Reputation: 21895
I am storing dates in a MySQL database in datetime fields in UTC. I'm using PHP, and I've called date_timezone_set('UTC') so that all calls to date() (without timestamp) return the date in UTC.
I then have it so a given web site can select its timezone. Now I want dates to display in the site's timezone. So, if I have a date stored as '2009-04-01 15:36:13', it should display for a user in the PDT timezone (-7 hours) as '2009-04-01 08:36:13'.
What is the easiest (least code) method for doing this via PHP? So far all I've thought of is
date('Y-m-d H:i:s', strtotime($Site->getUTCOffset() . ' hours', strtotime(date($utcDate))));
Is there a shorter way?
Upvotes: 10
Views: 29498
Reputation: 1153
Convert user timezone to server timezone and vice versa, with a single function:
function convertTimeZone($date, $convertTo = 'userTimeZone', $userTimeZone = 'America/Los_Angeles', $serverTimeZone = 'UTC', $format = 'n/j/Y g:i A')
{
if($convertTo == 'userTimeZone'){
$dateTime = new DateTime ($date, new DateTimeZone($serverTimeZone));
$dateTime->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone($userTimeZone));
return $dateTime->format($format);
} else if($convertTo == 'serverTimeZone'){
$dateTime = new DateTime ($date, new DateTimeZone($userTimeZone));
$dateTime->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone($serverTimeZone));
return $dateTime->format($format);
}
}
echo convertTimeZone(date('Ydm h:i:s'),'serverTimeZone');
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2761
This worked for me and it's pretty clean
function convert_to_user_date($date, $userTimeZone = 'America/Los_Angeles', $serverTimeZone = 'UTC', $format = 'n/j/Y g:i A')
{
$dateTime = new DateTime ($date, new DateTimeZone($serverTimeZone));
$dateTime->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone($userTimeZone));
return $dateTime->format($format);
}
function convert_to_server_date($date, $userTimeZone = 'America/Los_Angeles', $serverTimeZone = 'UTC', $format = 'n/j/Y g:i A')
{
$dateTime = new DateTime ($date, new DateTimeZone($userTimeZone));
$dateTime->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone($serverTimeZone));
return $dateTime->format($format);
}
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 13883
Why not use the built in DateTime/TimeZone functionality?
<?php
$mysqlDate = '2009-04-01 15:36:13';
$dateTime = new DateTime ($mysqlDate);
$dateTime->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone('America/Los_Angeles'));
?>
DateTime Class: https://www.php.net/manual/en/class.datetime.php DateTimeZone Class: https://www.php.net/manual/en/class.datetimezone.php
PHP's supported Timezones: http://php.net/manual/en/timezones.php
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 11
<?php
function getNoteDateTimeZone($date = null, $from_dtz = 'US/Central', $to_dtz = null) {
//$from_zt = 'US/Central'; // Time Zone = -06:00
if (is_null($date) == FALSE && is_null($from_dtz) == FALSE && is_null($to_dtz) == FALSE) {
// set TimeZone from
$time_object = new DateTime($date, new DateTimeZone($from_dtz));
$time_now_object = new DateTime("now", new DateTimeZone($from_dtz));
// Change TimeZone
$time_object->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone(trim($to_dtz)));
$time_now_object->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone(trim($to_dtz)));
// Is day = day in $time_now_object, $time_object..?
if ($time_now_object->format('d') == $time_object->format('d')) {
return $time_object->format('H:i:s');
} else {
return $time_object->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
}
} else {
return '';
}
}
?>
Use sample:
<?php
$date = '2008-06-02 20:32:46';
$dtz = 'America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires';
echo getNoteDateTimeZone($date, 'US/Central', $dtz); // Out = 2008-06-02 23:32:46
?>
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 337
What you're doing is the right way of doing things. I'd recommend sticking with working in only UTC and just converting at the last minute for the display.
Here's a quick function I put together for time zone conversion using the DateTime class that comes with PHP. It's a bit more code than you have but I think it's easier and a better way to structure things...
function convert_time_zone($date_time, $from_tz, $to_tz)
{
$time_object = new DateTime($date_time, new DateTimeZone($from_tz));
$time_object->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone($to_tz));
return $time_object->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');
}
http://richardwillia.ms/blog/2011/04/time-zone-conversion-using-datetime-class/
Hope that helps.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 3251
Here's what we did with our servers. We set everything to use UTC, and we display in the user's time zone by converting from UTC on the fly. The code at the bottom of this post is an example of how to get this to work; you should confirm that it works in all cases with your setup (i.e. daylight savings, etc).
/etc/sysconfig/clock
and set ZONE
to UTC
ln -sf /usr/share/zoneinfo/UTC /etc/localtime
Import timezones into MySQL if necessary:
mysql_tzinfo_to_sql /usr/share/zoneinfo | mysql -u root -p mysql
Edit my.cnf and add the following within the [mysqld] section:
default-time-zone = 'UTC'
<?php
/*
Example usage:
$unixtime = TimeUtil::dateTimeToTimestamp('2009-04-01 15:36:13');
echo TimeUtil::UTCToPST("M d, Y - H:i:s", $unixtime);
*/
// You should move this to your regular init method
date_default_timezone_set('UTC'); // make this match the server timezone
class TimeUtil {
public static function timestampToDateTime($timestamp) {
return gmdate('Y-m-d H:i:s', $timestamp);
}
public static function dateTimeToTimestamp($dateTime) {
// dateTimeToTimestamp expects MySQL format
// If it gets a fully numeric value, we'll assume it's a timestamp
// You can comment out this if block if you don't want this behavior
if(is_numeric($dateTime)) {
// You should probably log an error here
return $dateTime;
}
$date = new DateTime($dateTime);
$ret = $date->format('U');
return ($ret < 0 ? 0 : $ret);
}
public static function UTCToPST($format, $time) {
$dst = intval(date("I", $time));
$tzOffset = intval(date('Z', time()));
return date($format, $time + $tzOffset - 28800 + $dst * 3600);
}
}
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 2683
Having spent a lot of time dealing with this issue, do not attempt to implement time zone translation yourself. It's a royal PIA, fraught with difficulties, and it's very hard to get it right internationally.
That said, the best option is to convert your datetimes in MySQL to timestamps, and just use the database to convert times:
mysql> set time_zone='America/New_York';
timestamps in MySQL are smaller, and support time zone translation. datetime does not.
Before you display the site information on the page, just invoke the above command, and it will display correctly without any PHP code changes at all.
Caveats:
To turn off timestamp properties:
ALTER TABLE mytable CHANGE COLUMN Created Created timestamp NULL DEFAULT 0;
The DEFAULT 0 disables the column being updated when you update other columns.
Upvotes: 1