-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
zic.8
568 lines (568 loc) · 15.8 KB
/
zic.8
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
.TH ZIC 8
.SH NAME
zic \- time zone compiler
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B zic
[
.I option
\&... ] [
.I filename
\&... ]
.SH DESCRIPTION
.ie '\(lq'' .ds lq \&"\"
.el .ds lq \(lq\"
.ie '\(rq'' .ds rq \&"\"
.el .ds rq \(rq\"
.de q
\\$3\*(lq\\$1\*(rq\\$2
..
.ie '\(la'' .ds < <
.el .ds < \(la
.ie '\(ra'' .ds > >
.el .ds > \(ra
.ie \n(.g \{\
. ds : \:
. ds - \f(CW-\fP
.\}
.el \{\
. ds :
. el ds - \-
.\}
.I Zic
reads text from the file(s) named on the command line
and creates the time conversion information files specified in this input.
If a
.I filename
is
.q "\*-" ,
the standard input is read.
.PP
These options are available:
.TP
.BI "\*-\*-version"
Output version information and exit.
.TP
.BI "\*-d " directory
Create time conversion information files in the named directory rather than
in the standard directory named below.
.TP
.BI "\*-l " timezone
Use the given time zone as local time.
.I Zic
will act as if the input contained a link line of the form
.sp
.ti +.5i
Link \fItimezone\fP localtime
.TP
.BI "\*-p " timezone
Use the given time zone's rules when handling POSIX-format
time zone environment variables.
.I Zic
will act as if the input contained a link line of the form
.sp
.ti +.5i
Link \fItimezone\fP posixrules
.TP
.BI "\*-L " leapsecondfilename
Read leap second information from the file with the given name.
If this option is not used,
no leap second information appears in output files.
.TP
.B \*-v
Be more verbose, and complain about the following situations:
.RS
.PP
The input specifies a link to a link.
.PP
A year that appears in a data file is outside the range
of years representable by
.IR time (2)
values.
.PP
A time of 24:00 or more appears in the input.
Pre-1998 versions of
.I zic
prohibit 24:00, and pre-2007 versions prohibit times greater than 24:00.
.PP
A rule goes past the start or end of the month.
Pre-2004 versions of
.I zic
prohibit this.
.PP
The output file does not contain all the information about the
long-term future of a zone, because the future cannot be summarized as
an extended POSIX TZ string. For example, as of 2013 this problem
occurs for Iran's daylight-saving rules for the predicted future, as
these rules are based on the Iranian calendar, which cannot be
represented.
.PP
The output contains data that may not be handled properly by client
code designed for older
.I zic
output formats. These compatibility issues affect only time stamps
before 1970 or after the start of 2038.
.PP
A time zone abbreviation has fewer than 3 characters.
POSIX requires at least 3.
.PP
An output file name contains a byte that is not an ASCII letter,
.q "\*-" ,
.q "/" ,
or
.q "_" ;
or it contains a file name component that contains more than 14 bytes
or that starts with
.q "\*-" .
.RE
.TP
.B \*-s
Limit time values stored in output files to values that are the same
whether they're taken to be signed or unsigned.
You can use this option to generate SVVS-compatible files.
.PP
Input files should be text files, that is, they should be a series of
zero or more lines, each ending in a newline byte and containing at
most 511 bytes, and without any NUL bytes. The input text's encoding
is typically UTF-8 or ASCII; it should have a unibyte representation
for the POSIX Portable Character Set (PPCS)
\*<http://pubs\*:.opengroup\*:.org/\*:onlinepubs/\*:9699919799/\*:basedefs/\*:V1_chap06\*:.html\*>
and the encoding's non-unibyte characters should consist entirely of
non-PPCS bytes. Non-PPCS characters typically occur only in comments:
although output file names and time zone abbreviations can contain
nearly any character, other software will work better if these are
limited to the restricted syntax described under the
.B \*-v
option.
.PP
Input lines are made up of fields.
Fields are separated from one another by one or more white space characters.
The white space characters are space, form feed, carriage return, newline,
tab, and vertical tab.
Leading and trailing white space on input lines is ignored.
An unquoted sharp character (#) in the input introduces a comment which extends
to the end of the line the sharp character appears on.
White space characters and sharp characters may be enclosed in double quotes
(") if they're to be used as part of a field.
Any line that is blank (after comment stripping) is ignored.
Non-blank lines are expected to be of one of three types:
rule lines, zone lines, and link lines.
.PP
Names (such as month names) must be in English and are case insensitive.
Abbreviations, if used, must be unambiguous in context.
.PP
A rule line has the form
.nf
.ti +.5i
.ta \w'Rule\0\0'u +\w'NAME\0\0'u +\w'FROM\0\0'u +\w'1973\0\0'u +\w'TYPE\0\0'u +\w'Apr\0\0'u +\w'lastSun\0\0'u +\w'2:00\0\0'u +\w'SAVE\0\0'u
.sp
Rule NAME FROM TO TYPE IN ON AT SAVE LETTER/S
.sp
For example:
.ti +.5i
.sp
Rule US 1967 1973 \*- Apr lastSun 2:00 1:00 D
.sp
.fi
The fields that make up a rule line are:
.TP "\w'LETTER/S'u"
.B NAME
Gives the (arbitrary) name of the set of rules this rule is part of.
.TP
.B FROM
Gives the first year in which the rule applies.
Any integer year can be supplied; the proleptic Gregorian calendar is assumed.
The word
.B minimum
(or an abbreviation) means the minimum year representable as an integer.
The word
.B maximum
(or an abbreviation) means the maximum year representable as an integer.
Rules can describe times that are not representable as time values,
with the unrepresentable times ignored; this allows rules to be portable
among hosts with differing time value types.
.TP
.B TO
Gives the final year in which the rule applies.
In addition to
.B minimum
and
.B maximum
(as above),
the word
.B only
(or an abbreviation)
may be used to repeat the value of the
.B FROM
field.
.TP
.B TYPE
should be
.q \*-
and is present for compatibility with older versions of
.I zic
in which it could contain year types.
.TP
.B IN
Names the month in which the rule takes effect.
Month names may be abbreviated.
.TP
.B ON
Gives the day on which the rule takes effect.
Recognized forms include:
.nf
.in +.5i
.sp
.ta \w'Sun<=25\0\0'u
5 the fifth of the month
lastSun the last Sunday in the month
lastMon the last Monday in the month
Sun>=8 first Sunday on or after the eighth
Sun<=25 last Sunday on or before the 25th
.fi
.in -.5i
.sp
Names of days of the week may be abbreviated or spelled out in full.
Note that there must be no spaces within the
.B ON
field.
.TP
.B AT
Gives the time of day at which the rule takes effect.
Recognized forms include:
.nf
.in +.5i
.sp
.ta \w'1:28:13\0\0'u
2 time in hours
2:00 time in hours and minutes
15:00 24-hour format time (for times after noon)
1:28:14 time in hours, minutes, and seconds
\*- equivalent to 0
.fi
.in -.5i
.sp
where hour 0 is midnight at the start of the day,
and hour 24 is midnight at the end of the day.
Any of these forms may be followed by the letter
.B w
if the given time is local
.q "wall clock"
time,
.B s
if the given time is local
.q "standard"
time, or
.B u
(or
.B g
or
.BR z )
if the given time is universal time;
in the absence of an indicator,
wall clock time is assumed.
The intent is that a rule line describes the instants when a
clock/calendar set to the type of time specified in the
.B AT
field would show the specified date and time of day.
.TP
.B SAVE
Gives the amount of time to be added to local standard time when the rule is in
effect.
This field has the same format as the
.B AT
field
(although, of course, the
.B w
and
.B s
suffixes are not used).
Only the sum of standard time and this amount matters; for example,
.I zic
does not distinguish a 10:30 standard time plus an 0:30
.B SAVE
from a 10:00 standard time plus a 1:00
.BR SAVE .
.TP
.B LETTER/S
Gives the
.q "variable part"
(for example, the
.q "S"
or
.q "D"
in
.q "EST"
or
.q "EDT" )
of time zone abbreviations to be used when this rule is in effect.
If this field is
.q \*- ,
the variable part is null.
.PP
A zone line has the form
.sp
.nf
.ti +.5i
.ta \w'Zone\0\0'u +\w'Australia/Adelaide\0\0'u +\w'GMTOFF\0\0'u +\w'RULES/SAVE\0\0'u +\w'FORMAT\0\0'u
Zone NAME GMTOFF RULES/SAVE FORMAT [UNTILYEAR [MONTH [DAY [TIME]]]]
.sp
For example:
.sp
.ti +.5i
Zone Australia/Adelaide 9:30 Aus AC%sT 1971 Oct 31 2:00
.sp
.fi
The fields that make up a zone line are:
.TP "\w'GMTOFF'u"
.B NAME
The name of the time zone.
This is the name used in creating the time conversion information file for the
zone.
It should not contain a file name component
.q ".\&"
or
.q ".." ;
a file name component is a maximal substring that does not contain
.q "/" .
.TP
.B GMTOFF
The amount of time to add to UT to get standard time in this zone.
This field has the same format as the
.B AT
and
.B SAVE
fields of rule lines;
begin the field with a minus sign if time must be subtracted from UT.
.TP
.B RULES/SAVE
The name of the rule(s) that apply in the time zone or,
alternately, an amount of time to add to local standard time.
If this field is
.B \*-
then standard time always applies in the time zone.
When an amount of time is given, only the sum of standard time and
this amount matters.
.TP
.B FORMAT
The format for time zone abbreviations in this time zone.
The pair of characters
.B %s
is used to show where the
.q "variable part"
of the time zone abbreviation goes.
Alternately, a format can use the pair of characters
.B %z
to stand for the UTC offset in the form
.RI \(+- hh ,
.RI \(+- hhmm ,
or
.RI \(+- hhmmss ,
using the shortest form that does not lose information, where
.IR hh ,
.IR mm ,
and
.I ss
are the hours, minutes, and seconds east (+) or west (\(mi) of UTC.
Alternately,
a slash (/)
separates standard and daylight abbreviations.
To conform to POSIX, a time zone abbreviation should contain only
alphanumeric ASCII characters, "+" and "\*-".
.TP
.B UNTILYEAR [MONTH [DAY [TIME]]]
The time at which the UT offset or the rule(s) change for a location.
It is specified as a year, a month, a day, and a time of day.
If this is specified,
the time zone information is generated from the given UT offset
and rule change until the time specified, which is interpreted using
the rules in effect just before the transition.
The month, day, and time of day have the same format as the IN, ON, and AT
fields of a rule; trailing fields can be omitted, and default to the
earliest possible value for the missing fields.
.IP
The next line must be a
.q "continuation"
line; this has the same form as a zone line except that the
string
.q "Zone"
and the name are omitted, as the continuation line will
place information starting at the time specified as the
.q "until"
information in the previous line in the file used by the previous line.
Continuation lines may contain
.q "until"
information, just as zone lines do, indicating that the next line is a further
continuation.
.PP
If a zone changes at the same instant that a rule would otherwise take
effect in the earlier zone or continuation line, the rule is ignored.
In a single zone it is an error if two rules take effect at the same
instant, or if two zone changes take effect at the same instant.
.PP
A link line has the form
.sp
.nf
.ti +.5i
.ta \w'Link\0\0'u +\w'Europe/Istanbul\0\0'u
Link TARGET LINK-NAME
.sp
For example:
.sp
.ti +.5i
Link Europe/Istanbul Asia/Istanbul
.sp
.fi
The
.B TARGET
field should appear as the
.B NAME
field in some zone line.
The
.B LINK-NAME
field is used as an alternate name for that zone;
it has the same syntax as a zone line's
.B NAME
field.
.PP
Except for continuation lines,
lines may appear in any order in the input.
However, the behavior is unspecified if multiple zone or link lines
define the same name, or if the source of one link line is the target
of another.
.PP
Lines in the file that describes leap seconds have the following form:
.nf
.ti +.5i
.ta \w'Leap\0\0'u +\w'YEAR\0\0'u +\w'MONTH\0\0'u +\w'DAY\0\0'u +\w'HH:MM:SS\0\0'u +\w'CORR\0\0'u
.sp
Leap YEAR MONTH DAY HH:MM:SS CORR R/S
.sp
For example:
.ti +.5i
.sp
Leap 1974 Dec 31 23:59:60 + S
.sp
.fi
The
.BR YEAR ,
.BR MONTH ,
.BR DAY ,
and
.B HH:MM:SS
fields tell when the leap second happened.
The
.B CORR
field
should be
.q "+"
if a second was added
or
.q "\*-"
if a second was skipped.
.\" There's no need to document the following, since it's impossible for more
.\" than one leap second to be inserted or deleted at a time.
.\" The C Standard is in error in suggesting the possibility.
.\" See Terry J Quinn, The BIPM and the accurate measure of time,
.\" Proc IEEE 79, 7 (July 1991), 894-905.
.\" or
.\" .q ++
.\" if two seconds were added
.\" or
.\" .q --
.\" if two seconds were skipped.
The
.B R/S
field
should be (an abbreviation of)
.q "Stationary"
if the leap second time given by the other fields should be interpreted as UTC
or
(an abbreviation of)
.q "Rolling"
if the leap second time given by the other fields should be interpreted as
local wall clock time.
.SH "EXTENDED EXAMPLE"
Here is an extended example of
.I zic
input, intended to illustrate many of its features.
.br
.ne 22
.nf
.in +2m
.ta \w'# Rule\0\0'u +\w'NAME\0\0'u +\w'FROM\0\0'u +\w'1973\0\0'u +\w'TYPE\0\0'u +\w'Apr\0\0'u +\w'lastSun\0\0'u +\w'2:00\0\0'u +\w'SAVE\0\0'u
.sp
# Rule NAME FROM TO TYPE IN ON AT SAVE LETTER/S
Rule Swiss 1941 1942 \*- May Mon>=1 1:00 1:00 S
Rule Swiss 1941 1942 \*- Oct Mon>=1 2:00 0 \*-
.sp .5
Rule EU 1977 1980 \*- Apr Sun>=1 1:00u 1:00 S
Rule EU 1977 only \*- Sep lastSun 1:00u 0 \*-
Rule EU 1978 only \*- Oct 1 1:00u 0 \*-
Rule EU 1979 1995 \*- Sep lastSun 1:00u 0 \*-
Rule EU 1981 max \*- Mar lastSun 1:00u 1:00 S
Rule EU 1996 max \*- Oct lastSun 1:00u 0 \*-
.sp
.ta \w'# Zone\0\0'u +\w'Europe/Zurich\0\0'u +\w'GMTOFF\0\0'u +\w'RULES/SAVE\0\0'u +\w'FORMAT\0\0'u
# Zone NAME GMTOFF RULES/SAVE FORMAT UNTIL
Zone Europe/Zurich 0:34:08 \*- LMT 1853 Jul 16
0:29:46 \*- BMT 1894 Jun
1:00 Swiss CE%sT 1981
1:00 EU CE%sT
.sp
Link Europe/Zurich Switzerland
.sp
.in
.fi
In this example, the zone is named Europe/Zurich but it has an alias
as Switzerland. This example says that Zurich was 34 minutes and 8
seconds west of UT until 1853-07-16 at 00:00, when the legal offset
was changed to 7\(de\|26\(fm\|22.50\(sd; although this works out to
0:29:45.50, the input format cannot represent fractional seconds so it
is rounded here. After 1894-06-01 at 00:00 Swiss daylight saving rules
(defined with lines beginning with "Rule Swiss") apply, and the UT offset
became one hour. From 1981 to the present, EU daylight saving rules have
applied, and the UTC offset has remained at one hour.
.PP
In 1941 and 1942, daylight saving time applied from the first Monday
in May at 01:00 to the first Monday in October at 02:00.
The pre-1981 EU daylight-saving rules have no effect
here, but are included for completeness. Since 1981, daylight
saving has begun on the last Sunday in March at 01:00 UTC.
Until 1995 it ended the last Sunday in September at 01:00 UTC,
but this changed to the last Sunday in October starting in 1996.
.PP
For purposes of
display, "LMT" and "BMT" were initially used, respectively. Since
Swiss rules and later EU rules were applied, the display name for the
time zone has been CET for standard time and CEST for daylight saving
time.
.SH NOTES
For areas with more than two types of local time,
you may need to use local standard time in the
.B AT
field of the earliest transition time's rule to ensure that
the earliest transition time recorded in the compiled file is correct.
.PP
If,
for a particular zone,
a clock advance caused by the start of daylight saving
coincides with and is equal to
a clock retreat caused by a change in UT offset,
.IR zic
produces a single transition to daylight saving at the new UT offset
(without any change in wall clock time).
To get separate transitions
use multiple zone continuation lines
specifying transition instants using universal time.
.PP
Time stamps well before the Big Bang are silently omitted from the output.
This works around bugs in software that mishandles large negative time
stamps. Call it sour grapes, but pre-Big-Bang time stamps are
physically suspect anyway. The pre-Big-Bang cutoff time is
approximate and may change in future versions.
.SH FILE
/usr/local/etc/zoneinfo standard directory used for created files
.SH "SEE ALSO"
newctime(3), tzfile(5), zdump(8)
.\" This file is in the public domain, so clarified as of
.\" 2009-05-17 by Arthur David Olson.