Briefly:
Moldova has used EU transition times since 2022.
The "right" TZif files are no longer installed by default.
-DTZ_RUNTIME_LEAPS=0 disables runtime support for leap seconds.
TZif files are no longer limited to 50 bytes of abbreviations.
zic is no longer limited to 50 leap seconds.
Several integer overflow bugs have been fixed.
Changes to past and future timestamps
Since 2022 Moldova has observed EU transition times, that is, it
has sprung forward at 03:00, not 02:00, and has fallen back at
04:00, not 03:00. (Thanks to Heitor David Pinto.)
Changes to data
Remove Europe/Chisinau from zonenow.tab, as it now agrees with
Europe/Athens for future timestamps.
Changes to build procedure
The Makefile no longer by default installs an alternate set
of TZif files for system clocks that count leap seconds.
Install with 'make REDO=posix_right' to get the old default,
which is rarely used in major downstream distributions.
If your system clock counts leap seconds (contrary to POSIX),
it is better to install with 'make REDO=right_only'.
This change does not affect the leapseconds file, which is still
installed as before.
The Makefile's POSIXRULES option, which was declared obsolete in
release 2019b, has been removed. The Makefile's build procedure
thus no longer optionally installs the obsolete posixrules file.
Changes to code
Compiling with the new option -DTZ_RUNTIME_LEAPS=0 disables
runtime support for leap seconds. Although this conforms to
POSIX, shrinks tzcode's attack surface, and is more efficient,
it fails to support Internet RFC 9636's leap seconds.
zic now can generate, and localtime.c can now use, TZif files that
hold up to 256 bytes of abbreviations, counting trailing NULs.
The previous limit was 50 bytes, and some tzdata TZif files were
already consuming 40 bytes. zic -v warns if it generates a file
that exceeds the old 50-byte limit.
zic -L can now generate TZif files with more than 50 leap seconds.
This helps test TZif readers not limited to 50 leap seconds, as
tzcode's localtime.c is; it has little immediate need for
practical timekeeping as there have been only 27 leap seconds and
possibly there will be no more, due to planned changes to UTC.
zic -v warns if its output exceeds the old 50-second limit.
localtime.c no longer accesses the posixrules file generated by
zic -p. Hence for obsolete and nonconforming settings like
TZ="AST4ADT" it now typically falls back on US DST rules, rather
than attempting to override this fallback with the contents of the
posixrules file. This removes library support that was declared
obsolete in release 2019b, and fixes some undefined behavior.
(Undefined behavior reported by GitHub user Naveed8951.)
The posix2time, posix2time_z, time2posix, and time2posix_z
functions now set errno=EOVERFLOW and return ((time_t) -1) if the
result is not representable. Formerly they had undefined behavior
that could in practice result in crashing, looping indefinitely,
or returning an incorrect result. As before, these functions are
defined only when localtime.c is compiled with the -DSTD_INSPIRED
option.
Some other undefined behavior, triggered by TZif files containing
outlandish but conforming UT offsets or leap second corrections,
has also been fixed. (Some of these bugs reported by Naveed8951.)
localtime.c no longer rejects TZif files that exactly fit in its
internal structures, fixing off-by-one typos introduced in 2014g.
zic no longer generates a no-op transition when
simultaneous Rule and Zone changes cancel each other out.
This occurs in tzdata only in Asia/Tbilisi on 1997-03-30.
(Thanks to Renchunhui for a test case showing the bug.)
zic no longer assumes you can fflush a read-only stream.
(Problem reported by Christos Zoulas.)
zic no longer generates UT offsets equal to -2**31 and localtime.c
no longer accepts them, as they can cause trouble in both
localtime.c and its callers. RFC 9636 prohibits such offsets.
zic -p now warns that the -p option is obsolete and likely
ineffective.
Moldova has used EU transition times since 2022.
The "right" TZif files are no longer installed by default.
-DTZ_RUNTIME_LEAPS=0 disables runtime support for leap seconds.
TZif files are no longer limited to 50 bytes of abbreviations.
zic is no longer limited to 50 leap seconds.
Several integer overflow bugs have been fixed.
Changes to past and future timestamps
Since 2022 Moldova has observed EU transition times, that is, it
has sprung forward at 03:00, not 02:00, and has fallen back at
04:00, not 03:00. (Thanks to Heitor David Pinto.)
Changes to data
Remove Europe/Chisinau from zonenow.tab, as it now agrees with
Europe/Athens for future timestamps.
Changes to build procedure
The Makefile no longer by default installs an alternate set
of TZif files for system clocks that count leap seconds.
Install with 'make REDO=posix_right' to get the old default,
which is rarely used in major downstream distributions.
If your system clock counts leap seconds (contrary to POSIX),
it is better to install with 'make REDO=right_only'.
This change does not affect the leapseconds file, which is still
installed as before.
The Makefile's POSIXRULES option, which was declared obsolete in
release 2019b, has been removed. The Makefile's build procedure
thus no longer optionally installs the obsolete posixrules file.
Changes to code
Compiling with the new option -DTZ_RUNTIME_LEAPS=0 disables
runtime support for leap seconds. Although this conforms to
POSIX, shrinks tzcode's attack surface, and is more efficient,
it fails to support Internet RFC 9636's leap seconds.
zic now can generate, and localtime.c can now use, TZif files that
hold up to 256 bytes of abbreviations, counting trailing NULs.
The previous limit was 50 bytes, and some tzdata TZif files were
already consuming 40 bytes. zic -v warns if it generates a file
that exceeds the old 50-byte limit.
zic -L can now generate TZif files with more than 50 leap seconds.
This helps test TZif readers not limited to 50 leap seconds, as
tzcode's localtime.c is; it has little immediate need for
practical timekeeping as there have been only 27 leap seconds and
possibly there will be no more, due to planned changes to UTC.
zic -v warns if its output exceeds the old 50-second limit.
localtime.c no longer accesses the posixrules file generated by
zic -p. Hence for obsolete and nonconforming settings like
TZ="AST4ADT" it now typically falls back on US DST rules, rather
than attempting to override this fallback with the contents of the
posixrules file. This removes library support that was declared
obsolete in release 2019b, and fixes some undefined behavior.
(Undefined behavior reported by GitHub user Naveed8951.)
The posix2time, posix2time_z, time2posix, and time2posix_z
functions now set errno=EOVERFLOW and return ((time_t) -1) if the
result is not representable. Formerly they had undefined behavior
that could in practice result in crashing, looping indefinitely,
or returning an incorrect result. As before, these functions are
defined only when localtime.c is compiled with the -DSTD_INSPIRED
option.
Some other undefined behavior, triggered by TZif files containing
outlandish but conforming UT offsets or leap second corrections,
has also been fixed. (Some of these bugs reported by Naveed8951.)
localtime.c no longer rejects TZif files that exactly fit in its
internal structures, fixing off-by-one typos introduced in 2014g.
zic no longer generates a no-op transition when
simultaneous Rule and Zone changes cancel each other out.
This occurs in tzdata only in Asia/Tbilisi on 1997-03-30.
(Thanks to Renchunhui for a test case showing the bug.)
zic no longer assumes you can fflush a read-only stream.
(Problem reported by Christos Zoulas.)
zic no longer generates UT offsets equal to -2**31 and localtime.c
no longer accepts them, as they can cause trouble in both
localtime.c and its callers. RFC 9636 prohibits such offsets.
zic -p now warns that the -p option is obsolete and likely
ineffective.
- links to
-
Review(master)
openjdk/jdk/30108
1.
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TZ: 2026a |
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Open | Johny Jose | 2026-03-02 |