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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OPENJPA-2555?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
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Mark Struberg resolved OPENJPA-2555.
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    Resolution: Fixed

> Timestamp precision from manual schema not respected
> ----------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: OPENJPA-2555
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/OPENJPA-2555
>             Project: OpenJPA
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: jdbc, jpa, sql
>    Affects Versions: 2.2.2, 2.3.0
>            Reporter: Ancoron Luciferis
>            Assignee: Mark Struberg
>            Priority: Major
>             Fix For: 3.1.0
>
>         Attachments: 2.2.x-Enable-timestamp-precision-handling.patch, 
> 2.3.x-Enable-timestamp-precision-handling.patch, 
> openjpa-2.2.x-Enhance-timestamp-precision-handling.patch, 
> openjpa-2.3.x-Enhance-timestamp-precision-handling.patch, 
> openjpa-trunk-Enhance-timestamp-precision-handling.patch, 
> timestamp-scale-preserve-default-behavior.patch, 
> trunk-Enable-timestamp-precision-handling.patch
>
>
> The use cases here are the following:
> # JPA entities are to-be-created for an existing database schema which 
> includes several timestamp columns with explicit precision
> # A developer wants to specify timestamp precision inside JPA entities to 
> better specify column data type information for the generated schema
> \\
> In both cases, the result will be that any query executed for a timestamp 
> column that is configured for less than millisecond precision (e.g. deci- or 
> centi-seconds) will fail to find appropriate rows.
> One of the reasons for that is that the precision used for rounding a 
> timestamp value before it goes into a query is configured for a whole 
> database type (using the dictionary) or the whole persistence context (using 
> the configuration parameter).
> This makes it impossible to have different column configurations, e.g. some 
> without any precision declaration (where it's not important) but some with.
> In addition, the default precision for the standard timestamp data type is 6 
> (microseconds), which is not respected by some databases (most prominently 
> MySQL, which defaults to a precision of "0" instead).
> However, even if respected, when using timestamps generated by the database 
> itself, which include the relevant precision, using those values for later 
> comparison often fails because of precision mismatch and also for different 
> behavior of different databases regarding fractional handling and the way how 
> comparisons on timestamps work.



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