Paul Rogers created DRILL-5360:
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             Summary: Timestamp type documented as UTC, implemented as local 
time
                 Key: DRILL-5360
                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DRILL-5360
             Project: Apache Drill
          Issue Type: Bug
    Affects Versions: 1.10.0
            Reporter: Paul Rogers


The Drill documentation implies that the {{Timestamp}} type is in UTC:

bq. JDBC timestamp in year, month, date hour, minute, second, and optional 
milliseconds format: yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss.SSS. ... TIMESTAMP literals: Drill 
stores values in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC). Drill supports time 
functions in the range 1971 to 2037. ... Drill does not support TIMESTAMP with 
time zone.

The above is ambiguous. The first part talks about JDBC timestamps. From the 
JDK Javadoc:

bq. Timestamp: A thin wrapper around java.util.Date. ... Date class is intended 
to reflect coordinated universal time (UTC)...

So, a JDBC timestamp is intended to represent time in UTC. (The "indented to 
reflect" statement leaves open the possibility of misusing {{Date}} to 
represent times in other time zones. This was common practice in early Java 
development and was the reason for the eventual development of the Joda, then 
Java 8 date/time classes.)

The Drill documentation implies that timestamp *literals* are in UTC, but a 
careful read of the documentation does allow an interpretation that the 
internal representation can be other than UTC. If this is true, then we would 
also rely on a liberal reading of the Java `Timestamp` class to also not be 
UTC. (Or, we rely on the Drill JDBC driver to convert from the (unknown) server 
time zone to a UTC value returned by the Drill JDBC client.)

Still, a superficial reading (and common practice) would suggest that a Drill 
Timestamp should be in UTC.

However, a test on a Mac, with an embedded Drillbit (run in the Pacific time 
zone, with Daylight Savings Time in effect) shows that the Timestamp binary 
value is actual local time:

{code}
      long before = System.currentTimeMillis();
      long value = getDateValue(client, "SELECT NOW() FROM (VALUES(1))" );
      double hrsDiff = (value - before) / (1000.00 * 60 * 60);
      System.out.println("Hours: " + hrsDiff);
{code}

The above gets the actual UTC time from Java. Then, it runs a query that gets 
Drill's idea of the current time using the {{NOW()}} function. (The 
{{getDateValue}} function uses the new test framework to access the actual 
{{long}} value from the returned value vector.) Finally, we compute the 
difference between the two times, converted to hours. Output:

{code}
Hours: -6.9999975
{code}

As it turns out, this is the difference between UTC and PDT. So, the time is in 
local time, not UTC.

Since the documentation and implementation are both ambiguous, it is hard to 
know the intent of the Drill Timestamp. Clearly, common practice is to use UTC. 
But, there is wiggle-room.

If the Timestamp value is supposed to be local time, then Drill should provide 
a function to return the server's time zone offset (in ms) from UTC so that the 
client can to the needed local-to-UTC conversion to get a true timestamp.

On the other hand, if the Timestamp is supposed to be UTC (per common 
practice), then {{NOW()}} should not report local time, it should return UTC.

Further, if {{NOW()}} returns local time, but Timestamp literals are UTC, then 
it is hard to see how any query can be rationally written if one timestamp 
value is local, but a literal is UTC.

So, job #1 is to define the Timestamp semantics. Then, use that to figure out 
where the bug lies to make implementation consistent with documentation (or 
visa-versa.)



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