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Mon, 5 Feb 2024 00:57:58 GMT (envelope-from git) Date: Mon, 5 Feb 2024 00:57:58 GMT Message-Id: <202402050057.4150vwW0087926@gitrepo.freebsd.org> To: src-committers@FreeBSD.org, dev-commits-src-all@FreeBSD.org, dev-commits-src-branches@FreeBSD.org From: Philip Paeps Subject: git: 24eb518714f6 - releng/13.3 - contrib/tzdata: import tzdata 2024a List-Id: Commit messages for all branches of the src repository List-Archive: https://lists.freebsd.org/archives/dev-commits-src-all List-Help: List-Post: List-Subscribe: List-Unsubscribe: Sender: owner-dev-commits-src-all@freebsd.org X-BeenThere: dev-commits-src-all@freebsd.org MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit X-Git-Committer: philip X-Git-Repository: src X-Git-Refname: refs/heads/releng/13.3 X-Git-Reftype: branch X-Git-Commit: 24eb518714f6c681fc5fbb28170b1d74296d24f1 Auto-Submitted: auto-generated The branch releng/13.3 has been updated by philip: URL: https://cgit.FreeBSD.org/src/commit/?id=24eb518714f6c681fc5fbb28170b1d74296d24f1 commit 24eb518714f6c681fc5fbb28170b1d74296d24f1 Author: Philip Paeps AuthorDate: 2024-02-02 02:01:39 +0000 Commit: Philip Paeps CommitDate: 2024-02-05 00:56:50 +0000 contrib/tzdata: import tzdata 2024a Changes: https://github.com/eggert/tz/blob/2024a/NEWS (cherry picked from commit 2723c7ffb7f729a1d3f7c59e7db48b0edf3d30a6) (cherry picked from commit f4256acec1c980b7d08e9e526be6d2a7c4751f0b) Approved by: re (karels) --- contrib/tzdata/Makefile | 53 ++++-- contrib/tzdata/NEWS | 68 +++++++ contrib/tzdata/africa | 8 +- contrib/tzdata/asia | 174 +++++++++++------- contrib/tzdata/australasia | 14 +- contrib/tzdata/checknow.awk | 2 +- contrib/tzdata/etcetera | 2 +- contrib/tzdata/europe | 29 ++- contrib/tzdata/leap-seconds.list | 373 +++++++++++++-------------------------- contrib/tzdata/leapseconds | 19 +- contrib/tzdata/leapseconds.awk | 11 +- contrib/tzdata/northamerica | 29 +-- contrib/tzdata/southamerica | 5 +- contrib/tzdata/theory.html | 37 ++-- contrib/tzdata/version | 2 +- contrib/tzdata/zishrink.awk | 98 ++++++---- contrib/tzdata/zonenow.tab | 4 +- 17 files changed, 507 insertions(+), 421 deletions(-) diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/Makefile b/contrib/tzdata/Makefile index 4e45f93b915c..d48354c72df4 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/Makefile +++ b/contrib/tzdata/Makefile @@ -53,7 +53,7 @@ DATAFORM= main LOCALTIME= Factory -# The POSIXRULES macro controls interpretation of POSIX-like TZ +# The POSIXRULES macro controls interpretation of POSIX-2017.1-like TZ # settings like TZ='EET-2EEST' that lack DST transition rules. # If POSIXRULES is '-', no template is installed; this is the default. # Any other value for POSIXRULES is obsolete and should not be relied on, as: @@ -274,7 +274,7 @@ LDLIBS= # -DTZ_DOMAINDIR=\"/path\" to use "/path" for gettext directory; # the default is system-supplied, typically "/usr/lib/locale" # -DTZDEFRULESTRING=\",date/time,date/time\" to default to the specified -# DST transitions for POSIX-style TZ strings lacking them, +# DST transitions for POSIX.1-2017-style TZ strings lacking them, # in the usual case where POSIXRULES is '-'. If not specified, # TZDEFRULESTRING defaults to US rules for future DST transitions. # This mishandles some past timestamps, as US DST rules have changed. @@ -340,9 +340,10 @@ GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS = -DGCC_LINT -g3 -O3 -fno-common \ # guess TM_GMTOFF from other macros; define NO_TM_GMTOFF to suppress this. # Similarly, if your system has a "zone abbreviation" field, define # -DTM_ZONE=tm_zone -# and define NO_TM_ZONE to suppress any guessing. Although these two fields -# not required by POSIX, a future version of POSIX is planned to require them -# and they are widely available on GNU/Linux and BSD systems. +# and define NO_TM_ZONE to suppress any guessing. +# Although these two fields are not required by POSIX.1-2017, +# POSIX 202x/D4 requires them and they are widely available +# on GNU/Linux and BSD systems. # # The next batch of options control support for external variables # exported by tzcode. In practice these variables are less useful @@ -352,7 +353,7 @@ GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS = -DGCC_LINT -g3 -O3 -fno-common \ # # -DHAVE_TZNAME=0 # do not support "tzname" # # -DHAVE_TZNAME=1 # support "tzname", which is defined by system library # # -DHAVE_TZNAME=2 # support and define "tzname" -# # to the "CFLAGS=" line. "tzname" is required by POSIX 1988 and later. +# # to the "CFLAGS=" line. "tzname" is required by POSIX.1-1988 and later. # # If not defined, the code attempts to guess HAVE_TZNAME from other macros. # # Warning: unless time_tz is also defined, HAVE_TZNAME=1 can cause # # crashes when combined with some platforms' standard libraries, @@ -362,8 +363,8 @@ GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS = -DGCC_LINT -g3 -O3 -fno-common \ # # -DUSG_COMPAT=0 # do not support # # -DUSG_COMPAT=1 # support, and variables are defined by system library # # -DUSG_COMPAT=2 # support and define variables -# # to the "CFLAGS=" line; "timezone" and "daylight" are inspired by -# # Unix Systems Group code and are required by POSIX 2008 (with XSI) and later. +# # to the "CFLAGS=" line; "timezone" and "daylight" are inspired by Unix +# # Systems Group code and are required by POSIX.1-2008 and later (with XSI). # # If not defined, the code attempts to guess USG_COMPAT from other macros. # # # # To support the external variable "altzone", add @@ -427,7 +428,7 @@ GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS = -DGCC_LINT -g3 -O3 -fno-common \ # The name of a POSIX-like library archiver, its flags, C compiler, # linker flags, and 'make' utility. Ordinarily the defaults suffice. -# The commented-out values are the defaults specified by POSIX 202x/D3. +# The commented-out values are the defaults specified by POSIX.1-202x/D4. #AR = ar #ARFLAGS = -rv #CC = c17 @@ -439,6 +440,12 @@ GCC_DEBUG_FLAGS = -DGCC_LINT -g3 -O3 -fno-common \ LEAPSECONDS= +# Where to fetch leap-seconds.list from. +leaplist_URI = \ + https://hpiers.obspm.fr/iers/bul/bulc/ntp/leap-seconds.list +# The file is generated by the IERS Earth Orientation Centre, in Paris. +leaplist_TZ = Europe/Paris + # The zic command and its arguments. zic= ./zic @@ -471,7 +478,8 @@ AWK= awk # is typically nicer if it works. KSHELL= /bin/bash -# Name of curl , used for HTML validation. +# Name of curl , used for HTML validation +# and to fetch leap-seconds.list from upstream. CURL= curl # Name of GNU Privacy Guard , used to sign distributions. @@ -718,6 +726,28 @@ leapseconds: $(LEAP_DEPS) -f leapseconds.awk leap-seconds.list >$@.out mv $@.out $@ +# Awk script to extract a Git-style author from leap-seconds.list comments. +EXTRACT_AUTHOR = \ + author_line { sub(/^.[[:space:]]*/, ""); \ + sub(/:[[:space:]]*/, " <"); \ + printf "%s>\n", $$0; \ + success = 1; \ + exit \ + } \ + /Questions or comments to:/ { author_line = 1 } \ + END { exit !success } + +# Fetch leap-seconds.list from upstream. +fetch-leap-seconds.list: + $(CURL) -OR $(leaplist_URI) + +# Fetch leap-seconds.list from upstream and commit it to the local repository. +commit-leap-seconds.list: fetch-leap-seconds.list + author=$$($(AWK) '$(EXTRACT_AUTHOR)' leap-seconds.list) && \ + date=$$(TZ=$(leaplist_TZ) stat -c%y leap-seconds.list) && \ + git commit --author="$$author" --date="$$date" -m'make $@' \ + leap-seconds.list + # Arguments to pass to submakes of install_data. # They can be overridden by later submake arguments. INSTALLARGS = \ @@ -1315,7 +1345,8 @@ zic.o: private.h tzfile.h tzdir.h version.h .PHONY: ALL INSTALL all .PHONY: check check_mild check_time_t_alternatives .PHONY: check_web check_zishrink -.PHONY: clean clean_misc dummy.zd force_tzs +.PHONY: clean clean_misc commit-leap-seconds.list dummy.zd +.PHONY: fetch-leap-seconds.list force_tzs .PHONY: install install_data maintainer-clean names .PHONY: posix_only posix_right public .PHONY: rearguard_signatures rearguard_signatures_version diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/NEWS b/contrib/tzdata/NEWS index 031ba6a8a250..d407342a50e6 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/NEWS +++ b/contrib/tzdata/NEWS @@ -1,5 +1,73 @@ News for the tz database +Release 2024a - 2024-02-01 09:28:56 -0800 + + Briefly: + Kazakhstan unifies on UTC+5 beginning 2024-03-01. + Palestine springs forward a week later after Ramadan. + zic no longer pretends to support indefinite-past DST. + localtime no longer mishandles Ciudad Juárez in 2422. + + Changes to future timestamps + + Kazakhstan unifies on UTC+5. This affects Asia/Almaty and + Asia/Qostanay which together represent the eastern portion of the + country that will transition from UTC+6 on 2024-03-01 at 00:00 to + join the western portion. (Thanks to Zhanbolat Raimbekov.) + + Palestine springs forward a week later than previously predicted + in 2024 and 2025. (Thanks to Heba Hamad.) Change spring-forward + predictions to the second Saturday after Ramadan, not the first; + this also affects other predictions starting in 2039. + + Changes to past timestamps + + Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh's 1955-07-01 transition occurred at 01:00 + not 00:00. (Thanks to Đoàn Trần Công Danh.) + + From 1947 through 1949, Toronto's transitions occurred at 02:00 + not 00:00. (Thanks to Chris Walton.) + + In 1911 Miquelon adopted standard time on June 15, not May 15. + + Changes to code + + The FROM and TO columns of Rule lines can no longer be "minimum" + or an abbreviation of "minimum", because TZif files do not support + DST rules that extend into the indefinite past - although these + rules were supported when TZif files had only 32-bit data, this + stopped working when 64-bit TZif files were introduced in 1995. + This should not be a problem for realistic data, since DST was + first used in the 20th century. As a transition aid, FROM columns + like "minimum" are now diagnosed and then treated as if they were + the year 1900; this should suffice for TZif files on old systems + with only 32-bit time_t, and it is more compatible with bugs in + 2023c-and-earlier localtime.c. (Problem reported by Yoshito + Umaoka.) + + localtime and related functions no longer mishandle some + timestamps that occur about 400 years after a switch to a time + zone with a DST schedule. In 2023d data this problem was visible + for some timestamps in November 2422, November 2822, etc. in + America/Ciudad_Juarez. (Problem reported by Gilmore Davidson.) + + strftime %s now uses tm_gmtoff if available. (Problem and draft + patch reported by Dag-Erling Smørgrav.) + + Changes to build procedure + + The leap-seconds.list file is now copied from the IERS instead of + from its downstream counterpart at NIST, as the IERS version is + now in the public domain too and tends to be more up-to-date. + (Thanks to Martin Burnicki for liaisoning with the IERS.) + + Changes to documentation + + The strftime man page documents which struct tm members affect + which conversion specs, and that tzset is called. (Problems + reported by Robert Elz and Steve Summit.) + + Release 2023d - 2023-12-21 20:02:24 -0800 Briefly: diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/africa b/contrib/tzdata/africa index 6fae18c0979f..92d823a0515c 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/africa +++ b/contrib/tzdata/africa @@ -30,6 +30,10 @@ # Milne J. Civil time. Geogr J. 1899 Feb;13(2):173-94. # https://www.jstor.org/stable/1774359 # +# For the 1911/1912 establishment of standard time in French possessions, see: +# Société Française de Physique, Recueil de constantes physiques (1913), +# page 752, 18b. +# # European-style abbreviations are commonly used along the Mediterranean. # For sub-Saharan Africa abbreviations were less standardized. # Previous editions of this database used WAT, CAT, SAT, and EAT @@ -113,7 +117,7 @@ Zone Atlantic/Cape_Verde -1:34:04 - LMT 1912 Jan 01 2:00u # Praia # Chad # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] -Zone Africa/Ndjamena 1:00:12 - LMT 1912 # N'Djamena +Zone Africa/Ndjamena 1:00:12 - LMT 1912 Jan 1 # N'Djamena 1:00 - WAT 1979 Oct 14 1:00 1:00 WAST 1980 Mar 8 1:00 - WAT @@ -139,7 +143,7 @@ Zone Africa/Ndjamena 1:00:12 - LMT 1912 # N'Djamena # Inaccessible, Nightingale: uninhabited # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] -Zone Africa/Abidjan -0:16:08 - LMT 1912 +Zone Africa/Abidjan -0:16:08 - LMT 1912 Jan 1 0:00 - GMT ############################################################################### diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/asia b/contrib/tzdata/asia index 04526c196931..05683b9ebaa3 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/asia +++ b/contrib/tzdata/asia @@ -2457,18 +2457,33 @@ Zone Asia/Amman 2:23:44 - LMT 1931 # effective December 21st, 2018.... # http://adilet.zan.kz/rus/docs/P1800000817 (russian language). +# From Zhanbolat Raimbekov (2024-01-19): +# Kazakhstan (all parts) switching to UTC+5 on March 1, 2024 +# https://www.gov.kz/memleket/entities/mti/press/news/details/688998?lang=ru +# [in Russian] +# (2024-01-20): https://primeminister.kz/ru/decisions/19012024-20 +# +# From Alexander Krivenyshev (2024-01-19): +# According to a different news and the official web site for the Ministry of +# Trade and Integration of the Republic of Kazakhstan: +# https://en.inform.kz/news/kazakhstan-to-switch-to-single-hour-zone-mar-1-54ad0b/ + # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] # # Almaty (formerly Alma-Ata), representing most locations in Kazakhstan -# This includes KZ-AKM, KZ-ALA, KZ-ALM, KZ-AST, KZ-BAY, KZ-VOS, KZ-ZHA, -# KZ-KAR, KZ-SEV, KZ-PAV, and KZ-YUZ. +# This includes Abai/Abay (ISO 3166-2 code KZ-10), Aqmola/Akmola (KZ-11), +# Almaty (KZ-19), Almaty city (KZ-75), Astana city (KZ-71), +# East Kazkhstan (KZ-63), Jambyl/Zhambyl (KZ-31), Jetisu/Zhetysu (KZ-33), +# Karaganda (KZ-35), North Kazakhstan (KZ-59), Pavlodar (KZ-55), +# Shyumkent city (KZ-79), Turkistan (KZ-61), and Ulytau (KZ-62). Zone Asia/Almaty 5:07:48 - LMT 1924 May 2 # or Alma-Ata 5:00 - +05 1930 Jun 21 6:00 RussiaAsia +06/+07 1991 Mar 31 2:00s 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 1992 Jan 19 2:00s 6:00 RussiaAsia +06/+07 2004 Oct 31 2:00s - 6:00 - +06 -# Qyzylorda (aka Kyzylorda, Kizilorda, Kzyl-Orda, etc.) (KZ-KZY) + 6:00 - +06 2024 Mar 1 0:00 + 5:00 - +05 +# Qyzylorda (aka Kyzylorda, Kizilorda, Kzyl-Orda, etc.) (KZ-43) Zone Asia/Qyzylorda 4:21:52 - LMT 1924 May 2 4:00 - +04 1930 Jun 21 5:00 - +05 1981 Apr 1 @@ -2481,8 +2496,7 @@ Zone Asia/Qyzylorda 4:21:52 - LMT 1924 May 2 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 2004 Oct 31 2:00s 6:00 - +06 2018 Dec 21 0:00 5:00 - +05 -# -# Qostanay (aka Kostanay, Kustanay) (KZ-KUS) +# Qostanay (aka Kostanay, Kustanay) (KZ-39) # The 1991/2 rules are unclear partly because of the 1997 Turgai # reorganization. Zone Asia/Qostanay 4:14:28 - LMT 1924 May 2 @@ -2493,9 +2507,9 @@ Zone Asia/Qostanay 4:14:28 - LMT 1924 May 2 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 1991 Mar 31 2:00s 4:00 RussiaAsia +04/+05 1992 Jan 19 2:00s 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 2004 Oct 31 2:00s - 6:00 - +06 - -# Aqtöbe (aka Aktobe, formerly Aktyubinsk) (KZ-AKT) + 6:00 - +06 2024 Mar 1 0:00 + 5:00 - +05 +# Aqtöbe (aka Aktobe, formerly Aktyubinsk) (KZ-15) Zone Asia/Aqtobe 3:48:40 - LMT 1924 May 2 4:00 - +04 1930 Jun 21 5:00 - +05 1981 Apr 1 @@ -2505,7 +2519,7 @@ Zone Asia/Aqtobe 3:48:40 - LMT 1924 May 2 4:00 RussiaAsia +04/+05 1992 Jan 19 2:00s 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 2004 Oct 31 2:00s 5:00 - +05 -# Mangghystaū (KZ-MAN) +# Mangghystaū (KZ-47) # Aqtau was not founded until 1963, but it represents an inhabited region, # so include timestamps before 1963. Zone Asia/Aqtau 3:21:04 - LMT 1924 May 2 @@ -2517,7 +2531,7 @@ Zone Asia/Aqtau 3:21:04 - LMT 1924 May 2 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 1994 Sep 25 2:00s 4:00 RussiaAsia +04/+05 2004 Oct 31 2:00s 5:00 - +05 -# Atyraū (KZ-ATY) is like Mangghystaū except it switched from +# Atyraū (KZ-23) is like Mangghystaū except it switched from # +04/+05 to +05/+06 in spring 1999, not fall 1994. Zone Asia/Atyrau 3:27:44 - LMT 1924 May 2 3:00 - +03 1930 Jun 21 @@ -2528,7 +2542,7 @@ Zone Asia/Atyrau 3:27:44 - LMT 1924 May 2 5:00 RussiaAsia +05/+06 1999 Mar 28 2:00s 4:00 RussiaAsia +04/+05 2004 Oct 31 2:00s 5:00 - +05 -# West Kazakhstan (KZ-ZAP) +# West Kazakhstan (KZ-27) # From Paul Eggert (2016-03-18): # The 1989 transition is from USSR act No. 227 (1989-03-14). Zone Asia/Oral 3:25:24 - LMT 1924 May 2 # or Ural'sk @@ -3430,19 +3444,26 @@ Zone Asia/Karachi 4:28:12 - LMT 1907 # ... winter time will begin in Palestine from Saturday 10-28-2023, # 02:00 AM by 60 minutes back. # -# From Paul Eggert (2023-03-22): +# From Heba Hamad (2024-01-25): +# the summer time for the years 2024,2025 will begin in Palestine +# from Saturday at 02:00 AM by 60 minutes forward as shown below: +# year date +# 2024 2024-04-20 +# 2025 2025-04-12 +# +# From Paul Eggert (2024-01-25): # For now, guess that spring and fall transitions will normally # continue to use 2022's rules, that during DST Palestine will switch # to standard time at 02:00 the last Saturday before Ramadan and back -# to DST at 02:00 the first Saturday after Ramadan, and that +# to DST at 02:00 the second Saturday after Ramadan, and that # if the normal spring-forward or fall-back transition occurs during # Ramadan the former is delayed and the latter advanced. # To implement this, I predicted Ramadan-oriented transition dates for -# 2023 through 2086 by running the following program under GNU Emacs 28.2, +# 2026 through 2086 by running the following program under GNU Emacs 29.2, # with the results integrated by hand into the table below. # Predictions after 2086 are approximated without Ramadan. # -# (let ((islamic-year 1444)) +# (let ((islamic-year 1447)) # (require 'cal-islam) # (while (< islamic-year 1510) # (let ((a (calendar-islamic-to-absolute (list 9 1 islamic-year))) @@ -3451,6 +3472,7 @@ Zone Asia/Karachi 4:28:12 - LMT 1907 # (while (/= saturday (mod (setq a (1- a)) 7))) # (while (/= saturday (mod b 7)) # (setq b (1+ b))) +# (setq b (+ 7 b)) # (setq a (calendar-gregorian-from-absolute a)) # (setq b (calendar-gregorian-from-absolute b)) # (insert @@ -3501,84 +3523,84 @@ Rule Palestine 2021 only - Oct 29 1:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2022 only - Mar 27 0:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2022 2035 - Oct Sat<=30 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2023 only - Apr 29 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2024 only - Apr 13 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2025 only - Apr 5 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2024 only - Apr 20 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2025 only - Apr 12 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2026 2054 - Mar Sat<=30 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2036 only - Oct 18 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2037 only - Oct 10 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2038 only - Sep 25 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2039 only - Sep 17 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2039 only - Oct 22 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2039 2067 - Oct Sat<=30 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2040 only - Sep 1 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2040 only - Oct 13 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2040 only - Oct 20 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2040 2067 - Oct Sat<=30 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2041 only - Aug 24 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2041 only - Sep 28 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2041 only - Oct 5 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2042 only - Aug 16 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2042 only - Sep 20 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2042 only - Sep 27 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2043 only - Aug 1 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2043 only - Sep 12 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2043 only - Sep 19 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2044 only - Jul 23 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2044 only - Aug 27 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2044 only - Sep 3 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2045 only - Jul 15 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2045 only - Aug 19 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2045 only - Aug 26 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2046 only - Jun 30 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2046 only - Aug 11 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2046 only - Aug 18 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2047 only - Jun 22 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2047 only - Jul 27 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2047 only - Aug 3 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2048 only - Jun 6 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2048 only - Jul 18 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2048 only - Jul 25 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2049 only - May 29 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2049 only - Jul 3 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2049 only - Jul 10 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2050 only - May 21 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2050 only - Jun 25 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2050 only - Jul 2 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2051 only - May 6 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2051 only - Jun 17 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2051 only - Jun 24 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2052 only - Apr 27 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2052 only - Jun 1 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2052 only - Jun 8 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2053 only - Apr 12 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2053 only - May 24 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2053 only - May 31 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2054 only - Apr 4 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2054 only - May 16 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2055 only - May 1 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2056 only - Apr 22 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2057 only - Apr 7 2:00 1:00 S -Rule Palestine 2058 max - Mar Sat<=30 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2054 only - May 23 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2055 only - May 8 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2056 only - Apr 29 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2057 only - Apr 14 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2058 only - Apr 6 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2059 max - Mar Sat<=30 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2068 only - Oct 20 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2069 only - Oct 12 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2070 only - Oct 4 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2071 only - Sep 19 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2072 only - Sep 10 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2072 only - Oct 15 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2072 only - Oct 22 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2072 max - Oct Sat<=30 2:00 0 - Rule Palestine 2073 only - Sep 2 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2073 only - Oct 7 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2073 only - Oct 14 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2074 only - Aug 18 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2074 only - Sep 29 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2074 only - Oct 6 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2075 only - Aug 10 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2075 only - Sep 14 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2075 only - Sep 21 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2076 only - Jul 25 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2076 only - Sep 5 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2076 only - Sep 12 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2077 only - Jul 17 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2077 only - Aug 28 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2077 only - Sep 4 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2078 only - Jul 9 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2078 only - Aug 13 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2078 only - Aug 20 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2079 only - Jun 24 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2079 only - Aug 5 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2079 only - Aug 12 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2080 only - Jun 15 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2080 only - Jul 20 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2080 only - Jul 27 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2081 only - Jun 7 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2081 only - Jul 12 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2081 only - Jul 19 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2082 only - May 23 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2082 only - Jul 4 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2082 only - Jul 11 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2083 only - May 15 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2083 only - Jun 19 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2083 only - Jun 26 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2084 only - Apr 29 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2084 only - Jun 10 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2084 only - Jun 17 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2085 only - Apr 21 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2085 only - Jun 2 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2085 only - Jun 9 2:00 1:00 S Rule Palestine 2086 only - Apr 13 2:00 0 - -Rule Palestine 2086 only - May 18 2:00 1:00 S +Rule Palestine 2086 only - May 25 2:00 1:00 S # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] Zone Asia/Gaza 2:17:52 - LMT 1900 Oct @@ -3606,7 +3628,7 @@ Zone Asia/Hebron 2:20:23 - LMT 1900 Oct # Philippines -# From Paul Eggert (2018-11-18): +# From Paul Eggert (2024-01-21): # The Spanish initially used American (west-of-Greenwich) time. # It is unknown what time Manila kept when the British occupied it from # 1762-10-06 through 1764-04; for now assume it kept American time. @@ -3614,7 +3636,7 @@ Zone Asia/Hebron 2:20:23 - LMT 1900 Oct # Philippines, issued a proclamation announcing that 1844-12-30 was to # be immediately followed by 1845-01-01; see R.H. van Gent's # History of the International Date Line -# https://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~gent0113/idl/idl_philippines.htm +# https://webspace.science.uu.nl/~gent0113/idl/idl_philippines.htm # The rest of the data entries are from Shanks & Pottenger. # From Jesper Nørgaard Welen (2006-04-26): @@ -4041,7 +4063,8 @@ Zone Asia/Tashkent 4:37:11 - LMT 1924 May 2 # The English-language name of Vietnam's most populous city is "Ho Chi Minh # City"; use Ho_Chi_Minh below to avoid a name of more than 14 characters. -# From Paul Eggert (2022-07-27) after a 2014 heads-up from Trần Ngọc Quân: +# From Paul Eggert (2024-01-14) after a 2014 heads-up from Trần Ngọc Quân +# and a 2024-01-14 heads-up from Đoàn Trần Công Danh: # Trần Tiến Bình's authoritative book "Lịch Việt Nam: thế kỷ XX-XXI (1901-2100)" # (Nhà xuất bản Văn Hoá - Thông Tin, Hanoi, 2005), pp 49-50, # is quoted verbatim in: @@ -4071,14 +4094,35 @@ Zone Asia/Tashkent 4:37:11 - LMT 1924 May 2 # # Trần cites the following sources; it's unclear which supplied the info above. # -# Hoàng Xuân Hãn: "Lịch và lịch Việt Nam". Tập san Khoa học Xã hội, -# No. 9, Paris, February 1982. +# Hoàng Xuân Hãn: "Lịch và lịch Việt Nam". Tập san Khoa học Xã hội, +# No. 9, Paris, February 1982. +# +# Lê Thành Lân: "Lịch và niên biểu lịch sử hai mươi thế kỷ (0001-2010)", +# NXB Thống kê, Hanoi, 2000. # -# Lê Thành Lân: "Lịch và niên biểu lịch sử hai mươi thế kỷ (0001-2010)", -# NXB Thống kê, Hanoi, 2000. +# Lê Thành Lân: "Lịch hai thế kỷ (1802-2010) và các lịch vĩnh cửu", +# NXB Thuận Hoá, Huế, 1995. # -# Lê Thành Lân: "Lịch hai thế kỷ (1802-2010) và các lịch vĩnh cửu", -# NXB Thuận Hoá, Huế, 1995. +# Here is the decision for the September 1945 transition: +# Võ Nguyên Giáp, Việt Nam Dân Quốc Công Báo, No. 1 (1945-09-29), page 13 +# http://baochi.nlv.gov.vn/baochi/cgi-bin/baochi?a=d&d=JwvzO19450929.2.5&dliv=none +# It says that on 1945-09-01 at 24:00, Vietnam moved back two hours, to +07. +# It also mentions a 1945-03-29 decree (by a Japanese Goveror-General) +# to set the time zone to +09, but does not say whether that decree +# merely legalized an earlier change to +09. +# +# July 1955 transition: +# Ngô Đình Diệm, Công Báo Việt Nam, No. 92 (1955-07-02), page 1780-1781 +# Ordinance (Dụ) No. 46 (1955-06-25) +# http://ddsnext.crl.edu/titles/32341#?c=0&m=29&s=0&cv=4&r=0&xywh=-89%2C342%2C1724%2C1216 +# It says that on 1955-07-01 at 01:00, South Vietnam moved back 1 hour (to +07). +# +# December 1959 transition: +# Ngô Đình Diệm, Công Báo Việt Nam Cộng Hòa, 1960 part 1 (1960-01-02), page 62 +# Decree (Sắc lệnh) No. 362-TTP (1959-12-30) +# http://ddsnext.crl.edu/titles/32341#?c=0&m=138&s=0&cv=793&r=0&xywh=-54%2C1504%2C1705%2C1202 +# It says that on 1959-12-31 at 23:00, South Vietnam moved forward 1 hour (to +08). + # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] #STDOFF 7:06:30.13 @@ -4086,9 +4130,9 @@ Zone Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh 7:06:30 - LMT 1906 Jul 1 7:06:30 - PLMT 1911 May 1 # Phù Liễn MT 7:00 - +07 1942 Dec 31 23:00 8:00 - +08 1945 Mar 14 23:00 - 9:00 - +09 1945 Sep 2 + 9:00 - +09 1945 Sep 1 24:00 7:00 - +07 1947 Apr 1 - 8:00 - +08 1955 Jul 1 + 8:00 - +08 1955 Jul 1 01:00 7:00 - +07 1959 Dec 31 23:00 8:00 - +08 1975 Jun 13 7:00 - +07 diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/australasia b/contrib/tzdata/australasia index dc98c1e2de17..0e9c2592e4be 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/australasia +++ b/contrib/tzdata/australasia @@ -420,11 +420,11 @@ Zone Pacific/Fiji 11:55:44 - LMT 1915 Oct 26 # Suva # French Polynesia # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] -Zone Pacific/Gambier -8:59:48 - LMT 1912 Oct # Rikitea +Zone Pacific/Gambier -8:59:48 - LMT 1912 Oct 1 # Rikitea -9:00 - -09 -Zone Pacific/Marquesas -9:18:00 - LMT 1912 Oct +Zone Pacific/Marquesas -9:18:00 - LMT 1912 Oct 1 -9:30 - -0930 -Zone Pacific/Tahiti -9:58:16 - LMT 1912 Oct # Papeete +Zone Pacific/Tahiti -9:58:16 - LMT 1912 Oct 1 # Papeete -10:00 - -10 # Clipperton (near North America) is administered from French Polynesia; # it is uninhabited. @@ -802,7 +802,7 @@ Zone Pacific/Apia 12:33:04 - LMT 1892 Jul 5 # Solomon Is # excludes Bougainville, for which see Papua New Guinea # Zone NAME STDOFF RULES FORMAT [UNTIL] -Zone Pacific/Guadalcanal 10:39:48 - LMT 1912 Oct # Honiara +Zone Pacific/Guadalcanal 10:39:48 - LMT 1912 Oct 1 # Honiara 11:00 - +11 # Tokelau @@ -963,6 +963,10 @@ Zone Pacific/Efate 11:13:16 - LMT 1912 Jan 13 # Vila # Milne J. Civil time. Geogr J. 1899 Feb;13(2):173-94. # https://www.jstor.org/stable/1774359 # +# For the 1911/1912 establishment of standard time in French possessions, see: +# Société Française de Physique, Recueil de constantes physiques (1913), +# page 752, 18b. +# # A reliable and entertaining source about time zones is # Derek Howse, Greenwich time and longitude, Philip Wilson Publishers (1997). # @@ -2039,7 +2043,7 @@ Zone Pacific/Efate 11:13:16 - LMT 1912 Jan 13 # Vila # ordaining - by a masterpiece of diplomatic flattery - that # the Fourth of July should be celebrated twice in that year." # This happened in 1892, according to the Evening News (Sydney) of 1892-07-20. -# https://www.staff.science.uu.nl/~gent0113/idl/idl.htm +# https://webspace.science.uu.nl/~gent0113/idl/idl_alaska_samoa.htm # Although Shanks & Pottenger says they both switched to UT -11:30 # in 1911, and to -11 in 1950. many earlier sources give -11 diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/checknow.awk b/contrib/tzdata/checknow.awk index d722c03fd689..57ff3c02e789 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/checknow.awk +++ b/contrib/tzdata/checknow.awk @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ END { for (zone in zone_data) { data = zone_data[zone] if (!zonenow[data]) { - printf "checknow.tab should have one of:%s\n", zones[data] + printf "zonenow.tab should have one of:%s\n", zones[data] zonenow[data] = zone # This suppresses duplicate diagnostics. status = 1 } diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/etcetera b/contrib/tzdata/etcetera index 865a220c1f4b..29fbed9b9290 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/etcetera +++ b/contrib/tzdata/etcetera @@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ # These entries are for uses not otherwise covered by the tz database. # Their main practical use is for platforms like Android that lack -# support for POSIX-style TZ strings. On such platforms these entries +# support for POSIX.1-2017-style TZ strings. On such platforms these entries # can be useful if the timezone database is wrong or if a ship or # aircraft at sea is not in a timezone. diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/europe b/contrib/tzdata/europe index 27f821e77600..c6b5270316b9 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/europe +++ b/contrib/tzdata/europe @@ -990,9 +990,34 @@ Zone Europe/Sofia 1:33:16 - LMT 1880 # Czech Republic (Czechia) # Slovakia # -# From Paul Eggert (2018-04-15): -# The source for Czech data is: Kdy začíná a končí letní čas. 2018-04-15. +# From Ivan Benovic (2024-01-30): +# https://www.slov-lex.sk/pravne-predpisy/SK/ZZ/1946/54/ +# (This is an official link to the Czechoslovak Summer Time Act of +# March 8, 1946 that authorizes the Czechoslovak government to set the +# exact dates of change to summer time and back to Central European Time. +# The act also implicitly confirms Central European Time as the +# official time zone of Czechoslovakia and currently remains in force +# in both the Czech Republic and Slovakia.) +# https://www.psp.cz/eknih/1945pns/tisky/t0216_00.htm +# (This is a link to the original legislative proposal dating back to +# February 22, 1946. The accompanying memorandum to the proposal says +# that an advisory committee on European railroad transportation that +# met in Brussels in October 1945 decided that the change of time +# should be carried out in all participating countries in a strictly +# coordinated manner....) +# +# From Paul Eggert (2024-01-30): +# The source for Czech data is: Kdy začíná a končí letní čas. # https://kalendar.beda.cz/kdy-zacina-a-konci-letni-cas +# Its main text disagrees with its quoted sources only in 1918, +# where the main text says spring and autumn transitions +# occurred at 02:00 and 03:00 respectively (as usual), +# whereas the 1918 source "Oznámení o zavedení letního času v roce 1918" +# says transitions were at 01:00 and 02:00 respectively. +# As the 1918 source appears to be a humorous piece, and it is +# unlikely that Prague would have disagreed with its neighbors by an hour, +# go with the main text for now. +# # We know of no English-language name for historical Czech winter time; # abbreviate it as "GMT", as it happened to be GMT. # diff --git a/contrib/tzdata/leap-seconds.list b/contrib/tzdata/leap-seconds.list index 3fe9a1210e3c..e52effc257b2 100644 --- a/contrib/tzdata/leap-seconds.list +++ b/contrib/tzdata/leap-seconds.list @@ -1,255 +1,120 @@ +# ATOMIC TIME. +# The Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is the reference time scale derived +# from The "Temps Atomique International" (TAI) calculated by the Bureau +# International des Poids et Mesures (BIPM) using a worldwide network of atomic +# clocks. UTC differs from TAI by an integer number of seconds; it is the basis +# of all activities in the world. # -# In the following text, the symbol '#' introduces -# a comment, which continues from that symbol until -# the end of the line. A plain comment line has a -# whitespace character following the comment indicator. -# There are also special comment lines defined below. -# A special comment will always have a non-whitespace -# character in column 2. -# -# A blank line should be ignored. -# -# The following table shows the corrections that must -# be applied to compute International Atomic Time (TAI) -# from the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) values that -# are transmitted by almost all time services. -# -# The first column shows an epoch as a number of seconds -# since 1 January 1900, 00:00:00 (1900.0 is also used to -# indicate the same epoch.) Both of these time stamp formats -# ignore the complexities of the time scales that were -# used before the current definition of UTC at the start -# of 1972. (See note 3 below.) -# The second column shows the number of seconds that -# must be added to UTC to compute TAI for any timestamp -# at or after that epoch. The value on each line is -# valid from the indicated initial instant until the -# epoch given on the next one or indefinitely into the -# future if there is no next line. -# (The comment on each line shows the representation of -# the corresponding initial epoch in the usual -# day-month-year format. The epoch always begins at -# 00:00:00 UTC on the indicated day. See Note 5 below.) -# -# Important notes: -# -# 1. Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) is often referred to -# as Greenwich Mean Time (GMT). The GMT time scale is no -# longer used, and the use of GMT to designate UTC is -# discouraged. -# -# 2. The UTC time scale is realized by many national -# laboratories and timing centers. Each laboratory -# identifies its realization with its name: Thus -# UTC(NIST), UTC(USNO), etc. The differences among -# these different realizations are typically on the -# order of a few nanoseconds (i.e., 0.000 000 00x s) -# and can be ignored for many purposes. These differences -# are tabulated in Circular T, which is published monthly -# by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures -# (BIPM). See www.bipm.org for more information. -# -# 3. The current definition of the relationship between UTC -# and TAI dates from 1 January 1972. A number of different -# time scales were in use before that epoch, and it can be -# quite difficult to compute precise timestamps and time -# intervals in those "prehistoric" days. For more information, -# consult: -# -# The Explanatory Supplement to the Astronomical -# Ephemeris. -# or -# Terry Quinn, "The BIPM and the Accurate Measurement -# of Time," Proc. of the IEEE, Vol. 79, pp. 894-905, -# July, 1991. -# reprinted in: -# Christine Hackman and Donald B Sullivan (eds.) -# Time and Frequency Measurement -# American Association of Physics Teachers (1996) -# , pp. 75-86 -# -# 4. The decision to insert a leap second into UTC is currently -# the responsibility of the International Earth Rotation and -# Reference Systems Service. (The name was changed from the -# International Earth Rotation Service, but the acronym IERS -# is still used.) -# -# Leap seconds are announced by the IERS in its Bulletin C. -# -# See www.iers.org for more details. -# -# Every national laboratory and timing center uses the -# data from the BIPM and the IERS to construct UTC(lab), -# their local realization of UTC. -# -# Although the definition also includes the possibility -# of dropping seconds ("negative" leap seconds), this has -# never been done and is unlikely to be necessary in the -# foreseeable future. -# -# 5. If your system keeps time as the number of seconds since -# some epoch (e.g., NTP timestamps), then the algorithm for -# assigning a UTC time stamp to an event that happens during a positive -# leap second is not well defined. The official name of that leap -# second is 23:59:60, but there is no way of representing that time -# in these systems. -# Many systems of this type effectively stop the system clock for -# one second during the leap second and use a time that is equivalent -# to 23:59:59 UTC twice. For these systems, the corresponding TAI -# timestamp would be obtained by advancing to the next entry in the -# following table when the time equivalent to 23:59:59 UTC -# is used for the second time. Thus the leap second which -# occurred on 30 June 1972 at 23:59:59 UTC would have TAI -# timestamps computed as follows: -# -# ... -# 30 June 1972 23:59:59 (2287785599, first time): TAI= UTC + 10 seconds -# 30 June 1972 23:59:60 (2287785599,second time): TAI= UTC + 11 seconds -# 1 July 1972 00:00:00 (2287785600) TAI= UTC + 11 seconds -# ... -# -# If your system realizes the leap second by repeating 00:00:00 UTC twice -# (this is possible but not usual), then the advance to the next entry -# in the table must occur the second time that a time equivalent to -# 00:00:00 UTC is used. Thus, using the same example as above: -# -# ... -# 30 June 1972 23:59:59 (2287785599): TAI= UTC + 10 seconds -# 30 June 1972 23:59:60 (2287785600, first time): TAI= UTC + 10 seconds -# 1 July 1972 00:00:00 (2287785600,second time): TAI= UTC + 11 seconds -# ... -# -# in both cases the use of timestamps based on TAI produces a smooth -# time scale with no discontinuity in the time interval. However, -# although the long-term behavior of the time scale is correct in both -# methods, the second method is technically not correct because it adds -# the extra second to the wrong day. -# -# This complexity would not be needed for negative leap seconds (if they -# are ever used). The UTC time would skip 23:59:59 and advance from -# 23:59:58 to 00:00:00 in that case. The TAI offset would decrease by -# 1 second at the same instant. This is a much easier situation to deal -# with, since the difficulty of unambiguously representing the epoch -# during the leap second does not arise. -# -# Some systems implement leap seconds by amortizing the leap second -# over the last few minutes of the day. The frequency of the local -# clock is decreased (or increased) to realize the positive (or -# negative) leap second. This method removes the time step described -# above. Although the long-term behavior of the time scale is correct -# in this case, this method introduces an error during the adjustment -# period both in time and in frequency with respect to the official -# definition of UTC. -# -# Questions or comments to: -# Judah Levine -# Time and Frequency Division -# NIST -# Boulder, Colorado -# Judah.Levine@nist.gov -# -# Last Update of leap second values: 8 July 2016 -# -# The following line shows this last update date in NTP timestamp -# format. This is the date on which the most recent change to -# the leap second data was added to the file. This line can -# be identified by the unique pair of characters in the first two -# columns as shown below. -# -#$ 3676924800 -# -# The NTP timestamps are in units of seconds since the NTP epoch, -# which is 1 January 1900, 00:00:00. The Modified Julian Day number -# corresponding to the NTP time stamp, X, can be computed as -# -# X/86400 + 15020 -# -# where the first term converts seconds to days and the second -# term adds the MJD corresponding to the time origin defined above. -# The integer portion of the result is the integer MJD for that -# day, and any remainder is the time of day, expressed as the -# fraction of the day since 0 hours UTC. The conversion from day -# fraction to seconds or to hours, minutes, and seconds may involve -# rounding or truncation, depending on the method used in the -# computation. -# -# The data in this file will be updated periodically as new leap -# seconds are announced. In addition to being entered on the line -# above, the update time (in NTP format) will be added to the basic -# file name leap-seconds to form the name leap-seconds.. -# In addition, the generic name leap-seconds.list will always point to -# the most recent version of the file. -# -# This update procedure will be performed only when a new leap second -# is announced. -# -# The following entry specifies the expiration date of the data -# in this file in units of seconds since the origin at the instant -# 1 January 1900, 00:00:00. This expiration date will be changed -# at least twice per year whether or not a new leap second is -# announced. These semi-annual changes will be made no later -# than 1 June and 1 December of each year to indicate what -# action (if any) is to be taken on 30 June and 31 December, -# respectively. (These are the customary effective dates for new -# leap seconds.) This expiration date will be identified by a -# unique pair of characters in columns 1 and 2 as shown below. -# In the unlikely event that a leap second is announced with an -# effective date other than 30 June or 31 December, then this -# file will be edited to include that leap second as soon as it is -# announced or at least one month before the effective date -# (whichever is later). -# If an announcement by the IERS specifies that no leap second is -# scheduled, then only the expiration date of the file will -# be advanced to show that the information in the file is still -# current -- the update time stamp, the data and the name of the file -# will not change. -# -# Updated through IERS Bulletin C66 -# File expires on: 28 June 2024 -# -#@ 3928521600 -# -2272060800 10 # 1 Jan 1972 -2287785600 11 # 1 Jul 1972 -2303683200 12 # 1 Jan 1973 -2335219200 13 # 1 Jan 1974 -2366755200 14 # 1 Jan 1975 -2398291200 15 # 1 Jan 1976 -2429913600 16 # 1 Jan 1977 -2461449600 17 # 1 Jan 1978 -2492985600 18 # 1 Jan 1979 -2524521600 19 # 1 Jan 1980 -2571782400 20 # 1 Jul 1981 -2603318400 21 # 1 Jul 1982 -2634854400 22 # 1 Jul 1983 -2698012800 23 # 1 Jul 1985 -2776982400 24 # 1 Jan 1988 -2840140800 25 # 1 Jan 1990 -2871676800 26 # 1 Jan 1991 -2918937600 27 # 1 Jul 1992 -2950473600 28 # 1 Jul 1993 -2982009600 29 # 1 Jul 1994 -3029443200 30 # 1 Jan 1996 -3076704000 31 # 1 Jul 1997 -3124137600 32 # 1 Jan 1999 -3345062400 33 # 1 Jan 2006 -3439756800 34 # 1 Jan 2009 -3550089600 35 # 1 Jul 2012 -3644697600 36 # 1 Jul 2015 -3692217600 37 # 1 Jan 2017 -# -# the following special comment contains the -# hash value of the data in this file computed -# use the secure hash algorithm as specified -# by FIPS 180-1. See the files in ~/pub/sha for -# the details of how this hash value is -# computed. Note that the hash computation -# ignores comments and whitespace characters -# in data lines. It includes the NTP values *** 599 LINES SKIPPED ***