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Commit 234bb98

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Update time zone data files to tzdata release 2018e.
DST law changes in North Korea. Redefinition of "daylight savings" in Ireland, as well as for some past years in Namibia and Czechoslovakia. Additional historical corrections for Czechoslovakia. With this change, the IANA database models Irish timekeeping as following "standard time" in summer, and "daylight savings" in winter, so that the daylight savings offset is one hour behind standard time not one hour ahead. This does not change their UTC offset (+1:00 in summer, 0:00 in winter) nor their timezone abbreviations (IST in summer, GMT in winter), though now "IST" is more correctly read as "Irish Standard Time" not "Irish Summer Time". However, the "is_dst" column in the pg_timezone_names view will now be true in winter and false in summer for the Europe/Dublin zone. Similar changes were made for Namibia between 1994 and 2017, and for Czechoslovakia between 1946 and 1947. So far as I can find, no Postgres internal logic cares about which way tm_isdst is reported; in particular, since commit b2cbced we do not rely on it to decide how to interpret ambiguous timestamps during DST transitions. So I don't think this change will affect any Postgres behavior other than the timezone-view outputs. Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/30996.1525445902@sss.pgh.pa.us
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src/backend/utils/adt/datetime.c

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@@ -1575,7 +1575,10 @@ DetermineTimeZoneOffsetInternal(struct pg_tm *tm, pg_tz *tzp, pg_time_t *tp)
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* fall-back transition, prefer "after". (We used to define and implement
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* this test as "prefer the standard-time interpretation", but that rule
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* does not help to resolve the behavior when both times are reported as
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* standard time; which does happen, eg Europe/Moscow in Oct 2014.)
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* standard time; which does happen, eg Europe/Moscow in Oct 2014. Also,
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* in some zones such as Europe/Dublin, there is widespread confusion
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* about which time offset is "standard" time, so it's fortunate that our
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* behavior doesn't depend on that.)
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*/
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if (beforetime > aftertime)
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{

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