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Bug #10677

closed

Regression: Time#parse no longer automatically converts to localtime

Added by parkr (Parker M) about 9 years ago. Updated about 9 years ago.

Status:
Rejected
Assignee:
Target version:
ruby -v:
ruby 2.2.0p0 (2014-12-25 revision 49005) [x86_64-darwin14]
[ruby-core:67215]

Description

In Ruby 2.1 and before, Time#parse automatically converted to the localtime:

Ruby 2.1:

>> require 'time'
=> true
>> ENV['TZ'] = 'Australia/Melbourne'
=> "Australia/Melbourne"
>> Time.parse("2014-12-29 20:16:32 -0400")
=> 2014-12-30 11:16:32 +1100

But in Ruby 2.2, this is not the case:

>> require 'time'
>> ENV['TZ'] = 'Australia/Melbourne'
>> Time.parse("2014-12-29 20:16:32 -0400")
=> 2014-12-29 20:16:32 -0400 # !!
>> Time.parse("2014-12-29 20:16:32 -0400").localtime
=> 2014-12-30 11:16:32 +1100

This seems to be a regression, as this is a change in default behaviour without a MAJOR version bump, violating semver.

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) about 9 years ago

  • Status changed from Open to Rejected

It's a bug fix.

Updated by parkr (Parker M) about 9 years ago

Ok, thanks Nobuyoshi. Is this documented somewhere? It caused a lot of strife for me, and I don't think I'll be the only one. I wrote a short post about it as I had no clue this was scheduled as a bug fix. I'll update my post with a link to the original bug and the related fixes. Thanks!

Updated by akr (Akira Tanaka) about 9 years ago

This change is intentional to preserve the original information.

Please use localtime method if you need a Time object in your local time.

Updated by parkr (Parker M) about 9 years ago

I hear you, Akira. I am asking for a link to the issue or conversation that tracked this change. I want to know why the change was made in more detail, so I would like to read the discussion.

Updated by akr (Akira Tanaka) about 9 years ago

There is no direct issue.

It is inspired by [Bug #9794].

Updated by binarylogic (Ben Johnson) about 9 years ago

Akira Tanaka wrote:

There is no direct issue.

It is inspired by [Bug #9794].

Can we start a discussion? I'm surprised major changes like this are made without one. I didn't see anything in the changelogs either. This will undoubtedly cause significant problems. I've tried upgrading and came across issues with rails, multiple gems, etc.

Updated by binarylogic (Ben Johnson) about 9 years ago

Akira Tanaka wrote:

There is no direct issue.

It is inspired by [Bug #9794].

I'd also like to add that Parker's post, and the explanation in the bottom half, is spot on ( https://byparker.com/blog/2014/ruby-2-2-0-time-parse-localtime-regression/ ).

I have a strong feeling this is going to be a major problem as people try to move forward. Adding "local" time everywhere you use Time.parse simply is not feasible. This change is also outside of the scope of a "minor" version change for ruby.

Finally, the amount of dependencies a typical ruby project has (gems). There is so much of this behavior we can not control. I can't even think of a backwards compatible patch, as gems start to adopt this new behavior, I'm not sure how we'd distinguish the "before" and "after" gems.

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) about 9 years ago

Ben Johnson wrote:

I have a strong feeling this is going to be a major problem as people try to move forward. Adding "local" time everywhere you use Time.parse simply is not feasible. This change is also outside of the scope of a "minor" version change for ruby.

I strongly disagree.
It's a bug that had ignored a part of the input which should not be ignored, and should be fixed as usual.

Updated by naruse (Yui NARUSE) about 9 years ago

It seems a small issue that no one notice before 2.2.0 released

You may know Ruby sometimes break compatibility to achieve better specs/functions.
For Time class it didn't save its time zone before.
After 1.9 whose time objects can save its timezone, Time methods supports time zone gradually.
This change is considered as a part of them.
see also https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/news/2013/12/21/ruby-version-policy-changes-with-2-1-0/

Of course such changes may cause trouble.
Therefore we provide preview releases and release candidates to test changes.
Since Travis supports such previews, you can test your applications easily.
http://rubies.travis-ci.org/
Heroku also supports preview versions.
You can report if a change is too large.
We may withdraw the change or provide more graceful transition.

Thanks,

Updated by binarylogic (Ben Johnson) about 9 years ago

Thank you for the explanation. I'll continue to debug and see if I can help measure it's impact. I more clearly understand the issue, and agree with the change. Unfortunately, I feel it's going to have a bigger impact than anticipated. If so, we should discuss a backwards compatible method of introducing this change.

Updated by rohandaxini (Rohan Daxini) about 9 years ago

Ben Johnson wrote:

Thank you for the explanation. I'll continue to debug and see if I can help measure it's impact. I more clearly understand the issue, and agree with the change. Unfortunately, I feel it's going to have a bigger impact than anticipated. If so, we should discuss a backwards compatible method of introducing this change.

Something similar happened to me, but we use Time.zone.parse.
Refer the ticket here - https://bugs.ruby-lang.org/issues/10758

Updated by blmlcu (Luca B) about 9 years ago

Yui NARUSE wrote:

After 1.9 whose time objects can save its timezone,

I welcome the change, even if it's backward incompatible.
However, I noticed that although the object is meant to save its own timezone, it does not return it any more:

require 'time'
                                                # 1.9.3 -> 2.1.5 | 2.2.0 and 2.2.1
                                                # ---------------|-----------------
p Time.parse("2014-12-31 20:16:32 -0400").zone  #    "GMT"       |       nil
ENV['TZ'] = "Australia/Melbourne"               #                |
p Time.parse("2014-12-31 20:16:32 -0400").zone  #    "AEDT"      |       nil

It seems to me that to be consistent with the spirit of the change, #zone should still return the same value.
Is this a bug? If not, what is the reason?

Actions #13

Updated by nobu (Nobuyoshi Nakada) about 9 years ago

You don't provide timezone, but offset only.
Try utc_offset.

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