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[2003-10-10 14:30 UTC] pennington at rhodes dot edu
Description: ------------ The Windows version of PHP 4.3.3 does not return the system's time when the date() command is used. It only returns UTC time and "BST" as the timezone, even when the Windows server is set to use local time and reports as such in the Date/Time control panel. Please note that this is different than bug #23467 because the time being reported is wrong (UTC rather than the local CST), in addition to the wrong "BST" timezone. Reproduce code: --------------- echo date("D M j G:i:s T Y"); Expected result: ---------------- Fri Oct 10 13:28:58 CST 2003 Actual result: -------------- Fri Oct 10 18:28:58 BST 2003 PatchesPull RequestsHistoryAllCommentsChangesGit/SVN commits
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Interestingly, when testing to see if this UTC display of time would happen for PHP installed as a CGI (couldn't reproduce with Apache2 or IIS5 as a CGI), I noticed that the UTC time problem does not show up right away with PHP installed as ISAPI on IIS5. Rather, when you stop the IIS service and then start it again, for a period of time, the correct time is displayed using echo date("D M j G:i:s T Y"); However, after a period of time passes (say an hour or so on a server averaging a few users at a time), the time switches to UTC and does not go back. If you stop IIS and then start it again, the time goes back to the correct time and the cycle starts again. Note that this is using ISAPI on IIS5 on Windows 2000 Server. I been trying PHP in ISAPI and CGI mode on a Windows 2000 workstation because I've been having trouble getting the Windows 2000 Server, which uses PHP ISAPI just fine, to run PHP in CGI mode. It should be as easy as setting cgi.force_redirect = 0 and changing the app mapping configuration to point to the php.exe and not the php4isapi.dll but I'm not having any luck (get "not authorized to view this page" on php scripts). This method works fine on the Win2K workstation. Anyway, this is not related to the UTC time issue...Ahh, the TikiWiki PHP application (in /lib/date/TimeZone.php) that we are running does use putenv() in the following function: ---------------- /** * Is the given date/time in DST for this time zone * * Attempts to determine if a given Date object represents a date/time * that is in DST for this time zone. WARNINGS: this basically attempts to * "trick" the system into telling us if we're in DST for a given time zone. * This uses putenv() which may not work in safe mode, and relies on unix time * which is only valid for dates from 1970 to ~2038. This relies on the * underlying OS calls, so it may not work on Windows or on a system where * zoneinfo is not installed or configured properly. * * @access public * @param object Date $date the date/time to test * @return boolean true if this date is in DST for this time zone */ function inDaylightTime($date) { $env_tz = ""; if(getenv("TZ")) { $env_tz = getenv("TZ"); } putenv("TZ=".$this->id); $ltime = localtime($date->getTime(), true); putenv("TZ=".$env_tz); return $ltime['tm_isdst']; } ------------------- Are you saying that this could change the environment variable for timezone for the entire server for good (at least until IIS5 is restarted) once this code is executed? And this would affect pages that don't even include the function above?The Problem is too common as PHP data time function calls GMT time not our specific time zone time....\ i too faced the problem.. there is a simple answer to it... use strtotime('+ 5 hour 30 minute') // your time zone mine id IST = GMT + 5:30 instead of time(); so to obtain a full time you do the following. date("l-jS-F-Y g:i:s A", strtotime('+ 5 hour 30 minute')) = Sunday-11th-May-2014 5:32:30 PM as answer.....