We're upgrading a database from 8.4 to 9.4 The web developer complains that the timestamps are suddenly 2 hours late. We are in GMT+02. The issue would go away if we cast the postgres timestamps to timestamp WITH timezone. It works in pg8.4 and 9.4
He told me that PHP always uses timezones, so i tried to reproduce it without the application layer. Since PHP always uses a timezone, the first part of the query always converts to "with time zone', it is what i presume PHP is doing.
That is the same as assuming and I would verify.
select timestamp with time zone 'epoch' + extract(epoch from now()::timestamp) * interval '1 second'-now(),substr(version(), 12, 3) --> 02:00:00 9.4 --> 00:00:00 8.4
select timestamp with time zone 'epoch' + extract(epoch from now()::timestamp WITH TIME ZONE) * interval '1 second' - now(),substr(version(), 12, 3) --> 00:00:00 9.4 --> 00:00:00 8.4
What does:
show timezone;
return?
Is there a reason for this change of behavior between 8.4 and 9.* ?
Have you looked at what TimeZone is set to in the 8.4 and 9.4 postgresql.conf files?
The method of setting that during initdb changed in 9.2: