José Soares ha scritto:
> Hi all,
>
> Seems that PostgreSQL checks for leap day only before 1902.
>
> prova=> select date '0001-02-29';
> ERROR: date_in: day must be limited to values 1 through 28 in
> '0001-02-29'
>
> prova=> select date '1701-02-29';
> ERROR: date_in: day must be limited to values 1 through 28 in
> '1701-02-29'
>
> prova=> select date '1901-02-29';
> ERROR: date_in: day must be limited to values 1 through 28 in
> '1901-02-29'
>
> prova=> select date '1902-02-29';
> ?column?
> ----------
> 1902-03-01
> (1 row)
PostgreSQL checks for date validity only for dates less than 1902 and
greater than 2037.
hygea=> select date '1901-04-31';
ERROR: date_in: day must be limited to values 1 through 30 in
'1901-04-31'
hygea=> select date '1902-04-31';
?column?
----------
1902-05-01
(1 row)
hygea=> select date '2037-04-31';
?column?
----------
2037-05-01
(1 row)
hygea=> select date '2038-04-31';
ERROR: date_in: day must be limited to values 1 through 30 in
'2038-04-31'
hygea=>
I looked at ../src/backend/utils/adt/
and I saw things like...
#define MIN_DAYNUM -24856 /* December 13, 1901 */
#define MAX_DAYNUM 24854 /* January 18, 2038 */
/* validate, before going out of range on some members */
if (tm->tm_year < 1901 || tm->tm_year > 2038
#define UTIME_MINYEAR (1901)
#define UTIME_MAXYEAR (2038)
Any body knows what does it mean ?
José