I am saving a timestamp in my MySQL database with the creation time of a record. When fetching it using CodeIgniter (a PHP framework) it shows in UTC while my timezone is UTC+2. I think that timestamps are stored always in UTC, that's ok, but I don't know how to display it in UTC+2. Same CodeIgniter application in local shows in UTC+2, probably because my computer is in UTC+2 while my server is in UTC.
Is it possible to change a timestamp to another timezone using PHP or a CodeIgniter function, without changing the timezone of either my MySQL server or the web server itself? (I am using a shared hosting, that's why changing the timezone is probably not possible).
Thank you!
You can set the MySQL time zone for your session with something like
SET time_zone = 'Europe/Berlin';
If you give this command immediately after you make your MySql connection each time, you'll always see your TIMESTAMP values rendered in your local time. This uses the so-called zoneinfo database, which is kept current with temporopolitical changes.
The list of zone names is here.
You don't have to change MySQL's global time zone setting to do this.
I know that using this query I can set time per session in mysql server
SET SESSION time_zone = '+04:00'
Question is how to detect this +04:00 (it can vary during year because of daylight saving time) part in PHP for my country?
Try using the timezone name (like America/Chicago) instead of +/- a set of hours. This should take into account daylight savings time.
You will need to load zoneinfo into your mysql database if you haven't already.
I will take a guess that perhaps you are in Azerbaijan? If so, you should use the IANA time zone id of Asia/Baku. This time zone alternates between a standard offset of +4:00 and a daylight offset of +5:00.
See "Time Zone != Offset" and "Time Zone Databases" in the timezone tag wiki.
If you need to do this in MySQL, you will need to load the IANA time zone database (aka "zoneinfo") into MySQL using mysql_tzinfo_to_sql. Thanks to datasage and kordirko for this tip.
But often the better approach is to only store UTC times in your database. You can do timezone translations directly in PHP using the DateTime and DateTimeZone classes. PHP also implements the same IANA time zone database, and you can find Asia/Baku on PHP's list of supported time zones.
Open your my.ini file. For windows it is in /mysql/bin/my.ini
Search for the section mysqld.
in this section enter -
default-time-zone = '+00:00'
+00:00 is the offset from GMT. Check out the time-zone-support page for better reference.
SOmewhat related to Doing calculations in MySQL vs PHP
Right now, our database assumes that the system time is in UTC and uses that to calculate NOW(). PHP explicitly sets the timezone as UTC (so its impervious to server time zone shifts).
An accidental shift of timezones on the server messed this relationship up at the database level and i'm now trying to figure out the ideal congiguration:
configure Mysql to be in UTC, but also from the perspective that:
our application may be on someone else's server where they might have a different TZ (so i cant set the timezone at the mysql/server level). How do i configure it at the specific database level?
You should check out UTC_TIMESTAMP(); this ensures that a timestamp field is always UTC in the database. Have your PHP script do the offset from the users browser information. This can also be done using DATE_ADD/DATE_SUB or better CONVERT_TZ().
Have PHP set it before you store it in the database. Have it set to GMT and then calculate when displaying based on the users timezone as needed.
I have gone through many timezone/PHP posts, and most suggest storing your datetime fields in UTC, then using the application users timezone offset when storing and displaying datetime information.
The problem i have I've inherited an application that wasn't timezone aware, and now I need to cater for this.
The server is already set to "EST +11:00 Australia/Melbourne", and there are already applications running from that server. So i can't change this.
Fortunately, I do know a users timezone offset, ie -05:00, etc,.
The application takes Javascript Dates and parses them using PHP's strtotime() function and stores in a MySQL database, like this:
$event_starts = date('Y-m-d H:i:s',
strtotime('Thu Dec 02 2010 11:15:00 GMT+1100 (AUS Eastern Daylight Time)');
So does anyone have any suggestions for the best way on how I can make this application timezone aware considering the server isn't set to UTC?
Many thanks, J.
This is not going to be very easy.
First of all, consider that existing stored dates are in local time of your server, which observes daylight saving time. Any code that has to do anything with these dates except just printing them, now or in the future, will need to convert them to UTC first. If the daylight saving rules are not exactly the same at the point in time where the date was stored and the current time (when the conversion is taking place), your server will use the "current" rules and therefore produce a wrong result. Granted, this scenario may be far-fetched in your specific case (or then again it might not), but it's a very strong warning against storing anything other than UTC.
Assuming that the DST rules remain constant, and that you have PHP >= 5.3.0, you can do this:
Read "original" database date with DateTime::createFromFormat, explicitly specifying the timezone (server's TZ)
Convert to user local time with DateTime::setTimezone (specifying user's TZ)
Display to the user
When receiving user input, you will need to do the reverse:
Create user local time date with with DateTime::createFromFormat, explicitly specifying the timezone (user's TZ)
Convert to server local time with DateTime::setTimezone (specifying server's TZ)
Store in database
Apart from the above, I would suggest taking your application offline at some point and convert all dates in the database to UTC. You would then be rid of the problem discussed earlier (at least in the future, as the past cannot be undone). The "server's TZ" I mention above would then be UTC (regardless of the fact that the actual server may be set to AUS EDT or not, your "working" timezone will be UTC).
You could make use of
1) date_default_timezone_set - Sets the default timezone used by all date/time functions in a script
2) Instead of using this function to set the default timezone in your script, you can also use the INI setting date.timezone to set the default timezone.
The important thing to keep in mind is not UTC, but that all times stored must be standardized to one timezone. So, if your PHP server and your database server both use the same timezone, the only issue that arises is when you need to display a location-aware time to the user or when you allow a user to enter a datetime from another timezone.
PHP has a nice, though somewhat scantly documented class, called DateTime. And some ancillary classes like DateTimeZone, DateInterval, etc. These make converting from db time to user time pretty simple.
So does anyone have any suggestions for the best way on how I can make this application timezone aware considering the server isn't set to UTC?
If you manage to come with any scheme for remapping the timezones its going to be horribly complicated and even more impossible to ever fix properly. Do yourself a favour and get the server timezone to UTC and fix your existing data.
First of allyou have to convert the date time selected by user to timestamp.
You have to use Server time zone offset and save the time to server in GMT.
This is the best way because while displaying the date just add the offset of the user
and convert and show.
I have implemented this for my client as it was an auction site and user may add item from AUS in his time and bidder will be from US. Time zone issues was there and we implemented after a lots of rerence.
You know one thing best and easy way is , do like ebay . just save the user time zone and show time with the time zone. No conversion nothing. Simple and better . 10:35 EST :)
If you wannabe perfect in time zone conversion, think about daylight saving time also. start date and end date on each year will change slightly. If you want to be accurate you have to save the daylight starting and ending date in db and add that difference too .:)
For working with datetime in different timezones and formats you can try to use PHP library Dater (https://github.com/barbushin/dater). Cheers!
I have just realised if I add a particular record to my MySQL database - it will have a date/time of the server and not the particular user and where they are located which means my search function by date is useless! As they will not be able to search by when they have added it in their timezone rather when it was added in the servers timezone.
Is there a way in Codeigniter to globally set time and date specific to a users location (maybe using their IP) and every time I call date() or time() that users timezone is used.
What I am actually asking for is
probably how to make my application
dependent on each users timezone?
Maybe its better to store each users timezone in their profile and have a standard time (servers time) and then convert the time to for each user?
Thanks all
It sounds like what you need to do is store all of the date and times in your system as UTC time (used to be called GMT). This is the base time that everything in the world is calculated off of with adjustments. (eg: Central Time is -6 hours off of UTC)
In MySQL you can use UTC_TIMESTAMP() to get the current UTC time as long as your server and DB are configured with the correct times and timezone settings.
In PHP run this to set the timestamp of PHP to UTC (you will run this in your code so put it on every page or in a centralized index file):
date_default_timezone_set('UTC');
Or you can go directly into PHP.INI and tell it to use UTC time globally. (this may not work if you have multiple websites on a single installation of PHP.
And then anywhere in the system you need to get the current UTC time you can just call:
time();
Then for each user in the system you will need to ask them what timezone they live in and then when you display times make the adjustment for that user. So if it is 5:00PM UTC and I live in Easter US (-5) the time would be 5:00 - 5 hours = 12:00PM.
This can be a long process to get right but once you do your users will find it very useful especially internationally.
I think the easiest way is define a timezone for internal data storage (your server's time zone or UTC) and convert the time according to the user's time zone when outputting it.
I don't know CodeIgniter so I can't point you to the right functions. One prominent library that is timezone aware is Zend_Date: Working with Timezones I have not worked with these functions yet but they look promising.
However, once you know the user's time zone, it's not difficult to put together an own function that adds/substracts the offset when outputting dates and/or times.
Possibly related question:
MySQL: keep server timezone or user timezone?
Take an example of an existing web application such as WordPress and phpBB. Each user have their own timezone setting.
When receiving a content from the user, use local_to_gmt() function in the Date Helper then save the content into database using the gmt date. When fetching the data you will get the time in gmt. Get the user's timezone setting, then display the data in that timezone.
This way, you can save yourself from calculating between two timezone. Just make sure that your server's time is in correct setting, so all your data is in the correct gmt time.
UPDATE:
Recently I review the last project I worked on that have timezone issue. After thinking various scenario, here is the solution for the timezone issue:
All data stored right now already
using server's time. Changing this
will takes times and prone to error,
so I leave it like that.
For the new data from user that set the content date to a certain
date and time, I stored it into 2
column. First column is to store the
data as is, and used to displaying
it as is. Second column will be a
recalculation of the date based on
the user's timezone into server's
timezone. This column is used in the
WHERE statement (filter based on
server date) and for the ORDER
(because this column's value all in
same timezone, which is the server's
timezone).
This way, I only do 1 timezone calculation, which is to convert user date into server date. For displaying , I display the date according to server's datetime. Since all data stored in the same timezone, data can be ordered by the column that hold the server date value.
For the user that have set their timezone, the date from database can be easily recalculated to get the datetime in the user's timezone. Btw, in my application, I display the date using timeago jquery plugins. This plugins need time in the ISO8601 format (UTC time). local_to_gmt() function in CodeIgniter can be used to do this.
Obviously the leap to British Summer Time (Daylight Savings Time) is a big confusion in the world of programming, and I am indeed caught up in that confusion.
The best possible solution I can find (which I will try to coherently explain) when using a timezone sensitive system is this:
The Web Server and Database should both be running off the same machine timezone. I suggest UTC as it is the building blocks of timezone conversions. This will ensure that all of the dates stored in your database are constant, and don't skip any times such as the 1hour jump between Daylight Savings.
At the top of all of your PHP scripts use date_default_timezone_set('Europe/London'); with the specific timezone of the user.
When producing dates from user submitted forms, use gmmktime(); to ensure that the timestamp created is UTC and not altered by the timezone that you have set.
date(); can be used when displaying dates, as this will convert the timestamp to the correct time taking into account the timezone that you have set.
If you do need to show a date in the UTC format then use gmdate(); with the $gm_timestamp that you have taken from the database or created with gmmktime();.
I have written this bit of PHP to help understand the situation.
date_default_timezone_set('UTC');
$gmtime = gmmktime(2,0,0,03,29,2009);
$time = mktime(2,0,0,03,29,2009);
echo $gmtime.'<br />'.date('r',$gmtime).'<br />'.gmdate('r',$gmtime).'<br />';
echo $time.'<br />'.date('r',$time).'<br />'.gmdate('r',$time).'<br />';
date_default_timezone_set('Europe/London');
$gmtime = gmmktime(2,0,0,03,29,2009);
$time = mktime(2,0,0,03,29,2009);
echo $gmtime.'<br />'.date('r',$gmtime).'<br />'.gmdate('r',$gmtime).'<br />';
echo $time.'<br />'.date('r',$time).'<br />'.gmdate('r',$time).'<br />';
Hopefully I've done a good job, but I doubt it because I'm still trying to battle the problem in my head.
UPDATE:
Glad I did this, because I am now having doubts about the user inputted dates.
To get the User inputted date (taking into account their timezone) to match up with the UTC corresponding date in the database, you should put it through mktime(). And then use gmdate('U', $timestamp); to get the true UTC timestamp. (I think)
Example
Looking at it from a reporting side, the user is using the 'Europe/London' timezone. At the start of our PHP script we call date_default_timezone_set('Europe/London');, whilst the Database (and all the records within) is still in UTC.
The user then sends through that they want to select a list of books added to the database between 25/03/2010 10:00 to 30/03/2010 14:00. The PHP script then runs the date variables through mktime($hour, $minute, $second, $month, $day, $year) to generate a correct UTC timestamp. The start date will not change, but PHP knows that the end date is within the BST timezone, so changes the timestamp to UTC accordingly.
When the results are returned back to the user, date('r', $date_added) can be used to show the user the date the book was added to the database according to their set timezone.
This link may help with understanding when it changes. http://www.daylightsavingtime.co.uk/
I think recalculating to user's time is better option, since it gives you normalized time on server, i.e. if you'll need to look up something, that happened (from your point of view) hour ago, you won't have a mess with american, asian and e.g. australian time.
Just ask them for their timezone (usually select with major cities in that timezone) and then recalculate :)
Or, alternatively, you can store two timedates - one for your comparison and one to show, so you won't have so much calculations on serverside.
Also, if recalculating, you can use date helper:
http://ellislab.com/codeigniter/user-guide/helpers/date_helper.html
I've used the MySQL built-in timezone conversion. In the database, all datetimes are stored as UTC. In the select query, I used CONVERT_TZ to convert to the user's timezone. You can specify timezone codes or hour invervals like:
SELECT CONVERT_TZ('2004-01-01 12:00:00','GMT','MET');
SELECT CONVERT_TZ('2004-01-01 12:00:00','+00:00','+10:00');
But, the problem is this does not accommodate for daylight savings times. This is particularly frustrating since many parts of the world either don't honor daylight savings or honor it on different dates. So, if you install the timezone description tables, you can use descriptive names that will account for daylight savings automatically like:
SELECT CONVERT_TZ('2004-01-01 12:00:00', 'UTC', 'US/Eastern');
Codeigniter contains a helper which deals with all manner of date functions.
Codeigniter Date helper
the command gmt_to_local() should help you... the third parameter is for 'daylight_saving'.
Takes a Unix timestamp (referenced to GMT) as input, and converts it to a localized timestamp based on the timezone and Daylight Saving time submitted. Example:
$timestamp = '1140153693';
$timezone = 'UM8';
$daylight_saving = TRUE;
echo gmt_to_local($timestamp, $timezone, $daylight_saving);
Add this line to autoload.php in the application folder/config folder:
$autoload['time_zone'] = date_default_timezone_set('Asia/Kolkata');