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Yuanjian Li updated SPARK-31030: -------------------------------- Parent: SPARK-26904 Issue Type: Sub-task (was: Improvement) > Backward Compatibility for Parsing and Formatting Datetime > ---------------------------------------------------------- > > Key: SPARK-31030 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SPARK-31030 > Project: Spark > Issue Type: Sub-task > Components: SQL > Affects Versions: 3.0.0 > Reporter: Yuanjian Li > Assignee: Yuanjian Li > Priority: Major > Fix For: 3.0.0 > > Attachments: image-2020-03-04-10-54-05-208.png, > image-2020-03-04-10-54-13-238.png > > > *Background* > In Spark version 2.4 and earlier, datetime parsing, formatting and conversion > are performed by using the hybrid calendar ([Julian + > Gregorian|https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/GregorianCalendar.html]). > > Since the Proleptic Gregorian calendar is de-facto calendar worldwide, as > well as the chosen one in ANSI SQL standard, Spark 3.0 switches to it by > using Java 8 API classes (the java.time packages that are based on [ISO > chronology|https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/time/chrono/IsoChronology.html] > ). > The switching job is completed in SPARK-26651. > > *Problem* > Switching to Java 8 datetime API breaks the backward compatibility of Spark > 2.4 and earlier when parsing datetime. Spark need its own patters definition > on datetime parsing and formatting. > > *Solution* > To avoid unexpected result changes after the underlying datetime API switch, > we propose the following solution. > * Introduce the fallback mechanism: when the Java 8-based parser fails, we > need to detect these behavior differences by falling back to the legacy > parser, and fail with a user-friendly error message to tell users what gets > changed and how to fix the pattern. > * Document the Spark’s datetime patterns: The date-time formatter of Spark > is decoupled with the Java patterns. The Spark’s patterns are mainly based on > the [Java 7’s > pattern|https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html] > (for better backward compatibility) with the customized logic (caused by the > breaking changes between [Java > 7|https://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/text/SimpleDateFormat.html] > and [Java > 8|https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/time/format/DateTimeFormatter.html] > pattern string). Below are the customized rules: > ||Pattern||Java 7||Java 8|| Example||Rule|| > |u|Day number of week (1 = Monday, ..., 7 = Sunday)|Year (Different with y, u > accept a negative value to represent BC, while y should be used together with > G to do the same thing.)|!image-2020-03-04-10-54-05-208.png! |Substitute ‘u’ > to ‘e’ and use Java 8 parser to parse the string. If parsable, return the > result; otherwise, fall back to ‘u’, and then use the legacy Java 7 parser to > parse. When it is successfully parsed, throw an exception and ask users to > change the pattern strings or turn on the legacy mode; otherwise, return NULL > as what Spark 2.4 does.| > | z| General time zone which also accepts > [RFC 822 time zones|#rfc822timezone]]|Only accept time-zone name, e.g. > Pacific Standard Time; PST|!image-2020-03-04-10-54-13-238.png! |The > semantics of ‘z’ are different between Java 7 and Java 8. Here, Spark 3.0 > follows the semantics of Java 8. > Use Java 8 to parse the string. If parsable, return the result; otherwise, > use the legacy Java 7 parser to parse. When it is successfully parsed, throw > an exception and ask users to change the pattern strings or turn on the > legacy mode; otherwise, return NULL as what Spark 2.4 does.| > > > -- This message was sent by Atlassian Jira (v8.3.4#803005) --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: issues-unsubscr...@spark.apache.org For additional commands, e-mail: issues-h...@spark.apache.org