Current File : //proc/self/root/proc/self/root/usr/share/perl5/vendor_perl/DateTime/TimeZone/OlsonDB/Observance.pm |
package DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::Observance;
$DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::Observance::VERSION = '1.70';
use strict;
use warnings;
use DateTime::Duration;
use DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB;
use DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::Change;
use List::Util qw( first );
use Params::Validate qw( validate SCALAR ARRAYREF UNDEF OBJECT );
sub new {
my $class = shift;
my %p = validate(
@_, {
gmtoff => { type => SCALAR },
rules => { type => ARRAYREF },
format => { type => SCALAR },
until => { type => SCALAR, default => '' },
utc_start_datetime => { type => OBJECT | UNDEF },
offset_from_std => { type => SCALAR, default => 0 },
last_offset_from_utc => { type => SCALAR, default => 0 },
last_offset_from_std => { type => SCALAR, default => 0 },
}
);
my $offset_from_utc = DateTime::TimeZone::offset_as_seconds( $p{gmtoff} );
my $offset_from_std
= DateTime::TimeZone::offset_as_seconds( $p{offset_from_std} );
my $last_offset_from_utc = delete $p{last_offset_from_utc};
my $last_offset_from_std = delete $p{last_offset_from_std};
my $self = bless {
%p,
offset_from_utc => $offset_from_utc,
offset_from_std => $offset_from_std,
until => [ split /\s+/, $p{until} ],
}, $class;
$self->{first_rule}
= $self->_first_rule( $last_offset_from_utc, $last_offset_from_std );
if ( $p{utc_start_datetime} ) {
$offset_from_std += $self->{first_rule}->offset_from_std
if $self->{first_rule};
my $local_start_datetime = $p{utc_start_datetime}->clone;
$local_start_datetime += DateTime::Duration->new(
seconds => $offset_from_utc + $offset_from_std );
$self->{local_start_datetime} = $local_start_datetime;
}
return $self;
}
sub offset_from_utc { $_[0]->{offset_from_utc} }
sub offset_from_std { $_[0]->{offset_from_std} }
sub total_offset { $_[0]->offset_from_utc + $_[0]->offset_from_std }
sub rules { @{ $_[0]->{rules} } }
sub first_rule { $_[0]->{first_rule} }
sub format { $_[0]->{format} }
sub utc_start_datetime { $_[0]->{utc_start_datetime} }
sub local_start_datetime { $_[0]->{local_start_datetime} }
sub expand_from_rules {
my $self = shift;
my $zone = shift;
# real max is year + 1 so we include max year
my $max_year = (shift) + 1;
my $min_year;
if ( $self->utc_start_datetime ) {
$min_year = $self->utc_start_datetime->year;
}
else {
# There is at least one time zone that has an infinite
# observance, but that observance has rules that only start at
# a certain point - Pacific/Chatham
# In this case we just find the earliest rule and start there
$min_year
= ( sort { $a <=> $b } map { $_->min_year } $self->rules )[0];
}
my $until = $self->until( $zone->last_change->offset_from_std );
if ($until) {
$max_year = $until->year;
}
else {
# Some zones, like Asia/Tehran, have a predefined fixed set of
# rules that go well into the future (2037 for Asia/Tehran)
my $max_rule_year = 0;
foreach my $rule ( $self->rules ) {
$max_rule_year = $rule->max_year
if $rule->max_year && $rule->max_year > $max_rule_year;
}
$max_year = $max_rule_year if $max_rule_year > $max_year;
}
foreach my $year ( $min_year .. $max_year ) {
my @rules = $self->_sorted_rules_for_year($year);
foreach my $rule (@rules) {
my $dt = $rule->utc_start_datetime_for_year( $year,
$self->offset_from_utc, $zone->last_change->offset_from_std );
next
if $self->utc_start_datetime
&& $dt <= $self->utc_start_datetime;
my $until = $self->until( $zone->last_change->offset_from_std );
next if $until && $dt >= $until;
my $change = DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::Change->new(
type => 'rule',
utc_start_datetime => $dt,
local_start_datetime => $dt + DateTime::Duration->new(
seconds => $self->total_offset + $rule->offset_from_std
),
short_name => sprintf( $self->{format}, $rule->letter ),
observance => $self,
rule => $rule,
);
if ($DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG) {
print "Adding rule change ...\n";
$change->_debug_output;
}
$zone->add_change($change);
}
}
}
sub _sorted_rules_for_year {
my $self = shift;
my $year = shift;
return (
map { $_->[0] }
sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] }
map {
my $dt = $_->utc_start_datetime_for_year( $year,
$self->offset_from_utc, 0 );
[ $_, $dt ]
}
grep {
$_->min_year <= $year
&& ( ( !$_->max_year ) || $_->max_year >= $year )
} $self->rules
);
}
sub until {
my $self = shift;
my $offset_from_std = shift || $self->offset_from_std;
return unless defined $self->until_year;
my $utc = DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::utc_datetime_for_time_spec(
spec => $self->until_time_spec,
year => $self->until_year,
month => $self->until_month,
day => $self->until_day,
offset_from_utc => $self->offset_from_utc,
offset_from_std => $offset_from_std,
);
return $utc;
}
sub until_year { $_[0]->{until}[0] }
sub until_month {
(
defined $_[0]->{until}[1]
? $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::MONTHS{ $_[0]->{until}[1] }
: 1
);
}
sub until_day {
(
defined $_[0]->{until}[2]
? DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::parse_day_spec(
$_[0]->{until}[2], $_[0]->until_month, $_[0]->until_year
)
: 1
);
}
sub until_time_spec {
defined $_[0]->{until}[3] ? $_[0]->{until}[3] : '00:00:00';
}
sub _first_rule {
my $self = shift;
my $last_offset_from_utc = shift;
my $last_offset_from_std = shift;
return unless $self->rules;
my $date = $self->utc_start_datetime
or return $self->_first_no_dst_rule;
my @rules = $self->rules;
my %possible_rules;
my $year = $date->year;
foreach my $rule (@rules) {
# We need to look at what the year _would_ be if we added the
# rule's offset to the UTC date. Otherwise we can end up with
# a UTC date in year X, and a rule that starts in _local_ year
# X + 1, where that rule really does apply to that UTC date.
my $temp_year
= $date->clone->add(
seconds => $self->offset_from_utc + $rule->offset_from_std )
->year;
# Save the highest value
$year = $temp_year if $temp_year > $year;
next if $rule->min_year > $temp_year;
$possible_rules{$rule} = $rule;
}
my $earliest_year = $year - 1;
foreach my $rule (@rules) {
$earliest_year = $rule->min_year
if $rule->min_year < $earliest_year;
}
# figure out what date each rule would start on _if_ that rule
# were applied to this current observance. this could be a rule
# that started much earlier, but is only now active because of an
# observance switch. An obnoxious example of this is
# America/Phoenix in 1944, which applies the US rule in April,
# thus (re-)instating the "war time" rule from 1942. Can you say
# ridiculous crack-smoking stupidity?
my @rule_dates;
foreach my $y ( $earliest_year .. $year ) {
RULE:
foreach my $rule ( values %possible_rules ) {
# skip rules that can't have applied the year before the
# observance started.
if ( $rule->min_year > $y ) {
print "Skipping rule beginning in ", $rule->min_year,
". Year is $y.\n"
if $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
next RULE;
}
if ( $rule->max_year && $rule->max_year < $y ) {
print "Skipping rule ending in ", $rule->max_year,
". Year is $y.\n"
if $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
next RULE;
}
my $rule_start = $rule->utc_start_datetime_for_year( $y,
$last_offset_from_utc, $last_offset_from_std );
push @rule_dates, [ $rule_start, $rule ];
}
}
@rule_dates = sort { $a->[0] <=> $b->[0] } @rule_dates;
print "Looking for first rule ...\n"
if $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
print " Observance starts: ", $date->datetime, "\n\n"
if $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
# ... look through the rules to see if any are still in
# effect at the beginning of the observance
for ( my $x = 0; $x < @rule_dates; $x++ ) {
my ( $dt, $rule ) = @{ $rule_dates[$x] };
my ( $next_dt, $next_rule )
= $x < @rule_dates - 1 ? @{ $rule_dates[ $x + 1 ] } : undef;
next if $next_dt && $next_dt < $date;
print " This rule starts: ", $dt->datetime, "\n"
if $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
print " Next rule starts: ", $next_dt->datetime, "\n"
if $next_dt && $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
print " No next rule\n\n"
if !$next_dt && $DateTime::TimeZone::OlsonDB::DEBUG;
if ( $dt <= $date ) {
if ($next_dt) {
return $rule if $date < $next_dt;
return $next_rule if $date == $next_dt;
}
else {
return $rule;
}
}
}
# If this observance has rules, but the rules don't have any
# defined changes until after the observance starts, we get the
# earliest standard time rule and use it. If there is none, shit
# blows up (but this is not the case for any time zones as of
# 2009a). I really, really hate the Olson database a lot of the
# time! Could this be more arbitrary?
my $std_time_rule = $self->_first_no_dst_rule;
die
"Cannot find a rule that applies to the observance's date range and cannot find a rule without DST to apply"
unless $std_time_rule;
return $std_time_rule;
}
sub _first_no_dst_rule {
my $self = shift;
return first { !$_->offset_from_std }
sort { $a->min_year <=> $b->min_year } $self->rules;
}
1;