Used '0:00' instead of 'UTC' which doesn't always exist in Oracle.

Thanks Ian Kelly for the suggestion.
This commit is contained in:
Aymeric Augustin 2013-02-13 21:21:30 +01:00
parent 01b6366f3c
commit 4f290bdb60
1 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -161,13 +161,13 @@ WHEN (new.%(col_name)s IS NULL)
# if the time zone name is passed in parameter. Use interpolation instead.
# https://groups.google.com/forum/#!msg/django-developers/zwQju7hbG78/9l934yelwfsJ
# This regexp matches all time zone names from the zoneinfo database.
_tzname_re = re.compile(r'^[\w/+-]+$')
_tzname_re = re.compile(r'^[\w/:+-]+$')
def _convert_field_to_tz(self, field_name, tzname):
if not self._tzname_re.match(tzname):
raise ValueError("Invalid time zone name: %s" % tzname)
# Convert from UTC to local time, returning TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE.
result = "(FROM_TZ(%s, 'UTC') AT TIME ZONE '%s')" % (field_name, tzname)
result = "(FROM_TZ(%s, '0:00') AT TIME ZONE '%s')" % (field_name, tzname)
# Extracting from a TIMESTAMP WITH TIME ZONE ignore the time zone.
# Convert to a DATETIME, which is called DATE by Oracle. There's no
# built-in function to do that; the easiest is to go through a string.