisville represents a region around the city of
327   Louisville, the boundaries of which are unclear.
328
329 * Changes that are modeled as instantaneous transitions in the tz
330   database were often spread out over hours, days, or even decades.
331
332 * Even if the time is specified by law, locations sometimes
333   deliberately flout the law.
334
335 * Early timekeeping practices, even assuming perfect clocks, were
336   often not specified to the accuracy that the tz database requires.
337
338 * Sometimes historical timekeeping was specified more precisely
339   than what the tz database can handle.  For example, from 1909 to
340   1937 Netherlands clocks were legally UT +00:19:32.13, but the tz
341   database cannot represent the fractional second.
342
343 * Even when all the timestamp transitions recorded by the tz database
344   are correct, the tz rules that generate them may not faithfully
345   reflect the historical rules.  For example, from 1922 until World
346   War II the UK moved clocks forward the day following the third
347   Saturday in April unless that was Easter, in which case it moved
348   clocks forward the previous Sunday.  Because the tz database has no
349   way to specify Easter, these exceptional years are entered as
350   separate tz Rule lines, even though the legal rules did not change.
351
352 * The tz database models pre-standard time using the proleptic Gregorian
353   calendar and local mean time (LMT), but many people used other
354   calendars and other timescales.  For example, the Roman Empire used
355   the Julian calendar, and had 12 varying-length daytime hours with a
356   non-hour-based system at night.
357
358 * Early clocks were less reliable, and data entries do not represent
359   clock error.
360
361 * The tz database assumes Universal Time (UT) as an origin, even
362   though UT is not standardized for older time stamps.  In the tz
363   database commentary, UT denotes a family of time standards that
364   includes Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) along with other variants
365   such as UT1 and GMT, with days starting at midnight.  Although UT
366   equals UTC for modern time stamps, UTC was not defined until 1960,
367   so commentary uses the more-general abbreviation UT for time stamps
368   that might predate 1960.  Since UT, UT1, etc. disagree slightly,
369   and since pre-1972 UTC seconds varied in length, interpretation of
370   older time stamps can be problematic when subsecond accuracy is
371   needed.
372
373 * Civil time was not based on atomic time before 1972, and we don't
374   know the history of earth's rotation accurately enough to map SI
375   seconds to historical solar time to more than about one-hour
376   accuracy.  See: Stephenson FR, Morrison LV, Hohenkerk CY.
377   Measurement of the Earth's rotation: 720 BC to AD 2015.
378   Proc Royal Soc A. 2016 Dec 7;472:20160404.
379   http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2016.0404
380   Also see: Espenak F. Uncertainty in Delta T (��T).
381   http://eclipse.gsfc.nasa.gov/SEhelp/uncertainty2004.html
382
383 * The relationship between POSIX time (that is, UTC but ignoring leap
384   seconds) and UTC is not agreed upon after 1972.  Although the POSIX
385   clock officially stops during an inserted leap second, at least one
386   proposed standard has it jumping back a second instead; and in
387   practice POSIX clocks more typically either progress glacially during
388   a leap second, or are slightly slowed while near a leap second.
389
390 * The tz database does not represent how uncertain its information is.
391   Ideally it would contain information about when data entries are
392   incomplete or dicey.  Partial temporal knowledge is a field of
393   active research, though, and it's not clear how to apply it here.
394
395In short, many, perhaps most, of the tz database's pre-1970 and future
396time stamps are either wrong or misleading.  Any attempt to pass the
397tz database off as the definition of time should be unacceptable to
398anybody who cares about the facts.  In particular, the tz database's
399LMT offsets should not be considered meaningful, and should not prompt
400creation of zones merely because two locations differ in LMT or
401transitioned to standard time at different dates.
402
403
404----- Time and date functions -----
405
406The tz code contains time and date functions that are upwards
407compatible with those of POSIX.
408
409POSIX has the following properties and limitations.
410
411*	In POSIX, time display in a process is controlled by the
412	environment variable TZ.  Unfortunately, the POSIX TZ string takes
413	a form that is hard to describe and is error-prone in practice.
414	Also, POSIX TZ strings can't deal with other (for example, Israeli)
415	daylight saving time rules, or situations where more than two
416	time zone abbreviations are used in an area.
417
418	The POSIX TZ string takes the following form:
419
420		stdoffset[dst[offset][,date[/time],date[/time]]]
421
422	where:
423
424	std and dst
425		are 3 or more characters specifying the standard
426		and daylight saving time (DST) zone names.
427		Starting with POSIX.1-2001, std and dst may also be
428		in a quoted form like "<UTC+10>"; this allows
429		"+" and "-" in the names.
430	offset
431		is of the form '[+-]hh:[mm[:ss]]' and specifies the
432		offset west of UT.  'hh' may be a single digit; 0<=hh<=24.
433		The default DST offset is one hour ahead of standard time.
434	date[/time],date[/time]
435		specifies the beginning and end of DST.  If this is absent,
436		the system supplies its own rules for DST, and these can
437		differ from year to year; typically US DST rules are used.
438	time
439		takes the form 'hh:[mm[:ss]]' and defaults to 02:00.
440		This is the same format as the offset, except that a
441		leading '+' or '-' is not allowed.
442	date
443		takes one of the following forms:
444		Jn (1<=n<=365)
445			origin-1 day number not counting February 29
446		n (0<=n<=365)
447			origin-0 day number counting February 29 if present
448		Mm.n.d (0[Sunday]<=d<=6[Saturday], 1<=n<=5, 1<=m<=12)
449			for the dth day of week n of month m of the year,
450			where week 1 is the first week in which day d appears,
451			and '5' stands for the last week in which day d appears
452			(which may be either the 4th or 5th week).
453			Typically, this is the only useful form;
454			the n and Jn forms are rarely used.
455
456	Here is an example POSIX TZ string, for US Pacific time using rules
457	appropriate from 1987 through 2006:
458
459		TZ='PST8PDT,M4.1.0/02:00,M10.5.0/02:00'
460
461	This POSIX TZ string is hard to remember, and mishandles time stamps
462	before 1987 and after 2006.  With this package you can use this
463	instead:
464
465		TZ='America/Los_Angeles'
466
467*	POSIX does not define the exact meaning of TZ values like "EST5EDT".
468	Typically the current US DST rules are used to interpret such values,
469	but this means that the US DST rules are compiled into each program
470	that does time conversion.  This means that when US time conversion
471	rules change (as in the United States in 1987), all programs that
472	do time conversion must be recompiled to ensure proper results.
473
474*	The TZ environment variable is process-global, which makes it hard
475	to write efficient, thread-safe applications that need access
476	to multiple time zones.
477
478*	In POSIX, there's no tamper-proof way for a process to learn the
479	system's best idea of local wall clock.  (This is important for
480	applications that an administrator wants used only at certain times -
481	without regard to whether the user has fiddled the "TZ" environment
482	variable.  While an administrator can "do everything in UTC" to get
483	around the problem, doing so is inconvenient and precludes handling
484	daylight saving time shifts - as might be required to limit phone
485	calls to off-peak hours.)
486
487*	POSIX provides no convenient and efficient way to determine the UT
488	offset and time zone abbreviation of arbitrary time stamps,
489	particularly for time zone settings that do not fit into the
490	POSIX model.
491
492*	POSIX requires that systems ignore leap seconds.
493
494*	The tz code attempts to support all the time_t implementations
495	allowed by POSIX.  The time_t type represents a nonnegative count of
496	seconds since 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC, ignoring leap seconds.
497	In practice, time_t is usually a signed 64- or 32-bit integer; 32-bit
498	signed time_t values stop working after 2038-01-19 03:14:07 UTC, so
499	new implementations these days typically use a signed 64-bit integer.
500	Unsigned 32-bit integers are used on one or two platforms,
501	and 36-bit and 40-bit integers are also used occasionally.
502	Although earlier POSIX versions allowed time_t to be a
503	floating-point type, this was not supported by any practical
504	systems, and POSIX.1-2013 and the tz code both require time_t
505	to be an integer type.
506
507These are the extensions that have been made to the POSIX functions:
508
509*	The "TZ" environment variable is used in generating the name of a file
510	from which time zone information is read (or is interpreted a la
511	POSIX); "TZ" is no longer constrained to be a three-letter time zone
512	name followed by a number of hours and an optional three-letter
513	daylight time zone name.  The daylight saving time rules to be used
514	for a particular time zone are encoded in the time zone file;
515	the format of the file allows U.S., Australian, and other rules to be
516	encoded, and allows for situations where more than two time zone
517	abbreviations are used.
518
519	It was recognized that allowing the "TZ" environment variable to
520	take on values such as "America/New_York" might cause "old" programs
521	(that expect "TZ" to have a certain form) to operate incorrectly;
522	consideration was given to using some other environment variable
523	(for example, "TIMEZONE") to hold the string used to generate the
524	time zone information file name.  In the end, however, it was decided
525	to continue using "TZ": it is widely used for time zone purposes;
526	separately maintaining both "TZ" and "TIMEZONE" seemed a nuisance;
527	and systems where "new" forms of "TZ" might cause problems can simply
528	use TZ values such as "EST5EDT" which can be used both by
529	"new" programs (a la POSIX) and "old" programs (as zone names and
530	offsets).
531
532*	The code supports platforms with a UT offset member in struct tm,
533	e.g., tm_gmtoff.
534
535*	The code supports platforms with a time zone abbreviation member in
536	struct tm, e.g., tm_zone.
537
538*	Since the "TZ" environment variable can now be used to control time
539	conversion, the "daylight" and "timezone" variables are no longer
540	needed.  (These variables are defined and set by "tzset"; however, their
541	values will not be used by "localtime.")
542
543*	Functions tzalloc, tzfree, localtime_rz, and mktime_z for
544	more-efficient thread-safe applications that need to use
545	multiple time zones.  The tzalloc and tzfree functions
546	allocate and free objects of type timezone_t, and localtime_rz
547	and mktime_z are like localtime_r and mktime with an extra
548	timezone_t argument.  The functions were inspired by NetBSD.
549
550*	A function "tzsetwall" has been added to arrange for the system's
551	best approximation to local wall clock time to be delivered by
552	subsequent calls to "localtime."  Source code for portable
553	applications that "must" run on local wall clock time should call
554	"tzsetwall();" if such code is moved to "old" systems that don't
555	provide tzsetwall, you won't be able to generate an executable program.
556	(These time zone functions also arrange for local wall clock time to be
557	used if tzset is called - directly or indirectly - and there's no "TZ"
558	environment variable; portable applications should not, however, rely
559	on this behavior since it's not the way SVR2 systems behave.)
560
561*	Negative time_t values are supported, on systems where time_t is signed.
562
563*	These functions can account for leap seconds, thanks to Bradley White.
564
565Points of interest to folks with other systems:
566
567*	Code compatible with this package is already part of many platforms,
568	including GNU/Linux, Android, the BSDs, Chromium OS, Cygwin, AIX, iOS,
569	BlackBery 10, macOS, Microsoft Windows, OpenVMS, and Solaris.
570	On such hosts, the primary use of this package
571	is to update obsolete time zone rule tables.
572	To do this, you may need to compile the time zone compiler
573	'zic' supplied with this package instead of using the system 'zic',
574	since the format of zic's input is occasionally extended,
575	and a platform may still be shipping an older zic.
576
577*	The UNIX Version 7 "timezone" function is not present in this package;
578	it's impossible to reliably map timezone's arguments (a "minutes west
579	of GMT" value and a "daylight saving time in effect" flag) to a
580	time zone abbreviation, and we refuse to guess.
581	Programs that in the past used the timezone function may now examine
582	tzname[localtime(&clock)->tm_isdst] to learn the correct time
583	zone abbreviation to use.  Alternatively, use
584	localtime(&clock)->tm_zone if this has been enabled.
585
586*	The 4.2BSD gettimeofday function is not used in this package.
587	This formerly let users obtain the current UTC offset and DST flag,
588	but this functionality was removed in later versions of BSD.
589
590*	In SVR2, time conversion fails for near-minimum or near-maximum
591	time_t values when doing conversions for places that don't use UT.
592	This package takes care to do these conversions correctly.
593	A comment in the source code tells how to get compatibly wrong
594	results.
595
596The functions that are conditionally compiled if STD_INSPIRED is defined
597should, at this point, be looked on primarily as food for thought.  They are
598not in any sense "standard compatible" - some are not, in fact, specified in
599*any* standard.  They do, however, represent responses of various authors to
600standardization proposals.
601
602Other time conversion proposals, in particular the one developed by folks at
603Hewlett Packard, offer a wider selection of functions that provide capabilities
604beyond those provided here.  The absence of such functions from this package
605is not meant to discourage the development, standardization, or use of such
606functions.  Rather, their absence reflects the decision to make this package
607contain valid extensions to POSIX, to ensure its broad acceptability.  If
608more powerful time conversion functions can be standardized, so much the
609better.
610
611
612----- Interface stability -----
613
614The tz code and data supply the following interfaces:
615
616 * A set of zone names as per "Names of time zone rules" above.
617
618 * Library functions described in "Time and date functions" above.
619
620 * The programs tzselect, zdump, and zic, documented in their man pages.
621
622 * The format of zic input files, documented in the zic man page.
623
624 * The format of zic output files, documented in the tzfile man page.
625
626 * The format of zone table files, documented in zone1970.tab.
627
628 * The format of the country code file, documented in iso3166.tab.
629
630 * The version number of the code and data, as the first line of
631   the text file 'version' in each release.
632
633Interface changes in a release attempt to preserve compatibility with
634recent releases.  For example, tz data files typically do not rely on
635recently-added zic features, so that users can run older zic versions
636to process newer data files.  The tz-link.htm file describes how
637releases are tagged and distributed.
638
639Interfaces not listed above are less stable.  For example, users
640should not rely on particular UT offsets or abbreviations for time
641stamps, as data entries are often based on guesswork and these guesses
642may be corrected or improved.
643
644
645----- Calendrical issues -----
646
647Calendrical issues are a bit out of scope for a time zone database,
648but they indicate the sort of problems that we would run into if we
649extended the time zone database further into the past.  An excellent
650resource in this area is Nachum Dershowitz and Edward M. Reingold,
651Calendrical Calculations: Third Edition, Cambridge University Press (2008)
652<http://emr.cs.iit.edu/home/reingold/calendar-book/third-edition/>.
653Other information and sources are given below.  They sometimes disagree.
654
655
656France
657
658Gregorian calendar adopted 1582-12-20.
659French Revolutionary calendar used 1793-11-24 through 1805-12-31,
660and (in Paris only) 1871-05-06 through 1871-05-23.
661
662
663Russia
664
665From Chris Carrier (1996-12-02):
666On 1929-10-01 the Soviet Union instituted an "Eternal Calendar"
667with 30-day months plus 5 holidays, with a 5-day week.
668On 1931-12-01 it changed to a 6-day week; in 1934 it reverted to the
669Gregorian calendar while retaining the 6-day week; on 1940-06-27 it
670reverted to the 7-day week.  With the 6-day week the usual days
671off were the 6th, 12th, 18th, 24th and 30th of the month.
672(Source: Evitiar Zerubavel, _The Seven Day Circle_)
673
674
675Mark Brader reported a similar story in "The Book of Calendars", edited
676by Frank Parise (1982, Facts on File, ISBN 0-8719-6467-8), page 377.  But:
677
678From: Petteri Sulonen (via Usenet)
679Date: 14 Jan 1999 00:00:00 GMT
680...
681
682If your source is correct, how come documents between 1929 and 1940 were
683still dated using the conventional, Gregorian calendar?
684
685I can post a scan of a document dated December 1, 1934, signed by
686Yenukidze, the secretary, on behalf of Kalinin, the President of the
687Executive Committee of the Supreme Soviet, if you like.
688
689
690
691Sweden (and Finland)
692
693From: Mark Brader
694Subject: Re: Gregorian reform - a part of locale?
695<news:1996Jul6.012937.29190@sq.com>
696Date: 1996-07-06
697
698In 1700, Denmark made the transition from Julian to Gregorian.  Sweden
699decided to *start* a transition in 1700 as well, but rather than have one of
700those unsightly calendar gaps :-), they simply decreed that the next leap
701year after 1696 would be in 1744 - putting the whole country on a calendar
702different from both Julian and Gregorian for a period of 40 years.
703
704However, in 1704 something went wrong and the plan was not carried through;
705they did, after all, have a leap year that year.  And one in 1708.  In 1712
706they gave it up and went back to Julian, putting 30 days in February that
707year!...
708
709Then in 1753, Sweden made the transition to Gregorian in the usual manner,
710getting there only 13 years behind the original schedule.
711
712(A previous posting of this story was challenged, and Swedish readers
713produced the following references to support it: "Tider��kning och historia"
714by Natanael Beckman (1924) and "Tid, en bok om tider��kning och
715kalenderv��sen" by Lars-Olof Lod��n (1968).
716
717
718Grotefend's data
719
720From: "Michael Palmer" [with one obvious typo fixed]
721Subject: Re: Gregorian Calendar (was Re: Another FHC related question
722Newsgroups: soc.genealogy.german
723Date: Tue, 9 Feb 1999 02:32:48 -800
724...
725
726The following is a(n incomplete) listing, arranged chronologically, of
727European states, with the date they converted from the Julian to the
728Gregorian calendar:
729
73004/15 Oct 1582 - Italy (with exceptions), Spain, Portugal, Poland (Roman
731                 Catholics and Danzig only)
73209/20 Dec 1582 - France, Lorraine
733
73421 Dec 1582/
735   01 Jan 1583 - Holland, Brabant, Flanders, Hennegau
73610/21 Feb 1583 - bishopric of Liege (L��ttich)
73713/24 Feb 1583 - bishopric of Augsburg
73804/15 Oct 1583 - electorate of Trier
73905/16 Oct 1583 - Bavaria, bishoprics of Freising, Eichstedt, Regensburg,
740                 Salzburg, Brixen
74113/24 Oct 1583 - Austrian Oberelsa�� and Breisgau
74220/31 Oct 1583 - bishopric of Basel
74302/13 Nov 1583 - duchy of J��lich-Berg
74402/13 Nov 1583 - electorate and city of K��ln
74504/15 Nov 1583 - bishopric of W��rzburg
74611/22 Nov 1583 - electorate of Mainz
74716/27 Nov 1583 - bishopric of Strassburg and the margraviate of Baden
74817/28 Nov 1583 - bishopric of M��nster and duchy of Cleve
74914/25 Dec 1583 - Steiermark
750
75106/17 Jan 1584 - Austria and Bohemia
75211/22 Jan 1584 - Lucerne, Uri, Schwyz, Zug, Freiburg, Solothurn
75312/23 Jan 1584 - Silesia and the Lausitz
75422 Jan/
755   02 Feb 1584 - Hungary (legally on 21 Oct 1587)
756      Jun 1584 - Unterwalden
75701/12 Jul 1584 - duchy of Westfalen
758
75916/27 Jun 1585 - bishopric of Paderborn
760
76114/25 Dec 1590 - Transylvania
762
76322 Aug/
764   02 Sep 1612 - duchy of Prussia
765
76613/24 Dec 1614 - Pfalz-Neuburg
767
768          1617 - duchy of Kurland (reverted to the Julian calendar in
769                 1796)
770
771          1624 - bishopric of Osnabr��ck
772
773          1630 - bishopric of Minden
774
77515/26 Mar 1631 - bishopric of Hildesheim
776
777          1655 - Kanton Wallis
778
77905/16 Feb 1682 - city of Strassburg
780
78118 Feb/
782   01 Mar 1700 - Protestant Germany (including Swedish possessions in
783                 Germany), Denmark, Norway
78430 Jun/
785   12 Jul 1700 - Gelderland, Zutphen
78610 Nov/
787   12 Dec 1700 - Utrecht, Overijssel
788
78931 Dec 1700/
790   12 Jan 1701 - Friesland, Groningen, Z��rich, Bern, Basel, Geneva,
791                 Turgau, and Schaffhausen
792
793          1724 - Glarus, Appenzell, and the city of St. Gallen
794
79501 Jan 1750    - Pisa and Florence
796
79702/14 Sep 1752 - Great Britain
798
79917 Feb/
800   01 Mar 1753 - Sweden
801
8021760-1812      - Graub��nden
803
804The Russian empire (including Finland and the Baltic states) did not
805convert to the Gregorian calendar until the Soviet revolution of 1917.
806
807Source: H. Grotefend, _Taschenbuch der Zeitrechnung des deutschen
808Mittelalters und der Neuzeit_, herausgegeben von Dr. O. Grotefend
809(Hannover: Hahnsche Buchhandlung, 1941), pp. 26-28.
810
811
812----- Time and time zones on Mars -----
813
814Some people's work schedules use Mars time.  Jet Propulsion Laboratory
815(JPL) coordinators have kept Mars time on and off at least since 1997
816for the Mars Pathfinder mission.  Some of their family members have
817also adapted to Mars time.  Dozens of special Mars watches were built
818for JPL workers who kept Mars time during the Mars Exploration
819Rovers mission (2004).  These timepieces look like normal Seikos and
820Citizens but use Mars seconds rather than terrestrial seconds.
821
822A Mars solar day is called a "sol" and has a mean period equal to
823about 24 hours 39 minutes 35.244 seconds in terrestrial time.  It is
824divided into a conventional 24-hour clock, so each Mars second equals
825about 1.02749125 terrestrial seconds.
826
827The prime meridian of Mars goes through the center of the crater
828Airy-0, named in honor of the British astronomer who built the
829Greenwich telescope that defines Earth's prime meridian.  Mean solar
830time on the Mars prime meridian is called Mars Coordinated Time (MTC).
831
832Each landed mission on Mars has adopted a different reference for
833solar time keeping, so there is no real standard for Mars time zones.
834For example, the Mars Exploration Rover project (2004) defined two
835time zones "Local Solar Time A" and "Local Solar Time B" for its two
836missions, each zone designed so that its time equals local true solar
837time at approximately the middle of the nominal mission.  Such a "time
838zone" is not particularly suited for any application other than the
839mission itself.
840
841Many calendars have been proposed for Mars, but none have achieved
842wide acceptance.  Astronomers often use Mars Sol Date (MSD) which is a
843sequential count of Mars solar days elapsed since about 1873-12-29
84412:00 GMT.
845
846The tz database does not currently support Mars time, but it is
847documented here in the hopes that support will be added eventually.
848
849Sources:
850
851Michael Allison and Robert Schmunk,
852"Technical Notes on Mars Solar Time as Adopted by the Mars24 Sunclock"
853<http://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/mars24/help/notes.html> (2012-08-08).
854
855Jia-Rui Chong, "Workdays Fit for a Martian", Los Angeles Times
856<http://articles.latimes.com/2004/jan/14/science/sci-marstime14>
857(2004-01-14), pp A1, A20-A21.
858
859Tom Chmielewski, "Jet Lag Is Worse on Mars", The Atlantic (2015-02-26)
860<http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2015/02/jet-lag-is-worse-on-mars/386033/>
861
862-----
863
864This file is in the public domain, so clarified as of 2009-05-17 by
865Arthur David Olson.
866
867-----
868Local Variables:
869coding: utf-8
870End:
871