#include #include class DateLUTImpl; namespace DB { class ReadBuffer; /** https://xkcd.com/1179/ * * The existence of this function is an example of bad practice * and contradicts our development principles. * * This function will recognize the following patterns: * * NNNNNNNNNN - 9..10 digits is a unix timestamp * * YYYYMMDDhhmmss - 14 numbers is always interpreted this way * * YYYYMMDD - 8 digits in a row * YYYY*MM*DD - or with any delimiter after first 4-digit year component and after month. * * DD/MM/YY * DD/MM/YYYY - when '/' separator is used, these are the only possible forms * Note that American style is not supported. * * hh:mm:ss - when ':' separator is used, it is always time * hh:mm - it can be specified without seconds * * YYYY - 4 digits is always year * * YYYYMM - 6 digits is a year, month if year was not already read * hhmmss - 6 digits is a time if year was already read * * .nnnnnnn - any number of digits after point is fractional part of second, if it is not YYYY.MM.DD or DD.MM.YYYY * * T - means that time will follow * * Z - means zero UTC offset * * +hhmm * +hh:mm * +hh * -... - time zone offset * * single whitespace can be used as a separator * * AM/PM - AM is ignored and PM means: add 12 hours if value is less than 12. * * Jan/Feb/Mar/Apr/May/Jun/Jul/Aug/Sep/Oct/Nov/Dec - allowed to specify month * Mon/Tue/Wed/Thu/Fri/Sat/Sun - simply ignored. */ void parseDateTimeBestEffort(time_t & res, ReadBuffer & in, const DateLUTImpl & local_time_zone, const DateLUTImpl & utc_time_zone); bool tryParseDateTimeBestEffort(time_t & res, ReadBuffer & in, const DateLUTImpl & local_time_zone, const DateLUTImpl & utc_time_zone); }