tz-link.html revision 1.14
11.1Schristos<!DOCTYPE html> 21.1Schristos<html lang="en"> 31.1Schristos<head> 41.13Schristos<title>Time zone and daylight saving time data</title> 51.1Schristos<meta charset="UTF-8"> 61.2Schristos<style> 71.2Schristospre {margin-left: 2em; white-space: pre-wrap;} 81.2Schristos</style> 91.1Schristos</head> 101.1Schristos<body> 111.13Schristos<h1>Time zone and daylight saving time data</h1> 121.1Schristos<p> 131.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_zone">Time zone</a> and 141.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daylight_saving_time">daylight-saving</a> 151.1Schristosrules are controlled by individual 161.1Schristosgovernments. They are sometimes changed with little notice, and their 171.1Schristoshistories and planned futures are often recorded only fitfully. Here 181.1Schristosis a summary of attempts to organize and record relevant data in this 191.1Schristosarea. 201.1Schristos</p> 211.6Schristos <h3>Outline</h3> 221.6Schristos <nav> 231.6Schristos <ul> 241.6Schristos <li>The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database product and process 251.6Schristos <ul> 261.6Schristos <li><a href="#tzdb">The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a></li> 271.6Schristos <li><a href="#download">Downloading the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a></li> 281.6Schristos <li><a href="#changes">Changes to the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a></li> 291.14Schristos <li><a href="#coordinating">Coordinating with governments and distributors</a></li> 301.6Schristos <li><a href="#commentary">Commentary on the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a></li> 311.6Schristos </ul> 321.6Schristos </li> 331.6Schristos <li>Uses of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database 341.6Schristos <ul> 351.6Schristos <li><a href="#web">Web sites using recent versions of the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</a></li> 361.6Schristos <li><a href="#protocols">Network protocols for <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data</a></li> 371.6Schristos <li><a href="#compilers">Other <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> compilers</a></li> 381.6Schristos <li><a href="#TZif">Other <abbr>TZif</abbr> readers</a></li> 391.6Schristos <li><a href="#software">Other <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code>-based time zone software</a></li> 401.6Schristos </ul> 411.6Schristos </li> 421.6Schristos <li>Related data 431.6Schristos <ul> 441.6Schristos <li><a href="#other-dbs">Other time zone databases</a></li> 451.6Schristos <li><a href="#maps">Maps</a></li> 461.6Schristos <li><a href="#boundaries">Time zone boundaries</a></li> 471.6Schristos </ul> 481.6Schristos </li> 491.6Schristos <li>Timekeeping concepts 501.6Schristos <ul> 511.6Schristos <li><a href="#civil">Civil time concepts and history</a></li> 521.6Schristos <li><a href="#national">National histories of legal time</a></li> 531.7Schristos <li><a href="#costs">Costs and benefits of time shifts</a></li> 541.6Schristos <li><a href="#precision">Precision timekeeping</a></li> 551.6Schristos <li><a href="#notation">Time notation</a></li> 561.6Schristos </ul> 571.6Schristos </li> 581.13Schristos <li><a href="#see-also">See also</a></li> 591.6Schristos </ul> 601.6Schristos </nav> 611.6Schristos 621.6Schristos<section> 631.1Schristos<h2 id="tzdb">The <code><abbr title="time zone">tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 641.1Schristos<p> 651.1SchristosThe <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_domain">public-domain</a> 661.1Schristostime zone database contains code and data 671.1Schristosthat represent the history of local time 681.1Schristosfor many representative locations around the globe. 691.1SchristosIt is updated periodically to reflect changes made by political bodies 701.1Schristosto time zone boundaries and daylight saving rules. 711.1SchristosThis database (known as <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code>, 721.1Schristos<code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code>, or <code>zoneinfo</code>) 731.1Schristosis used by several implementations, 741.1Schristosincluding 751.1Schristos<a href="https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/">the 761.1Schristos<abbr title="GNU's Not Unix">GNU</abbr> 771.1SchristosC Library</a> (used in 781.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux"><abbr>GNU</abbr>/Linux</a>), 791.1Schristos<a href="https://www.android.com">Android</a>, 801.1Schristos<a href="https://www.freebsd.org">Free<abbr 811.1Schristostitle="Berkeley Software Distribution">BSD</abbr></a>, 821.1Schristos<a href="https://netbsd.org">Net<abbr>BSD</abbr></a>, 831.1Schristos<a href="https://www.openbsd.org">Open<abbr>BSD</abbr></a>, 841.13Schristos<a href="https://www.chromium.org/chromium-os/">Chromium OS</a>, 851.1Schristos<a href="https://cygwin.com">Cygwin</a>, 861.7Schristos<a href="https://mariadb.org">MariaDB</a>, 871.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MINIX">MINIX</a>, 881.1Schristos<a href="https://www.mysql.com">MySQL</a>, 891.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebOS"><abbr 901.1Schristostitle="Web Operating System">webOS</abbr></a>, 911.7Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IBM_AIX"><abbr 921.1Schristostitle="Advanced Interactive eXecutive">AIX</abbr></a>, 931.6Schristos<a href="https://www.apple.com/ios"><abbr 941.1Schristostitle="iPhone OS">iOS</abbr></a>, 951.6Schristos<a href="https://www.apple.com/macos">macOS</a>, 961.1Schristos<a href="https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/windows">Microsoft Windows</a>, 971.6Schristos<a href="https://www.vmssoftware.com">Open<abbr 981.1Schristostitle="Virtual Memory System">VMS</abbr></a>, 991.6Schristos<a href="https://www.oracle.com/database/">Oracle Database</a>, and 1001.1Schristos<a href="https://www.oracle.com/solaris">Oracle Solaris</a>.</p> 1011.1Schristos<p> 1021.2SchristosEach main entry in the database represents a <dfn>timezone</dfn> 1031.2Schristosfor a set of civil-time clocks that have all agreed since 1970. 1041.2SchristosTimezones are typically identified by continent or ocean and then by the 1051.2Schristosname of the largest city within the region containing the clocks. 1061.1SchristosFor example, <code>America/New_York</code> 1071.1Schristosrepresents most of the <abbr title="United States">US</abbr> eastern time zone; 1081.1Schristos<code>America/Phoenix</code> represents most of Arizona, which 1091.2Schristosuses mountain time without daylight saving time (<abbr>DST</abbr>); 1101.1Schristos<code>America/Detroit</code> represents most of Michigan, which uses 1111.1Schristoseastern time but with different <abbr>DST</abbr> rules in 1975; 1121.1Schristosand other entries represent smaller regions like Starke County, 1131.1SchristosIndiana, which switched from central to eastern time in 1991 1141.1Schristosand switched back in 2006. 1151.1SchristosTo use the database on an extended <a 1161.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POSIX"><abbr 1171.1Schristostitle="Portable Operating System Interface">POSIX</abbr></a> 1181.1Schristosimplementation set the <code><abbr>TZ</abbr></code> 1191.1Schristosenvironment variable to the location's full name, 1201.1Schristose.g., <code><abbr>TZ</abbr>="America/New_York"</code>.</p> 1211.1Schristos<p> 1221.2SchristosAssociated with each timezone is a history of offsets from 1231.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Time">Universal 1241.1SchristosTime</a> (<abbr>UT</abbr>), which is <a 1251.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greenwich_Mean_Time">Greenwich Mean 1261.1SchristosTime</a> (<abbr>GMT</abbr>) with days beginning at midnight; 1271.2Schristosfor timestamps after 1960 this is more precisely <a 1281.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coordinated_Universal_Time">Coordinated 1291.1SchristosUniversal Time</a> (<abbr>UTC</abbr>). 1301.1SchristosThe database also records when daylight saving time was in use, 1311.1Schristosalong with some time zone abbreviations such as <abbr>EST</abbr> 1321.1Schristosfor Eastern Standard Time in the <abbr>US</abbr>.</p> 1331.6Schristos</section> 1341.6Schristos 1351.6Schristos<section> 1361.1Schristos<h2 id="download">Downloading the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 1371.1Schristos<p> 1381.1SchristosThe following <a 1391.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_shell">shell</a> commands download 1401.1Schristosthe latest release's two 1411.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tar_(computing)">tarballs</a> 1421.1Schristosto a <abbr>GNU</abbr>/Linux or similar host.</p> 1431.2Schristos<pre><code>mkdir tzdb 1441.1Schristoscd tzdb 1451.1Schristos<a href="https://www.gnu.org/software/wget/">wget</a> https://www.iana.org/time-zones/repository/tzcode-latest.tar.gz 1461.1Schristoswget https://www.iana.org/time-zones/repository/tzdata-latest.tar.gz 1471.1Schristos<a href="https://www.gnu.org/software/gzip/">gzip</a> -dc tzcode-latest.tar.gz | <a href="https://www.gnu.org/software/tar/">tar</a> -xf - 1481.1Schristosgzip -dc tzdata-latest.tar.gz | tar -xf - 1491.1Schristos</code></pre> 1501.1Schristos<p>Alternatively, the following shell commands download the same 1511.1Schristosrelease in a single-tarball format containing extra data 1521.1Schristosuseful for regression testing:</p> 1531.2Schristos<pre><code>wget <a href="https://www.iana.org/time-zones/repository/tzdb-latest.tar.lz">https://www.iana.org/time-zones/repository/tzdb-latest.tar.lz</a> 1541.1Schristos<a href="https://www.nongnu.org/lzip/">lzip</a> -dc tzdb-latest.tar.lz | tar -xf - 1551.1Schristos</code></pre> 1561.1Schristos<p>These commands use convenience links to the latest release 1571.1Schristosof the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database hosted by the 1581.1Schristos<a href="https://www.iana.org/time-zones">Time Zone Database website</a> 1591.1Schristosof the <a href="https://www.iana.org">Internet Assigned Numbers 1601.1SchristosAuthority (IANA)</a>. 1611.1SchristosOlder releases are in files named 1621.1Schristos<code>tzcode<var>V</var>.tar.gz</code>, 1631.1Schristos<code>tzdata<var>V</var>.tar.gz</code>, and 1641.1Schristos<code>tzdb-<var>V</var>.tar.lz</code>, 1651.1Schristoswhere <code><var>V</var></code> is the version. 1661.1SchristosSince 1996, each version has been a four-digit year followed by 1671.1Schristoslower-case letter (<samp>a</samp> through <samp>z</samp>, 1681.1Schristosthen <samp>za</samp> through <samp>zz</samp>, then <samp>zza</samp> 1691.1Schristosthrough <samp>zzz</samp>, and so on). 1701.13SchristosSince version 2022a, each release has been distributed in 1711.10Schristos<a href="https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/pax.html#tag_20_92_13_06">POSIX 1721.10Schristosustar interchange format</a>, compressed as described above; 1731.14Schristosolder releases use a nearly compatible format. 1741.1SchristosSince version 2016h, each release has contained a text file named 1751.1Schristos"<samp>version</samp>" whose first (and currently only) line is the version. 1761.7SchristosOlder releases are <a href="https://ftp.iana.org/tz/releases/">archived</a>, 1771.7Schristosand are also available in an 1781.1Schristos<a href="ftp://ftp.iana.org/tz/releases/"><abbr 1791.1Schristostitle="File Transfer Protocol">FTP</abbr> directory</a> via a 1801.14Schristosless secure protocol.</p> 1811.1Schristos<p>Alternatively, a development repository of code and data can be 1821.1Schristosretrieved from <a href="https://github.com">GitHub</a> via the shell 1831.1Schristoscommand:</p> 1841.2Schristos<pre><code><a href="https://git-scm.com">git</a> clone <a href="https://github.com/eggert/tz">https://github.com/eggert/tz</a> 1851.1Schristos</code></pre> 1861.1Schristos<p> 1871.1SchristosSince version 2012e, each release has been tagged in development repositories. 1881.1SchristosUntagged commits are less well tested and probably contain 1891.1Schristosmore errors.</p> 1901.1Schristos<p> 1911.1SchristosAfter obtaining the code and data files, see the 1921.1Schristos<code>README</code> file for what to do next. 1931.1SchristosThe code lets you compile the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source files into 1941.2Schristosmachine-readable binary files, one for each location. The binary files 1951.5Schristosare in a special timezone information format (<dfn><abbr>TZif</abbr></dfn>) 1961.13Schristosspecified by <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/8536">Internet 1971.5Schristos<abbr>RFC</abbr> 8536</a>. 1981.2SchristosThe code also lets 1991.2Schristosyou read a <abbr>TZif</abbr> file and interpret timestamps for that 2001.1Schristoslocation.</p> 2011.6Schristos</section> 2021.6Schristos 2031.6Schristos<section> 2041.1Schristos<h2 id="changes">Changes to the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 2051.1Schristos<p> 2061.1SchristosThe <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data 2071.1Schristosare by no means authoritative. If you find errors, please 2081.1Schristossend changes to <a href="mailto:tz@iana.org"><code>tz@iana.org</code></a>, 2091.1Schristosthe time zone mailing list. You can also <a 2101.1Schristoshref="https://mm.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/tz">subscribe</a> to it 2111.1Schristosand browse the <a 2121.1Schristoshref="https://mm.icann.org/pipermail/tz/">archive of old 2131.5Schristosmessages</a>. 2141.5Schristos<a href="https://tzdata-meta.timtimeonline.com/">Metadata for mailing list 2151.5Schristosdiscussions</a> and corresponding data changes can be 2161.5Schristosgenerated <a href="https://github.com/timparenti/tzdata-meta">automatically</a>. 2171.5Schristos</p> 2181.1Schristos<p> 2191.1SchristosChanges to the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data are often 2201.1Schristospropagated to clients via operating system updates, so 2211.1Schristosclient <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data can often be corrected by 2221.1Schristosapplying these updates. With GNU/Linux and similar systems, if your 2231.1Schristosmaintenance provider has not yet adopted the 2241.1Schristoslatest <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data, you can often short-circuit 2251.1Schristosthe process by tailoring the generic instructions in 2261.1Schristosthe <code><abbr>tz</abbr> README</code> file and installing the latest 2271.1Schristosdata yourself. System-specific instructions for installing the 2281.1Schristoslatest <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data have also been published 2291.11Schristosfor <a href="https://developer.ibm.com/articles/au-aix-olson-time-zone/"><abbr>AIX</abbr></a>, 2301.1Schristos<a 2311.10Schristoshref="https://source.android.com/devices/tech/config/timezone-rules">Android</a>, 2321.1Schristos<a 2331.11Schristoshref="https://unicode-org.github.io/icu/userguide/datetime/timezone/"><abbr 2341.1Schristostitle="International Components for Unicode">ICU</abbr></a>, 2351.11Schristos<a href="https://www.ibm.com/support/pages/java-sdk-time-zone-update-utility"><abbr>IBM</abbr> 2361.9SchristosJDK</a>, 2371.9Schristos<a href="https://www.joda.org/joda-time/tz_update.html">Joda-Time</a>, <a 2381.1Schristoshref="https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/en/time-zone-support.html">MySQL</a>, 2391.9Schristos<a href="https://nodatime.org/userguide/tzdb">Noda Time</a>, and <a 2401.11Schristoshref="https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/tzupdater-readme.html">OpenJDK/Oracle JDK</a>. 2411.1Schristos</p> 2421.12Schristos<p>Since version 2013a, 2431.12Schristossources for the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database have been 2441.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UTF-8"><abbr 2451.1Schristostitle="Unicode Transformation Format 8-bit">UTF-8</abbr></a> 2461.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Text_file">text files</a> 2471.1Schristoswith lines terminated by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newline"><abbr 2481.1Schristostitle="linefeed">LF</abbr></a>, 2491.1Schristoswhich can be modified by common text editors such 2501.1Schristosas <a href="https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/">GNU Emacs</a>, 2511.1Schristos<a href="https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/Gedit">gedit</a>, and 2521.1Schristos<a href="https://www.vim.org">vim</a>. 2531.1SchristosSpecialized source-file editing can be done via the 2541.1Schristos<a href="https://packagecontrol.io/packages/zoneinfo">Sublime 2551.1Schristoszoneinfo</a> package for <a 2561.1Schristoshref="https://www.sublimetext.com">Sublime Text</a> and the <a 2571.1Schristoshref="https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=gilmoreorless.vscode-zoneinfo">VSCode 2581.1Schristoszoneinfo</a> extension for <a href="https://code.visualstudio.com">Visual 2591.1SchristosStudio Code</a>. 2601.1Schristos</p> 2611.1Schristos<p> 2621.1SchristosFor further information about updates, please see 2631.13Schristos<a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc6557">Procedures for 2641.1SchristosMaintaining the Time Zone Database</a> (Internet <abbr 2651.1Schristostitle="Request For Comments">RFC</abbr> 6557). More detail can be 2661.7Schristosfound in <a href="theory.html">Theory and pragmatics of the 2671.7Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data</a>. 2681.2Schristos<a href="https://a0.github.io/a0-tzmigration/">A0 TimeZone Migration</a> 2691.2Schristosdisplays changes between recent <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> versions. 2701.1Schristos</p> 2711.6Schristos</section> 2721.6Schristos 2731.6Schristos<section> 2741.14Schristos<h2 id="coordinating">Coordinating with governments and distributors</h2> 2751.14Schristos<p> 2761.14SchristosAs discussed in 2771.14Schristos"<a href="https://www.icann.org/en/blogs/details/how-time-zones-are-coordinated-13-03-2023-en">How 2781.14SchristosTime Zones Are Coordinated</a>", the time zone database relies on 2791.14Schristoscollaboration among governments, the time zone database volunteer 2801.14Schristoscommunity, and data distributors downstream. 2811.14Schristos<p> 2821.14SchristosIf your government plans to change its time zone boundaries or 2831.14Schristosdaylight saving rules, please send email to <a 2841.14Schristoshref="mailto:tz@iana.org"><code>tz@iana.org</code></a> well in advance, 2851.14Schristosas this will lessen confusion and will coordinate updates to many cell phones, 2861.14Schristoscomputers, and other devices around the world. 2871.14SchristosIn your email, please cite the legislation or regulation that specifies 2881.14Schristosthe change, so that it can be checked for details such as the exact times 2891.14Schristoswhen clock transitions occur. 2901.14SchristosIt is OK if a rule change is planned to affect clocks 2911.14Schristosfar into the future, as a long-planned change can easily be reverted 2921.14Schristosor otherwise altered with a year's notice before the change would have 2931.14Schristosaffected clocks.</p> 2941.14Schristos<p> 2951.14SchristosThere is no fixed schedule for <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> releases. 2961.14SchristosHowever, typically a release occurs every few months. 2971.14SchristosMany downstream timezone data distributors wait for 2981.14Schristosa <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> release before they produce an update 2991.14Schristosto time zone behavior in consumer devices and software products. 3001.14SchristosAfter a release, various parties must integrate, test, 3011.14Schristosand roll out an update before <a 3021.14Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End_user">end users</a> see changes. 3031.14SchristosThese updates can be expensive, for both the <a 3041.14Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quality_assurance">quality 3051.14Schristosassurance</a> process and the overall cost of shipping and installing 3061.14Schristosupdates to each device's copy of <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code>. 3071.14SchristosUpdates may be batched with other updates and may take substantial 3081.14Schristostime to reach end users after a release. 3091.14SchristosOlder devices may no longer be supported and thus may never be updated, 3101.14Schristoswhich means they will continue to use out-of-date rules.</p> 3111.14Schristos<p> 3121.14SchristosFor these reasons any rule change should be promulgated at least a 3131.14Schristosyear before it affects how clocks operate; otherwise, there is a good 3141.14Schristoschance that many clocks will be wrong due to delays in propagating updates, 3151.14Schristosand that residents will be confused or even actively resist the change. 3161.14SchristosThe shorter the notice, the more likely clock problems will arise; see "<a 3171.14Schristoshref="https://codeofmatt.com/2016/04/23/on-the-timing-of-time-zone-changes/">On 3181.14Schristosthe Timing of Time Zone Changes</a>" for examples. 3191.14Schristos</p> 3201.14Schristos</section> 3211.14Schristos 3221.14Schristos<section> 3231.1Schristos<h2 id="commentary">Commentary on the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 3241.1Schristos<ul> 3251.1Schristos<li>The article 3261.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tz_database">tz database</a> is 3271.1Schristosan encyclopedic summary.</li> 3281.1Schristos<li><a href="tz-how-to.html">How to Read the 3291.1Schristostz Database Source Files</a> explains the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 3301.1Schristosdatabase format.</li> 3311.1Schristos<li><a 3321.1Schristoshref="https://blog.jonudell.net/2009/10/23/a-literary-appreciation-of-the-olsonzoneinfotz-database/">A 3331.1Schristosliterary appreciation of the Olson/Zoneinfo/tz database</a> comments on the 3341.1Schristosdatabase's style.</li> 3351.10Schristos<li><a href="https://doi.org/10.1145/3340301.3341125">What time is it: 3361.10Schristosmanaging time in the internet</a> analyzes the database longitudinally.</li> 3371.1Schristos</ul> 3381.6Schristos</section> 3391.6Schristos 3401.6Schristos<section> 3411.1Schristos<h2 id="web">Web sites using recent versions of the 3421.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database</h2> 3431.1Schristos<p> 3441.1SchristosThese are listed roughly in ascending order of complexity and fanciness. 3451.1Schristos</p> 3461.1Schristos<ul> 3471.1Schristos<li><a href="https://time.is">Time.is</a> shows locations' 3481.1Schristostime and zones.</li> 3491.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.timejones.com">TimeJones.com</a>, 3501.1Schristos<a href="https://timezoneconverterapp.com">Time Zone Converter</a> and 3511.7Schristos<a href="https://www.worldclock.com">The World Clock</a> 3521.1Schristosare time zone converters.</li> 3531.8Schristos<li><a href="https://timezonedb.com/download">TimeZoneDB Database</a> 3541.8Schristospublishes <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code>-derived data in 3551.8Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comma-separated_values"><abbr 3561.8Schristostitle="comma-separated values">CSV</abbr></a> and 3571.8Schristosin <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL"><abbr 3581.8Schristostitle="Structured Query Language">SQL</abbr></a> form.</li> 3591.1Schristos<li><a 3601.6Schristoshref="https://twiki.org/cgi-bin/xtra/tzdatepick.html">Date and Time Gateway</a> 3611.1Schristoslets you see the <code><abbr>TZ</abbr></code> values directly.</li> 3621.1Schristos<li><a 3631.13Schristoshref="https://www.convertit.com/Go/ConvertIt/World_Time/Current_Time.ASP">Current 3641.1SchristosTime in 1000 Places</a> uses descriptions of the values.</li> 3651.7Schristos<li><a href="https://home.kpn.nl/vanadovv/time/TZworld.html">Complete 3661.10Schristostimezone information for all countries</a> 3671.10Schristosdisplays tables of <abbr>DST</abbr> rules. 3681.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.timeanddate.com/worldclock/">The World Clock – 3691.1SchristosWorldwide</a> lets you sort zone names and convert times.</li> 3701.1Schristos<li><a href="https://24timezones.com">24TimeZones</a> has a world 3711.1Schristostime map and a time converter.</li> 3721.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.zeitverschiebung.net/en/">Time Difference</a> 3731.1Schristoscalculates the current time difference between locations.</li> 3741.13Schristos<li><a href="https://www.wx-now.com">Weather Now</a> and 3751.13Schristos<a href="https://www.thetimenow.com">The Time Now</a> list the weather too.</li> 3761.1Schristos</ul> 3771.6Schristos</section> 3781.6Schristos 3791.6Schristos<section> 3801.1Schristos<h2 id="protocols">Network protocols for <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data</h2> 3811.1Schristos<ul> 3821.1Schristos<li>The <a href="https://www.ietf.org">Internet Engineering Task Force</a>'s 3831.1Schristos<a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/tzdist/charter/">Time Zone Data 3841.1SchristosDistribution Service (tzdist) working group</a> defined <a 3851.13Schristoshref="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7808">TZDIST</a> 3861.1Schristos(Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 7808), a time zone data distribution service, 3871.13Schristosalong with <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7809">CalDAV</a> 3881.1Schristos(Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 7809), a calendar access protocol for 3891.2Schristostransferring time zone data by reference. 3901.8Schristos<a href="https://devguide.calconnect.org/Time-Zones/TZDS/">TZDIST 3911.8Schristosimplementations</a> are available. 3921.2SchristosThe <a href="https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/tzdist-bis">tzdist-bis 3931.9Schristosmailing list</a> discusses possible extensions.</li> 3941.13Schristos<li>The <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5545"> 3951.1SchristosInternet Calendaring and Scheduling Core Object Specification 3961.1Schristos(iCalendar)</a> (Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 5445) 3971.1Schristoscovers time zone 3981.1Schristosdata; see its VTIMEZONE calendar component. 3991.1SchristosThe iCalendar format requires specialized parsers and generators; a 4001.13Schristosvariant <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc6321">xCal</a> 4011.1Schristos(Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 6321) uses 4021.1Schristos<a href="https://www.w3.org/XML/"><abbr 4031.1Schristostitle="Extensible Markup Language">XML</abbr></a> format, and a variant 4041.13Schristos<a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc7265">jCal</a> 4051.1Schristos(Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 7265) 4061.1Schristosuses <a href="https://www.json.org"><abbr 4071.1Schristostitle="JavaScript Object Notation">JSON</abbr></a> format.</li> 4081.1Schristos</ul> 4091.6Schristos</section> 4101.6Schristos 4111.6Schristos<section> 4121.1Schristos<h2 id="compilers">Other <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> compilers</h2> 4131.7Schristos<p>Although some of these do not fully support 4141.7Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data, in recent <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> 4151.7Schristosdistributions you can generally work around compatibility problems by 4161.7Schristosrunning the command <code>make rearguard_tarballs</code> and compiling 4171.7Schristosfrom the resulting tarballs instead.</p> 4181.1Schristos<ul> 4191.1Schristos<li><a href="https://sourceforge.net/projects/vzic/">Vzic</a> is a <a 4201.14Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_(programming_language)">C</a> 4211.1Schristosprogram that compiles 4221.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into iCalendar-compatible VTIMEZONE files. 4231.1SchristosVzic is freely 4241.1Schristosavailable under the <a 4251.1Schristoshref="https://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html"><abbr>GNU</abbr> 4261.1SchristosGeneral Public License (<abbr 4271.1Schristostitle="General Public License">GPL</abbr>)</a>.</li> 4281.1Schristos<li><a href="https://sourceforge.net/projects/tzical/">tziCal – tz 4291.1Schristosdatabase conversion utility</a> is like Vzic, except for the <a 4301.6Schristoshref="https://dotnet.microsoft.com">.NET framework</a> 4311.1Schristosand with a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license.</li> 4321.1Schristos<li><a 4331.4Schristoshref="https://metacpan.org/release/DateTime-TimeZone">DateTime::TimeZone</a> 4341.1Schristoscontains a script <code>parse_olson</code> that compiles 4351.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into <a href="https://www.perl.org">Perl</a> 4361.1Schristosmodules. It is part of the Perl <a 4371.4Schristoshref="https://github.com/houseabsolute/DateTime.pm/wiki">DateTime Project</a>, 4381.4Schristoswhich is freely 4391.1Schristosavailable under both the <abbr>GPL</abbr> and the Perl Artistic 4401.1SchristosLicense. DateTime::TimeZone also contains a script 4411.1Schristos<code>tests_from_zdump</code> that generates test cases for each clock 4421.1Schristostransition in the <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database.</li> 4431.1Schristos<li>The <a href="https://howardhinnant.github.io/date/tz.html">Time Zone 4441.1SchristosDatabase Parser</a> is a 4451.14Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C++">C++</a> parser and 4461.9Schristosruntime library with <a 4471.13Schristoshref="https://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2018/p0355r7.html">API</a> 4481.9Schristosadopted by 4491.6Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C++20">C++20</a>, 4501.9Schristosthe current iteration of the C++ standard. 4511.1SchristosIt is freely available under the 4521.1Schristos<abbr title="Massachusetts Institute of Technology">MIT</abbr> license.</li> 4531.13Schristos<li><a id="ICU" href="https://icu.unicode.org">International Components for 4541.1SchristosUnicode (<abbr>ICU</abbr>)</a> contains C/C++ and <a 4551.14Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_(programming_language)">Java</a> 4561.1Schristoslibraries for internationalization that 4571.1Schristoshas a compiler from <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source 4581.1Schristosand from <abbr title="Common Locale Data Repository">CLDR</abbr> data 4591.1Schristos(mentioned <a href="#CLDR">below</a>) 4601.1Schristosinto an <abbr>ICU</abbr>-specific format. 4611.1Schristos<abbr>ICU</abbr> is freely available under a 4621.1Schristos<abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license.</li> 4631.1Schristos<li>The <a href="https://github.com/lau/tzdata">Tzdata</a> package for 4641.1Schristosthe <a href="https://elixir-lang.org">Elixir</a> language downloads 4651.7Schristosand compiles <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source and exposes <abbr 4661.1Schristostitle="Application Program Interface">API</abbr>s for use. It is 4671.1Schristosfreely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 4681.1Schristos<li>Java-based compilers and libraries include: 4691.1Schristos<ul> 4701.1Schristos<li>The <a 4711.9Schristoshref="https://www.oracle.com/java/technologies/javase/tzupdater-readme.html">TZUpdater 4721.1Schristostool</a> compiles <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into the format used by 4731.9Schristos<a href="https://openjdk.java.net/">OpenJDK</a> and 4741.9Schristos<a href="https://jdk.java.net/">Oracle JDK</a>. 4751.9SchristosAlthough its source code is proprietary, its executable is available under the 4761.9Schristos<a href="https://www.oracle.com/a/tech/docs/tzupdater-lic.html">Java SE 4771.9SchristosTimezone Updater License Agreement</a>.</li> 4781.1Schristos<li>The <a 4791.4Schristoshref="https://www.oracle.com/technetwork/articles/java/jf14-date-time-2125367.html">Java 4801.6SchristosSE 8 Date and Time</a> <abbr>API</abbr> can be supplemented by <a 4811.4Schristoshref="https://www.threeten.org/threeten-extra/">ThreeTen-Extra</a>, 4821.1Schristoswhich is freely available under a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license.</li> 4831.4Schristos<li><a href="https://www.joda.org/joda-time/">Joda-Time – Java date 4841.1Schristosand time <abbr>API</abbr></a> contains a class 4851.1Schristos<code>org.joda.time.tz.ZoneInfoCompiler</code> that compiles 4861.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into a binary format. It inspired 4871.1SchristosJava 8 <code>java.time</code>, which its users should migrate to once 4881.1Schristosthey can assume Java 8 or later. It is available under the <a 4891.1Schristoshref="https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0">Apache License</a>.</li> 4901.9Schristos<li><a href="https://bell-sw.com/pages/iana-updater/">IANA Updater</a> and <a 4911.7Schristoshref="https://www.azul.com/products/open-source-tools/ziupdater-time-zone-tool/">ZIUpdater</a> 4921.9Schristosare alternatives to TZUpdater. IANA Updater's license is unclear; 4931.9SchristosZIUpdater is licensed under the <abbr>GPL</abbr>.</li> 4941.4Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/MenoData/Time4A">Time4A: Advanced date and 4951.4Schristostime library for Android</a> and 4961.4Schristos<a href="https://github.com/MenoData/Time4J/">Time4J: Advanced date, 4971.4Schristostime and interval library for Java</a> compile 4981.4Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into a binary format. 4991.4SchristosTime4A is available under the Apache License and Time4J is 5001.1Schristosavailable under the <a 5011.1Schristoshref="https://www.gnu.org/copyleft/lesser.html"><abbr>GNU</abbr> Lesser 5021.1SchristosGeneral Public License (<abbr title="Lesser General Public 5031.1SchristosLicense">LGPL</abbr>)</a>.</li> 5041.1Schristos<li><abbr>ICU</abbr> (mentioned <a href="#ICU">above</a>) contains compilers and 5051.1SchristosJava-based libraries.</li> 5061.1Schristos</ul> 5071.1Schristos<li><a href="https://nodatime.org">Noda Time – Date and 5081.1Schristostime <abbr>API</abbr> for .NET</a> 5091.4Schristosis like Joda-Time and Time4J, but for the .NET framework instead of Java. 5101.4SchristosIt is freely available under the Apache License.</li> 5111.8Schristos<li>Many modern 5121.8Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JavaScript">JavaScript</a> 5131.8Schristosruntimes support <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> natively via the 5141.8Schristos<samp>timeZone</samp> option of <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Intl/DateTimeFormat"><samp>Intl.DateTimeFormat</samp></a>. 5151.10SchristosThis can be used as-is or with most of the following libraries, 5161.10Schristosmany of which also support runtimes lacking the <samp>timeZone</samp> option. 5171.1Schristos<ul> 5181.8Schristos<li>The <a 5191.8Schristoshref="https://github.com/formatjs/date-time-format-timezone"><samp>Intl.DateTimeFormat</samp> 5201.8Schristostimezone polyfill</a> 5211.8Schristosis freely available under a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license.</li> 5221.10Schristos<li>The <a href="https://date-fns.org/">date-fns</a> 5231.10Schristoslibrary manipulates timezone-aware timestamps in browsers and 5241.10Schristosin <a href="https://nodejs.org/en/">Node.js</a>. 5251.10SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5261.10Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/iamkun/dayjs">Day.js</a> is a 5271.10Schristosminimalist replacement for the date and time API of 5281.10Schristosthe <a href="https://momentjs.com/docs/">now-legacy Moment.js</a> date 5291.10Schristosmanipulation library. 5301.10SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5311.10Schristos<li><a href="https://moment.github.io/luxon/">Luxon</a> improves 5321.10Schristostimezone support for the <samp>Intl</samp> API. 5331.10SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5341.1Schristos<li><a href="https://momentjs.com/timezone/">Moment Timezone</a> is a 5351.10SchristosMoment.js plugin. 5361.10SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5371.8Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/bigeasy/timezone">Timezone</a> is a 5381.8SchristosJavaScript library that supports date arithmetic that is time zone 5391.8Schristosaware. It is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5401.10Schristos<li><a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@tubular/time">@tubular/time</a> 5411.10Schristossupports live <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> updates, 5421.10Schristosastronomical and atomic time, a command-line interface, 5431.10Schristosand full <a 5441.10Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TypeScript">TypeScript</a>. 5451.10SchristosIts companion <a 5461.10Schristoshref="https://www.npmjs.com/package/@tubular/time-tzdb">@tubular/time-tzdb</a> 5471.10Schristoscan generate <abbr>TZif</abbr> and other files, and a companion website 5481.10Schristos<a href="https://tzexplorer.org">Timezone Database Explorer</a> lets you 5491.10Schristosconvert timestamps, view transition histories, and download code and data. 5501.10SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5511.1Schristos</ul> 5521.10SchristosThe proposed <a 5531.10Schristoshref="https://github.com/tc39/proposal-temporal"><samp>Temporal</samp> 5541.10Schristosobjects</a> let programs access an abstract view of 5551.10Schristos<code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> data, and are designed to replace <a 5561.10Schristoshref="https://codeofmatt.com/javascript-date-type-is-horribly-broken/">JavaScript's 5571.10Schristosproblematic <samp>Date</samp> objects</a> when working with dates and times. 5581.1Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/JuliaTime/">JuliaTime</a> contains a 5591.1Schristoscompiler from <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into 5601.1Schristos<a href="https://julialang.org/">Julia</a>. It is freely available 5611.1Schristosunder the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5621.6Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/pavkam/tzdb"><abbr>TZDB</abbr> – 5631.6Schristos<abbr>IANA</abbr> Time Zone Database for Delphi/<abbr 5641.6Schristostitle="Free Pascal Compiler">FPC</abbr></a> 5651.2Schristoscompiles from <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into 5661.2Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_Pascal">Object Pascal</a> 5671.2Schristosas compiled by <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Delphi_(IDE)">Delphi</a> 5681.2Schristosand <a 5691.2Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_Pascal"><abbr>FPC</abbr></a>. 5701.2SchristosIt is freely available under a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license.</li> 5711.1Schristos<li><a href="http://pytz.sourceforge.net">pytz – World Timezone 5721.1SchristosDefinitions for Python</a> compiles <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into 5731.1Schristos<a href="https://www.python.org">Python</a>. 5741.9SchristosIt is freely available under a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license. 5751.11SchristosIn code that can assume Python 3.6 or later it is largely superseded; see <a 5761.11Schristoshref="https://blog.ganssle.io/articles/2018/03/pytz-fastest-footgun.html">pytz: 5771.11SchristosThe Fastest Footgun in the West</a>.</li> 5781.1Schristos<li><a href="https://tzinfo.github.io">TZInfo – 5791.1SchristosRuby Timezone Library</a> 5801.1Schristoscompiles <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into 5811.1Schristos<a href="https://www.ruby-lang.org/en/">Ruby</a>. 5821.1SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 5831.13Schristos<li>The <a href="https://www.squeaksource.com/Chronos/">Chronos Date/Time 5841.1SchristosLibrary</a> is 5851.1Schristosa <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smalltalk">Smalltalk</a> class 5861.1Schristoslibrary that compiles <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> source into a time 5871.1Schristoszone repository whose format 5881.1Schristosis either proprietary or an <abbr>XML</abbr>-encoded 5891.1Schristosrepresentation.</li> 5901.1Schristos<li><a id="Tcl" href="https://tcl.tk">Tcl</a> 5911.1Schristoscontains a developer-oriented parser that compiles <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 5921.1Schristossource into text files, along with a runtime that can read those 5931.1Schristosfiles. Tcl is freely available under a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style 5941.1Schristoslicense.</li> 5951.1Schristos</ul> 5961.6Schristos</section> 5971.6Schristos 5981.6Schristos<section> 5991.2Schristos<h2 id="TZif">Other <abbr>TZif</abbr> readers</h2> 6001.1Schristos<ul> 6011.1Schristos<li>The <a 6021.1Schristoshref="https://www.gnu.org/software/libc/"><abbr>GNU</abbr> C 6031.1SchristosLibrary</a> 6041.1Schristoshas an independent, thread-safe implementation of 6051.2Schristosa <abbr>TZif</abbr> file reader. 6061.1SchristosThis library is freely available under the LGPL 6071.1Schristosand is widely used in <abbr>GNU</abbr>/Linux systems.</li> 6081.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.gnome.org">GNOME</a>'s 6091.1Schristos<a href="https://developer.gnome.org/glib/">GLib</a> has 6101.2Schristosa <abbr>TZif</abbr> file reader written in C that 6111.1Schristoscreates a <code>GTimeZone</code> object representing sets 6121.1Schristosof <abbr>UT</abbr> offsets. 6131.1SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>LGPL</abbr>.</li> 6141.1Schristos<li>The 6151.1Schristos<a href="https://github.com/bloomberg/bde/wiki">BDE Standard Library</a>'s 6161.1Schristos<code>baltzo::TimeZoneUtil</code> component contains a C++ 6171.2Schristosimplementation of a <abbr>TZif</abbr> file reader. It is freely available under 6181.1Schristosthe Apache License.</li> 6191.1Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/google/cctz">CCTZ</a> is a simple C++ 6201.1Schristoslibrary that translates between <abbr>UT</abbr> and civil time and 6211.2Schristoscan read <abbr>TZif</abbr> files. It is freely available under the Apache 6221.1SchristosLicense.</li> 6231.1Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/derickr/timelib">Timelib</a> is a C 6241.2Schristoslibrary that reads <abbr>TZif</abbr> files and converts 6251.2Schristostimestamps from one time zone or format to another. 6261.1SchristosIt is used by <a href="https://secure.php.net"><abbr 6271.1Schristostitle="PHP: Hypertext Preprocessor">PHP</abbr></a>, 6281.1Schristos<a href="https://hhvm.com"><abbr title="HipHop Virtual Machine">HHVM</abbr></a>, 6291.1Schristosand <a href="https://www.mongodb.com">MongoDB</a>. 6301.1SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 6311.1Schristos<li>Tcl, mentioned <a href="#Tcl">above</a>, also contains a 6321.2Schristos<abbr>TZif</abbr> file reader.</li> 6331.4Schristos<li><a href="https://metacpan.org/pod/DateTime::TimeZone::Tzfile"> 6341.1SchristosDateTime::TimeZone::Tzfile</a> 6351.2Schristosis a <abbr>TZif</abbr> file reader written in Perl. 6361.1SchristosIt is freely available under the same terms as Perl 6371.1Schristos(dual <abbr>GPL</abbr> and Artistic license).</li> 6381.9Schristos<li>Python has a <a id="python-zoneinfo" 6391.11Schristoshref="https://docs.python.org/3/library/zoneinfo.html"><code>zoneinfo.ZoneInfo</code> 6401.8Schristosclass</a> that reads <abbr>TZif</abbr> data and creates objects 6411.8Schristosthat represent <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> timezones. 6421.8SchristosPython is freely available under the 6431.11Schristos<a href="https://docs.python.org/3/license.html">Python Software Foundation 6441.8SchristosLicense</a>. 6451.9SchristosA companion <a id="pypi-tzdata" href="https://pypi.org/">PyPI</a> module 6461.8Schristos<a href="https://pypi.org/project/tzdata/"><code>tzdata</code></a> 6471.8Schristossupplies TZif data if the underlying system data cannot be found; 6481.8Schristosit is freely available under the Apache License.</li> 6491.1Schristos<li>The 6501.1Schristospublic-domain <a href="https://github.com/dbaron/tz.js">tz.js</a> 6511.1Schristoslibrary contains a Python tool that 6521.2Schristosconverts <abbr>TZif</abbr> data into 6531.1Schristos<abbr>JSON</abbr>-format data suitable for use 6541.1Schristosin its JavaScript library for time zone conversion. Dates before 1970 6551.1Schristosare not supported.</li> 6561.1Schristos<li>The <a 6571.1Schristoshref="https://hackage.haskell.org/package/timezone-olson">timezone-olson</a> 6581.1Schristospackage contains <a href="https://www.haskell.org">Haskell</a> code that 6591.2Schristosparses and uses <abbr>TZif</abbr> data. It is freely 6601.1Schristosavailable under a <abbr>BSD</abbr>-style license.</li> 6611.1Schristos</ul> 6621.6Schristos</section> 6631.6Schristos 6641.6Schristos<section> 6651.1Schristos<h2 id="software">Other <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code>-based time zone software</h2> 6661.1Schristos<ul> 6671.1Schristos<li><a href="https://foxclocks.org">FoxClocks</a> 6681.1Schristosis an extension for <a href="https://www.google.com/chrome/">Google 6691.1SchristosChrome</a> and for <a 6701.11Schristoshref="https://wiki.mozilla.org/Modules/Toolkit">Mozilla 6711.1SchristosToolkit</a> applications like <a 6721.1Schristoshref="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/new/">Firefox</a> and <a 6731.1Schristoshref="https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/thunderbird/">Thunderbird</a>. 6741.1SchristosIt displays multiple clocks in the application window, and has a mapping 6751.1Schristosinterface to <a href="https://www.google.com/earth/">Google Earth</a>. 6761.1SchristosIt is freely available under the <abbr>GPL</abbr>.</li> 6771.1Schristos<li><a href="https://golang.org">Go programming language</a> 6781.1Schristosimplementations contain a copy of a 32-bit subset of a recent 6791.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database in a 6801.1SchristosGo-specific format.</li> 6811.1Schristos<li>Microsoft Windows 8.1 6821.1Schristosand later has <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data and <abbr>CLDR</abbr> 6831.3Schristosdata (mentioned <a href="#CLDR">below</a>) used by the 6841.3Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Runtime">Windows Runtime</a> / 6851.3Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_Windows_Platform">Universal Windows Platform</a> classes 6861.3Schristos<a href="https://docs.microsoft.com/uwp/api/Windows.Globalization.DateTimeFormatting.DateTimeFormatter"><code>DateTimeFormatter</code></a> and 6871.3Schristos<a href="https://docs.microsoft.com/uwp/api/windows.globalization.calendar"><code>Calendar</code></a>. 6881.1Schristos<a id="System.TimeZoneInfo" 6891.1Schristoshref="https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/bclteam/2007/06/07/exploring-windows-time-zones-with-system-timezoneinfo-josh-free/">Exploring 6901.1SchristosWindows Time Zones with <code>System.TimeZoneInfo</code></a> describes 6911.1Schristosthe older, proprietary method of Microsoft Windows 2000 and later, 6921.1Schristoswhich stores time zone data in the 6931.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Registry">Windows Registry</a>. The 6941.1Schristos<a 6951.1Schristoshref="https://unicode.org/cldr/charts/latest/supplemental/zone_tzid.html">Zone → 6961.1SchristosTzid table</a> or <a 6971.6Schristoshref="https://github.com/unicode-org/cldr/blob/master/common/supplemental/windowsZones.xml"><abbr>XML</abbr> 6981.1Schristosfile</a> of the <abbr>CLDR</abbr> data maps proprietary zone IDs 6991.1Schristosto <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> names. 7001.3SchristosThese mappings can be performed programmatically via the <a href="https://github.com/mj1856/TimeZoneConverter">TimeZoneConverter</a> .NET library, 7011.3Schristosor the ICU Java and C++ libraries mentioned <a href="#ICU">above</a>. 7021.1Schristos<li><a 7031.1Schristoshref="https://www.oracle.com/java/index.html">Oracle 7041.1SchristosJava</a> contains a copy of a subset of a recent 7051.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database in a 7061.1SchristosJava-specific format.</li> 7071.1Schristos</ul> 7081.6Schristos</section> 7091.6Schristos 7101.6Schristos<section> 7111.1Schristos<h2 id="other-dbs">Other time zone databases</h2> 7121.1Schristos<ul> 7131.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.astro.com/atlas">Time-zone Atlas</a> 7141.4Schristosis Astrodienst's Web version of Shanks and Pottenger's out-of-print 7151.4Schristostime zone history atlases 7161.4Schristos<a href="https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/468828649">for the US</a> and 7171.9Schristos<a href="https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/76950459">for the world</a>. 7181.4SchristosAlthough these extensive atlases 7191.4Schristos<a href="https://astrologynewsservice.com/opinion/how-astrologers-contributed-to-the-information-age-a-brief-history-of-time/">were 7201.4Schristossources for much of the older <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> data</a>, 7211.4Schristosthey are unreliable as Shanks appears to have 7221.1Schristosguessed many <abbr>UT</abbr> offsets and transitions. The atlases cite no 7231.1Schristossources and do not indicate which entries are guesswork.</li> 7241.1Schristos<li><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP-UX">HP-UX</a> has a database in 7251.1Schristosits own <code>tztab</code>(4) format.</li> 7261.1Schristos<li>Microsoft Windows has proprietary data mentioned 7271.1Schristos<a href="#System.TimeZoneInfo">above</a>.</li> 7281.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.worldtimeserver.com">World Time Server</a> 7291.1Schristosis another time zone database.</li> 7301.1Schristos<li>The <a 7311.1Schristoshref="https://www.iata.org/publications/store/Pages/standard-schedules-information.aspx">Standard 7321.1SchristosSchedules Information Manual</a> of the 7331.1SchristosInternational Air Transport Association 7341.1Schristosgives current time zone rules for airports served by commercial aviation.</li> 7351.1Schristos</ul> 7361.6Schristos</section> 7371.6Schristos 7381.6Schristos<section> 7391.1Schristos<h2 id="maps">Maps</h2> 7401.1Schristos<ul> 7411.9Schristos<li>The <a 7421.9Schristoshref="https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/maps/world-regional/">World 7431.9Schristosand Regional Maps section</a> of <em>The World Factbook</em>, published by the 7441.9Schristos<a href="https://www.cia.gov">US Central Intelligence 7451.9SchristosAgency (<abbr 7461.9Schristostitle="Central Intelligence Agency">CIA</abbr>)</a>, contains a time 7471.9Schristoszone map; the 7481.1Schristos<a 7491.6Schristoshref="https://legacy.lib.utexas.edu/maps/world.html">Perry–Castañeda 7501.1SchristosLibrary Map Collection</a> 7511.1Schristosof the University of Texas at Austin has copies of 7521.1Schristosrecent editions. 7531.1SchristosThe pictorial quality is good, 7541.1Schristosbut the maps do not indicate daylight saving time, 7551.1Schristosand parts of the data are a few years out of date.</li> 7561.6Schristos<li><a href="https://www.worldtimezone.com">World Time Zone Map 7571.6Schristoswith current time</a> 7581.1Schristoshas several fancy time zone maps; it covers Russia particularly well. 7591.1SchristosThe maps' pictorial quality is not quite as good as the 7601.1Schristos<abbr>CIA</abbr>'s 7611.1Schristosbut the maps are more up to date.</li> 7621.1Schristos<li><a 7631.1Schristoshref="https://blog.poormansmath.net/how-much-is-time-wrong-around-the-world/">How 7641.1Schristosmuch is time wrong around the world?</a> maps the difference between 7651.1Schristosmean solar and standard time, highlighting areas such as western China 7661.1Schristoswhere the two differ greatly. It's a bit out of date, unfortunately.</li> 7671.1Schristos</ul> 7681.6Schristos</section> 7691.6Schristos 7701.6Schristos<section> 7711.1Schristos<h2 id="boundaries">Time zone boundaries</h2> 7721.2Schristos<p>Geographical boundaries between timezones are available 7731.9Schristosfrom several <a 7741.9Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_geolocation">Internet 7751.9Schristosgeolocation</a> 7761.1Schristosservices and other sources.</p> 7771.1Schristos<ul> 7781.1Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/evansiroky/timezone-boundary-builder">Timezone 7791.1SchristosBoundary Builder</a> extracts 7801.1Schristos<a href="https://www.openstreetmap.org">Open Street Map</a> data to build 7811.2Schristosboundaries of <code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> timezones. 7821.1SchristosIts code is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license, and 7831.1Schristosits data entries are freely available under the 7841.1Schristos<a href="https://opendatacommons.org/licenses/odbl/">Open Data Commons 7851.1SchristosOpen Database License</a>. The maps' borders appear to be quite accurate.</li> 7861.1Schristos<li>Programmatic interfaces that map geographical coordinates via tz_world to 7871.2Schristos<code><abbr>tzdb</abbr></code> timezones include: 7881.1Schristos<ul> 7891.1Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/mj1856/GeoTimeZone">GeoTimeZone</a> is 7901.1Schristoswritten in <a 7911.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_Sharp_(programming_language)">C#</a> 7921.1Schristosand is freely available under the <abbr>MIT</abbr> license.</li> 7931.1Schristos<li>The <a href="https://github.com/bradfitz/latlong">latlong package</a> 7941.1Schristosis written in Go and is freely available under the Apache License.</li> 7951.1Schristos<li><a href="https://github.com/drtimcooper/LatLongToTimezone">LatLongToTimezone</a>, 7961.1Schristosin both Java and 7971.1Schristos<a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift_(programming_language)">Swift</a> 7981.1Schristosform, is freely available under the MIT license.</li> 7991.10Schristos<li>For Node.js, 8001.1Schristosthe <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/geo-tz">geo-tz module</a> 8011.1Schristosis freely available under the MIT license, and 8021.1Schristosthe <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/tz-lookup">tz-lookup module</a> 8031.1Schristosis in the public domain.</li> 8041.1Schristos<li>The <a 8051.1Schristoshref="https://github.com/MrMinimal64/timezonefinder">timezonefinder</a> 8061.1Schristoslibrary for Python is freely available under the MIT license. 8071.1Schristos<li>The <a 8081.1Schristoshref="https://github.com/gunyarakun/timezone_finder">timezone_finder</a> 8091.1Schristoslibrary for Ruby is freely available under the MIT license.</li> 8101.1Schristos</ul></li> 8111.1Schristos<li>Free access via a network API, if you register a key, is provided by 8121.4Schristosthe <a 8131.4Schristoshref="https://www.geonames.org/export/web-services.html#timezone">GeoNames 8141.4SchristosTimezone web service</a>, the <a 8151.4Schristoshref="https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/timezone/intro">Google 8161.4SchristosMaps Time Zone API</a>, and 8171.8Schristosthe <a href="https://timezonedb.com/api">TimeZoneDB API</a>. 8181.1SchristosCommercial network API access is provided 8191.1Schristosby <a href="https://askgeo.com">AskGeo</a> 8201.1Schristosand <a href="https://www.geogarage.com/blog/news-1/post/geogarage-time-zone-api-31">GeoGarage</a>. 8211.1Schristos</li> 8221.1Schristos<li>"<a 8231.1Schristoshref="https://stackoverflow.com/questions/16086962/how-to-get-a-time-zone-from-a-location-using-latitude-and-longitude-coordinates/16086964">How 8241.1Schristosto get a time zone from a location using latitude and longitude 8251.1Schristoscoordinates?</a>" discusses other geolocation possibilities.</li> 8261.1Schristos<li><a href="http://statoids.com/statoids.html">Administrative 8271.1SchristosDivisions of Countries ("Statoids")</a> lists 8281.1Schristospolitical subdivision data related to time zones.</li> 8291.7Schristos<li><a href="https://home.kpn.nl/vanadovv/time/Multizones.html">Time 8301.1Schristoszone boundaries for multizone countries</a> summarizes legal 8311.1Schristosboundaries between time zones within countries.</li> 8321.13Schristos<li><a href="https://manifold.net/info/freestuff.shtml">Manifold Software 8331.1Schristos– GIS and Database Tools</a> includes a Manifold-format map of 8341.1Schristosworld time zone boundaries distributed under the 8351.1Schristos<abbr>GPL</abbr>.</li> 8361.1Schristos<li>A ship within the <a 8371.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Territorial_waters">territorial 8381.1Schristoswaters</a> of any nation uses that nation's time. In international 8391.1Schristoswaters, time zone boundaries are meridians 15° apart, except that 8401.1Schristos<abbr>UT</abbr>−12 and <abbr>UT</abbr>+12 are each 7.5° 8411.1Schristoswide and are separated by 8421.1Schristosthe 180° meridian (not by the International Date Line, which is 8431.1Schristosfor land and territorial waters only). A captain can change ship's 8441.1Schristosclocks any time after entering a new time zone; midnight changes are 8451.1Schristoscommon.</li> 8461.1Schristos</ul> 8471.6Schristos</section> 8481.6Schristos 8491.6Schristos<section> 8501.1Schristos<h2 id="civil">Civil time concepts and history</h2> 8511.1Schristos<ul> 8521.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.nist.gov/pml/time-and-frequency-division/popular-links/walk-through-time">A 8531.1SchristosWalk through Time</a> 8541.1Schristossurveys the evolution of timekeeping.</li> 8551.4Schristos<li>The history of daylight saving time is surveyed in <a 8561.4Schristoshref="http://www.webexhibits.org/daylightsaving/">About Daylight 8571.4SchristosSaving Time – History, rationale, laws & dates</a> and summarized in 8581.4Schristos<a href="http://seizethedaylight.com/dst/">A Brief 8591.4SchristosHistory of Daylight Saving Time</a>.</li> 8601.4Schristos<li><a href="https://www.laphamsquarterly.org/roundtable/time-lords">Time 8611.4SchristosLords</a> discusses how authoritarians manipulate civil time.</li> 8621.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/timezone/">Working with Time Zones</a> 8631.1Schristoscontains guidelines and best practices for software applications that 8641.1Schristosdeal with civil time.</li> 8651.1Schristos<li><a href="https://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~gent0113/idl/idl.htm">A History of 8661.1Schristosthe International Date Line</a> tells the story of the most important 8671.1Schristostime zone boundary.</li> 8681.1Schristos<li><a href="http://statoids.com/tconcept.html">Basic Time 8691.1SchristosZone Concepts</a> discusses terminological issues behind time zones.</li> 8701.1Schristos</ul> 8711.6Schristos</section> 8721.6Schristos 8731.6Schristos<section> 8741.1Schristos<h2 id="national">National histories of legal time</h2> 8751.1Schristos<dl> 8761.1Schristos<dt>Australia</dt> 8771.6Schristos<dd>The Parliamentary Library commissioned a <a 8781.1Schristoshref="https://www.aph.gov.au/binaries/library/pubs/rp/2009-10/10rp10.pdf">research 8791.1Schristospaper on daylight saving time in Australia</a>. 8801.1SchristosThe Bureau of Meteorology publishes a list of <a 8811.1Schristoshref="http://www.bom.gov.au/climate/averages/tables/dst_times.shtml">Implementation 8821.1SchristosDates of Daylight Savings Time within Australia</a>.</dd> 8831.1Schristos<dt>Belgium</dt> 8841.7Schristos<dd>The Royal Observatory of Belgium maintains a table of time in 8851.7SchristosBelgium (in 8861.7Schristos<a href="https://www.astro.oma.be/GENERAL/INFO/nli001a.html" 8871.7Schristoshreflang="nl">Dutch</a> and <a 8881.7Schristoshref="https://www.astro.oma.be/GENERAL/INFO/fri001a.html" 8891.7Schristoshreflang="fr">French</a>).</dd> 8901.1Schristos<dt>Brazil</dt> 8911.1Schristos<dd>The Time Service Department of the National Observatory 8921.1Schristosrecords <a href="http://pcdsh01.on.br/DecHV.html" 8931.1Schristoshreflang="pt-BR">Brazil's daylight saving time decrees (in 8941.1SchristosPortuguese)</a>.</dd> 8951.1Schristos<dt>Canada</dt> 8961.1Schristos<dd>National Research Council Canada publishes current 8971.1Schristosand some older information about <a 8981.6Schristoshref="https://nrc.canada.ca/en/certifications-evaluations-standards/canadas-official-time/time-zones-daylight-saving-time">time 8991.6Schristoszones and daylight saving time</a>.</dd> 9001.1Schristos<dt>Chile</dt> 9011.1Schristos<dd>The Hydrographic and Oceanographic Service of the Chilean Navy publishes a 9021.11Schristos<a href="https://www.horaoficial.cl/historia_hora.php" hreflang="es">history of 9031.1SchristosChile's official time (in Spanish)</a>.</dd> 9041.3Schristos<dt>China</dt> 9051.3Schristos<dd>The Hong Kong Observatory maintains a 9061.7Schristos<a href="https://www.hko.gov.hk/en/gts/time/Summertime.htm">history of 9071.3Schristos summer time in Hong Kong</a>, 9081.3Schristosand Macau's Meteorological and Geophysical Bureau maintains a <a 9091.7Schristoshref="https://www.smg.gov.mo/en/subpage/224/page/174">similar 9101.3Schristoshistory for Macau</a>. 9111.3SchristosUnfortunately the latter is incomplete and has errors.</dd> 9121.1Schristos<dt>Czech Republic</dt> 9131.1Schristos<dd><a href="https://kalendar.beda.cz/kdy-zacina-a-konci-letni-cas" 9141.1Schristoshreflang="cs">When daylight saving time starts and ends (in Czech)</a> 9151.10Schristossummarizes and cites historical <abbr>DST</abbr> regulations.</dd> 9161.1Schristos<dt>Germany</dt> 9171.1Schristos<dd>The National Institute for Science and Technology maintains the <a 9181.1Schristoshref="https://www.ptb.de/cms/en/fachabteilungen/abt4/fb-44/ag-441/realisation-of-legal-time-in-germany.html">Realisation 9191.1Schristosof Legal Time in Germany</a>.</dd> 9201.1Schristos<dt>Israel</dt> 9211.1Schristos<dd>The Interior Ministry periodically issues <a 9221.1Schristoshref="ftp://ftp.cs.huji.ac.il/pub/tz/announcements" 9231.1Schristoshreflang="he">announcements (in Hebrew)</a>.</dd> 9241.2Schristos<dt>Malaysia</dt> 9251.2Schristos<dd>See Singapore <a href="#Singapore">below</a>.</dd> 9261.1Schristos<dt>Mexico</dt> 9271.1Schristos<dd>The Investigation and Analysis Service of the Mexican Library of 9281.1SchristosCongress has published a <a 9291.13Schristoshref="https://www.diputados.gob.mx/bibliot/publica/inveyana/polisoc/horver/index.htm" 9301.1Schristoshreflang="es">history of Mexican local time (in Spanish)</a>.</dd> 9311.1Schristos<dt>Netherlands</dt> 9321.1Schristos<dd><a href="https://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~gent0113/wettijd/wettijd.htm" 9331.1Schristoshreflang="nl">Legal time in the Netherlands (in Dutch)</a> 9341.1Schristoscovers the history of local time in the Netherlands from ancient times.</dd> 9351.1Schristos<dt>New Zealand</dt> 9361.1Schristos<dd>The Department of Internal Affairs maintains a brief <a 9371.1Schristoshref="https://www.dia.govt.nz/Daylight-Saving-History">History of 9381.6SchristosDaylight Saving</a>.</dd> 9391.14Schristos<dt>Palestine</dt> 9401.14Schristos<dd>The Ministry of Telecom and IT publishes a <a 9411.14Schristoshref="https://mtit.pna.ps/Site/TimeZoon" 9421.14Schristoshreflang="ar">history of clock changes (in Arabic)</a>.</dd> 9431.10Schristos<dt>Portugal</dt> 9441.10Schristos<dd>The Lisbon Astronomical Observatory publishes a 9451.10Schristos<a href="https://oal.ul.pt/hora-legal/" hreflang="pt">history of 9461.10Schristoslegal time (in Portuguese)</a>.</dd> 9471.1Schristos<dt>Singapore</dt> 9481.1Schristos<dd><a id="Singapore" 9491.7Schristoshref="https://web.archive.org/web/20190822231045/http://www.math.nus.edu.sg/~mathelmr/teaching/timezone.html">Why 9501.1Schristosis Singapore in the "Wrong" Time Zone?</a> details the 9511.1Schristoshistory of legal time in Singapore and Malaysia.</dd> 9521.1Schristos<dt>United Kingdom</dt> 9531.1Schristos<dd><a 9541.1Schristoshref="https://www.polyomino.org.uk/british-time/">History of 9551.1Schristoslegal time in Britain</a> discusses in detail the country 9561.6Schristoswith perhaps the best-documented history of clock adjustments.</dd> 9571.1Schristos<dt>United States</dt> 9581.1Schristos<dd>The Department of Transportation's <a 9591.1Schristoshref="https://www.transportation.gov/regulations/recent-time-zone-proceedings">Recent 9601.1SchristosTime Zone Proceedings</a> lists changes to time zone boundaries.</dd> 9611.1Schristos<dt>Uruguay</dt> 9621.1Schristos<dd>The Oceanography, Hydrography, and Meteorology Service of the Uruguayan 9631.1SchristosNavy (SOHMA) publishes an annual <a 9641.13Schristoshref="https://sohma.armada.mil.uy/index.php/servicios/datos-astronomicos" hreflang="es">almanac 9651.1Schristos(in Spanish)</a>.</dd> 9661.1Schristos</dl> 9671.6Schristos</section> 9681.6Schristos 9691.6Schristos<section> 9701.7Schristos<h2 id="costs">Costs and benefits of time shifts</h2> 9711.7Schristos<p>Various sources argue for and against daylight saving time and time 9721.7Schristoszone shifts, and many scientific studies have been conducted. This 9731.8Schristossection summarizes reviews and position statements based on 9741.8Schristosscientific literature in the area.</p> 9751.7Schristos<ul> 9761.7Schristos<li>Carey RN, Sarma KM. 9771.7Schristos<a href="https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/7/6/e014319.long">Impact of 9781.7Schristosdaylight saving time on road traffic collision risk: a systematic 9791.7Schristosreview</a>. 9801.7Schristos<em>BMJ Open.</em> 2017;7(6):e014319. doi:<a href="https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014319">10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014319</a>. 9811.7SchristosThis reviews research literature and concludes that the evidence 9821.7Schristosneither supports nor refutes road safety benefits from 9831.7Schristosshifts in time zones.</li> 9841.7Schristos<li>Havranek T, Herman D, Irsova D. 9851.13Schristos<a href="https://www.iaee.org/en/publications/ejarticle.aspx?id=3051">Does 9861.13Schristosdaylight saving save electricity? A meta-analysis.</a> 9871.13Schristos<em>Energy J.</em> 2018;39(2):35–61. 9881.7Schristosdoi:<a href="https://doi.org/10.5547/01956574.39.2.thav">10.5547/01956574.39.2.thav</a>. 9891.7SchristosThis analyzes research literature and concludes, "Electricity savings 9901.7Schristosare larger for countries farther away from the equator, while 9911.10Schristossubtropical regions consume more electricity because of <abbr>DST</abbr>."</li> 9921.8Schristos<li>Rishi MA, Ahmed O, Barrantes Perez JH <em>et al</em>. 9931.8Schristos<a href="https://jcsm.aasm.org/doi/10.5664/jcsm.8780">Daylight saving time: 9941.8Schristosan American Academy of Sleep Medicine position statement</a>. 9951.8Schristos<em>J Clin Sleep Med.</em> 9961.8Schristos2020;<a href="https://doi.org/10.5664/jcsm.8780">10.5664/jcsm.8780</a>. 9971.8SchristosThis argues for permanent standard time due to health risks of both 9981.10Schristos<abbr>DST</abbr> transitions and permanent <abbr>DST</abbr>.</li> 9991.13Schristos<li>Roenneberg T, Wirz-Justice A, Skene DJ <em>et al</em>. 10001.13Schristos<a href="https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7205184/">Why 10011.13Schristosshould we abolish Daylight Saving Time?</a> 10021.13Schristos<em>J Biol Rhythms</em>. 2019;34(3):227–230. 10031.13Schristosdoi:<a href="https://doi.org/10.1177/0748730419854197">10.1177/0748730419854197</a>. 10041.13SchristosThis position paper of the Society for Research on Biological Rhythms 10051.13Schristosopposes DST changes and permanent DST, and advocates that governments adopt 10061.13Schristos"permanent Standard Time for the health and safety of their citizens".</li> 10071.7Schristos</ul> 10081.7Schristos</section> 10091.7Schristos 10101.7Schristos<section> 10111.1Schristos<h2 id="precision">Precision timekeeping</h2> 10121.1Schristos<ul> 10131.1Schristos<li><a 10141.1Schristoshref="http://leapsecond.com/hpan/an1289.pdf">The 10151.1SchristosScience of Timekeeping</a> is a thorough introduction 10161.1Schristosto the theory and practice of precision timekeeping.</li> 10171.1Schristos<li><a href="https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-59909-0">The Science of 10181.14SchristosTime 2016</a> contains several freely readable papers.</li> 10191.13Schristos<li><a href="https://www.ntp.org"><abbr 10201.1Schristostitle="Network Time Protocol">NTP</abbr>: The Network 10211.1SchristosTime Protocol</a> (Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 5905) 10221.1Schristosdiscusses how to synchronize clocks of 10231.1SchristosInternet hosts.</li> 10241.2Schristos<li>The <a href="https://www.usenix.org/system/files/conference/nsdi18/nsdi18-geng.pdf"><span style="font-variant: small-caps">Huygens</span></a> 10251.2Schristosfamily of software algorithms can achieve accuracy to a few tens of 10261.2Schristosnanoseconds in scalable server farms without special hardware.</li> 10271.1Schristos<li>The <a 10281.1Schristoshref="https://www.nist.gov/intelligent-systems-division/ieee-1588">Precision 10291.1SchristosTime Protocol</a> (<abbr 10301.1Schristostitle="Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers">IEEE</abbr> 1588) 10311.2Schristoscan achieve submicrosecond clock accuracy on a local area network 10321.2Schristoswith special-purpose hardware.</li> 10331.1Schristos<li><a 10341.13Schristoshref="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc4833">Timezone 10351.1SchristosOptions for <abbr title="Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol">DHCP</abbr></a> 10361.1Schristos(Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 4833) 10371.1Schristosspecifies a <a 10381.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_Host_Configuration_Protocol"><abbr>DHCP</abbr></a> 10391.1Schristosoption for a server to configure 10401.1Schristosa client's time zone and daylight saving settings automatically.</li> 10411.11Schristos<li><a href="https://www.ucolick.org/~sla/leapsecs/timescales.html">Time 10421.11SchristosScales</a> describes astronomical time scales like 10431.1Schristos<abbr title="Terrestrial Dynamic Time">TDT</abbr>, 10441.1Schristos<abbr title="Geocentric Coordinate Time">TCG</abbr>, and 10451.1Schristos<abbr title="Barycentric Dynamic Time">TDB</abbr>. 10461.1Schristos<li>The <a href="https://www.iau.org"><abbr 10471.1Schristostitle="International Astronomical Union">IAU</abbr></a>'s <a 10481.13Schristoshref="https://www.iausofa.org"><abbr 10491.1Schristostitle="Standards Of Fundamental Astronomy">SOFA</abbr></a> 10501.1Schristoscollection contains C and <a 10511.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fortran">Fortran</a> 10521.1Schristoscode for converting among time scales like 10531.1Schristos<abbr title="International Atomic Time">TAI</abbr>, 10541.1Schristos<abbr>TDB</abbr>, <abbr>TDT</abbr> and 10551.13Schristos<abbr>UTC</abbr>. It is freely available under the 10561.13Schristos<a href="https://www.iausofa.org/tandc.html">SOFA license</a>.</li> 10571.1Schristos<li><a 10581.1Schristoshref="https://www.giss.nasa.gov/tools/mars24/help/notes.html">Mars24 Sunclock 10591.1Schristos– Time on Mars</a> describes Airy Mean Time (<abbr>AMT</abbr>) and the 10601.1Schristosdiverse local time 10611.1Schristosscales used by each landed mission on Mars.</li> 10621.1Schristos<li><a href="http://leapsecond.com">LeapSecond.com</a> is 10631.1Schristosdedicated not only to leap seconds but to precise time and frequency 10641.1Schristosin general. It covers the state of the art in amateur timekeeping, and 10651.1Schristoshow the art has progressed over the past few decades.</li> 10661.7Schristos<li>The rules for leap seconds are specified in Annex 1 (Time scales) of <a 10671.7Schristoshref="https://www.itu.int/rec/R-REC-TF.460-6-200202-I/">Standard-frequency 10681.7Schristosand time-signal emissions</a>, International Telecommunication Union – 10691.7SchristosRadiocommunication Sector (ITU-R) Recommendation TF.460-6 (02/2002).</li> 10701.1Schristos<li><a 10711.1Schristoshref="https://www.iers.org/IERS/EN/Publications/Bulletins/bulletins.html"><abbr 10721.1Schristostitle="International Earth Rotation and Reference Systems Service">IERS</abbr> 10731.1SchristosBulletins</a> contains official publications of the International 10741.1SchristosEarth Rotation and Reference Systems Service, which decides when leap 10751.4Schristosseconds occur. The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data support leap seconds 10761.9Schristosvia an optional "<code>right</code>" configuration where a computer's internal 10771.9Schristos<code>time_t</code> integer clock counts every <abbr>TAI</abbr> second, 10781.9Schristosas opposed to the default "<code>posix</code>" configuration 10791.9Schristoswhere the internal clock ignores leap seconds. 10801.9SchristosThe two configurations agree for timestamps starting with 1972-01-01 00:00:00 10811.9Schristos<abbr>UTC</abbr> (<code>time_t</code> 63 072 000) and diverge for 10821.9Schristostimestamps starting with <code>time_t</code> 78 796 800, 10831.9Schristoswhich corresponds to the first leap second 10841.9Schristos1972-06-30 23:59:60 <abbr>UTC</abbr> in the "<code>right</code>" configuration, 10851.9Schristosand to 10861.9Schristos1972-07-01 00:00:00 <abbr>UTC</abbr> in the "<code>posix</code>" configuration. 10871.9SchristosIn practice the two configurations also agree for timestamps before 10881.9Schristos1972 even though the historical situation is messy, partly because 10891.9Schristosneither <abbr>UTC</abbr> nor <abbr>TAI</abbr> 10901.14Schristosis well-defined for sufficiently old timestamps.</li> 10911.1Schristos<li><a href="https://developers.google.com/time/smear">Leap Smear</a> 10921.1Schristosdiscusses how to gradually adjust <abbr>POSIX</abbr> clocks near a 10931.1Schristosleap second so that they disagree with <abbr>UTC</abbr> by at most a 10941.1Schristoshalf second, even though every <abbr>POSIX</abbr> minute has exactly 10951.4Schristossixty seconds. This approach works with the default <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 10961.1Schristos"<code>posix</code>" configuration, is <a 10971.1Schristoshref="http://bk1.ntp.org/ntp-stable/README.leapsmear">supported</a> by 10981.12Schristosthe <abbr>NTP</abbr> reference implementation, <a 10991.12Schristoshref="https://github.com/google/unsmear">supports</a> conversion between 11001.12Schristos<abbr>UTC</abbr> and smeared <abbr>POSIX</abbr> timestamps, and is used by major 11011.7Schristoscloud service providers. However, according to 11021.13Schristos<a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc8633#section-3.7.1">§3.7.1 of 11031.7SchristosNetwork Time Protocol Best Current Practices</a> 11041.7Schristos(Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 8633), leap smearing is not suitable for 11051.9Schristosapplications requiring accurate <abbr>UTC</abbr> or civil time, 11061.7Schristosand is intended for use only in single, well-controlled environments.</li> 11071.1Schristos<li>The <a 11081.1Schristoshref="https://pairlist6.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/leapsecs">Leap 11091.1SchristosSecond Discussion List</a> covers <a 11101.1Schristoshref="https://www2.unb.ca/gge/Resources/gpsworld.november99.pdf">McCarthy 11111.1Schristosand Klepczynski's 1999 proposal to discontinue leap seconds</a>, 11121.1Schristosdiscussed further in 11131.1Schristos<a href="https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/time/metrologia-leapsecond.pdf">The 11141.1Schristosleap second: its history and possible future</a>. 11151.1Schristos<a href="https://www.ucolick.org/~sla/leapsecs/"><abbr>UTC</abbr> 11161.1Schristosmight be redefined 11171.1Schristoswithout Leap Seconds</a> gives pointers on this 11181.14Schristoscontentious issue. 11191.14SchristosThe General Conference on Weights and Measures 11201.14Schristos<a href="https://www.bipm.org/en/cgpm-2022/resolution-4">voted in 2022</a> 11211.14Schristosto discontinue the use of leap seconds by 2035, replacing them with an 11221.14Schristosas-yet-undetermined scheme some time after the year 2135. 11231.14Schristos</li> 11241.1Schristos</ul> 11251.6Schristos</section> 11261.6Schristos 11271.6Schristos<section> 11281.1Schristos<h2 id="notation">Time notation</h2> 11291.1Schristos<ul> 11301.13Schristos<li>The <a id="CLDR" href="https://cldr.unicode.org">Unicode Common Locale Data 11311.1SchristosRepository (<abbr>CLDR</abbr>) Project</a> has localizations for time 11321.1Schristoszone names, abbreviations, identifiers, and formats. For example, it 11331.1Schristoscontains French translations for "Eastern European Summer Time", 11341.1Schristos"<abbr title="Eastern European Summer Time">EEST</abbr>", and 11351.1Schristos"Bucharest". Its 11361.1Schristos<a href="https://unicode.org/cldr/charts/latest/by_type/">by-type 11371.1Schristoscharts</a> show these values for many locales. Data values are available in 11381.1Schristosboth <abbr title="Locale Data Markup Language">LDML</abbr> 11391.1Schristos(an <abbr>XML</abbr> format) and <abbr>JSON</abbr>. 11401.1Schristos<li> 11411.1Schristos<a href="https://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~mgk25/iso-time.html">A summary of 11421.6Schristosthe international standard date and time notation</a> covers 11431.1Schristos<a 11441.6Schristoshref="https://www.iso.org/standard/70907.html"><em><abbr 11451.6Schristostitle="International Organization for Standardization">ISO</abbr> 11461.6Schristos8601-1:2019 – Date and time – Representations for information 11471.6Schristosinterchange – Part 1: Basic rules</em></a>.</li> 11481.1Schristos<li> 11491.6Schristos<a href="https://www.w3.org/TR/xmlschema/#dateTime"><abbr>XML</abbr> 11501.1SchristosSchema: Datatypes – dateTime</a> specifies a format inspired by 11511.1Schristos<abbr>ISO</abbr> 8601 that is in common use in <abbr>XML</abbr> data.</li> 11521.13Schristos<li><a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5322#section-3.3">§3.3 of 11531.1SchristosInternet Message Format</a> (Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 5322) 11541.1Schristosspecifies the time notation used in email and <a 11551.1Schristoshref="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypertext_Transfer_Protocol"><abbr>HTTP</abbr></a> 11561.1Schristosheaders.</li> 11571.1Schristos<li> 11581.13Schristos<a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc3339">Date and Time 11591.1Schristoson the Internet: Timestamps</a> (Internet <abbr>RFC</abbr> 3339) 11601.1Schristosspecifies an <abbr>ISO</abbr> 8601 11611.1Schristosprofile for use in new Internet 11621.1Schristosprotocols.</li> 11631.1Schristos<li> 11641.7Schristos<a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20190130042457/https://www.hackcraft.net/web/datetime/">Date & Time 11651.1SchristosFormats on the Web</a> surveys web- and Internet-oriented date and time 11661.1Schristosformats.</li> 11671.1Schristos<li>Alphabetic time zone abbreviations should not be used as unique 11681.1Schristosidentifiers for <abbr>UT</abbr> offsets as they are ambiguous in 11691.1Schristospractice. For example, in English-speaking North America 11701.1Schristos"<abbr>CST</abbr>" denotes 6 hours behind <abbr>UT</abbr>, 11711.1Schristosbut in China it denotes 8 hours ahead of <abbr>UT</abbr>, 11721.1Schristosand French-speaking North Americans prefer 11731.1Schristos"<abbr title="Heure Normale du Centre">HNC</abbr>" to 11741.1Schristos"<abbr>CST</abbr>". The <code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> 11751.2Schristosdatabase contains English abbreviations for many timestamps; 11761.1Schristosunfortunately some of these abbreviations were merely the database maintainers' 11771.1Schristosinventions, and these have been removed when possible.</li> 11781.1Schristos<li>Numeric time zone abbreviations typically count hours east of 11791.1Schristos<abbr>UT</abbr>, e.g., +09 for Japan and 11801.1Schristos−10 for Hawaii. However, the <abbr>POSIX</abbr> 11811.1Schristos<code><abbr>TZ</abbr></code> environment variable uses the opposite convention. 11821.1SchristosFor example, one might use <code><abbr>TZ</abbr>="<abbr 11831.1Schristostitle="Japan Standard Time">JST</abbr>-9"</code> and 11841.1Schristos<code><abbr>TZ</abbr>="<abbr title="Hawaii Standard Time">HST</abbr>10"</code> 11851.1Schristosfor Japan and Hawaii, respectively. If the 11861.1Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> database is available, it is usually better to use 11871.1Schristossettings like <code><abbr>TZ</abbr>="Asia/Tokyo"</code> and 11881.1Schristos<code><abbr>TZ</abbr>="Pacific/Honolulu"</code> instead, as this should avoid 11891.2Schristosconfusion, handle old timestamps better, and insulate you better from 11901.1Schristosany future changes to the rules. One should never set 11911.1Schristos<abbr>POSIX</abbr> <code><abbr>TZ</abbr></code> to a value like 11921.1Schristos<code>"GMT-9"</code>, though, since this would incorrectly imply that 11931.1Schristoslocal time is nine hours ahead of <abbr>UT</abbr> and the time zone 11941.1Schristosis called "<abbr>GMT</abbr>".</li> 11951.1Schristos</ul> 11961.6Schristos</section> 11971.6Schristos 11981.6Schristos<section> 11991.1Schristos<h2 id="see-also">See also</h2> 12001.1Schristos<ul> 12011.7Schristos<li><a href="theory.html">Theory and pragmatics of the 12021.7Schristos<code><abbr>tz</abbr></code> code and data</a></li> 12031.1Schristos<li><a href="tz-art.html">Time and the Arts</a></li> 12041.1Schristos</ul> 12051.6Schristos</section> 12061.6Schristos 12071.6Schristos<footer> 12081.1Schristos<hr> 12091.1SchristosThis web page is in the public domain, so clarified as of 12101.1Schristos2009-05-17 by Arthur David Olson. 12111.1Schristos<br> 12121.1SchristosPlease send corrections to this web page to the 12131.1Schristos<a href="mailto:tz@iana.org">time zone mailing list</a>. 12141.6Schristos</footer> 12151.1Schristos</body> 12161.1Schristos</html> 1217