This makes the target location consistent with other auto-generated
files like config_formats.h, config_core.h, and config_functions.h and
simplifies the build of clickhouse_common.
cmake/target.cmake defines macros for the supported platforms, this
commit changes predefined system macros to our own macros.
__linux__ --> OS_LINUX
__APPLE__ --> OS_DARWIN
__FreeBSD__ --> OS_FREEBSD
When I tried to add cool new clang-tidy 14 warnings, I noticed that the
current clang-tidy settings already produce a ton of warnings. This
commit addresses many of these. Almost all of them were non-critical,
i.e. C vs. C++ style casts.
The Year 1925 is a starting point because most of the timezones
switched to saner (mostly 15-minutes based) offsets somewhere
during 1924 or before. And that significantly simplifies implementation.
2238 is to simplify arithmetics for sanitizing LUT index access;
there are less than 0x1ffff days from 1925.
* Extended DateLUTImpl internal LUT to 0x1ffff items, some of which
represent negative (pre-1970) time values.
As a collateral benefit, Date now correctly supports dates up to 2149
(instead of 2106).
* Added a new strong typedef ExtendedDayNum, which represents dates
pre-1970 and post 2149.
* Functions that used to return DayNum now return ExtendedDayNum.
* Refactored DateLUTImpl to untie DayNum from the dual role of being
a value and an index (due to negative time). Index is now a different
type LUTIndex with explicit conversion functions from DatNum, time_t,
and ExtendedDayNum.
* Updated DateLUTImpl to properly support values close to epoch start
(1970-01-01 00:00), including negative ones.
* Reduced resolution of DateLUTImpl::Values::time_at_offset_change
to multiple of 15-minutes to allow storing 64-bits of time_t in
DateLUTImpl::Value while keeping same size.
* Minor performance updates to DateLUTImpl when building month LUT
by skipping non-start-of-month days.
* Fixed extractTimeZoneFromFunctionArguments to work correctly
with DateTime64.
* New unit-tests and stateless integration tests for both DateTime
and DateTime64.