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Request #53831 DateInterval constructor does not handle valid ISO 8601 strings
Submitted: 2011-01-24 18:41 UTC Modified: 2020-02-28 00:58 UTC
Votes:47
Avg. Score:4.4 ± 0.9
Reproduced:47 of 47 (100.0%)
Same Version:11 (23.4%)
Same OS:9 (19.1%)
From: pallinger at dsd dot sztaki dot hu Assigned: derick (profile)
Status: Not a bug Package: Date/time related
PHP Version: 5.3.5 OS: ubuntu linux 10.10
Private report: No CVE-ID: None
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 [2011-01-24 18:41 UTC] pallinger at dsd dot sztaki dot hu
Description:
------------
---
From manual page: http://www.php.net/dateinterval.construct
---
The documentation says that "Each duration period is represented by an integer value followed by a period designator.", however, the ISO 8601 allows non-integer values for the last number (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601#Durations).
This is quite important if I want to parse XML data which contains millisecond-precision durations, as the seconds will surely not be integers.

Test script:
---------------
<?php 
   var_dump(new DateInterval('PT1.1S'));
?>

Expected result:
----------------
Should print out a valid DateInterval object, eg.:
object(DateInterval)#1 (8) {
  ["y"]=>
  int(0)
  ["m"]=>
  int(0)
  ["d"]=>
  int(0)
  ["h"]=>
  int(0)
  ["i"]=>
  int(0)
  ["s"]=>
  float(1.1)
  ["invert"]=>
  int(0)
  ["days"]=>
  bool(false)
}
It could also include a millisecond/microsecond/nanosecond field to accomodate additional precision. However, if the durations that are stored are still integers, it would be difficult to handle durations like "P0.5Y".

Actual result:
--------------
PHP Fatal error:  Uncaught exception 'Exception' with message 'DateInterval::__construct(): Unknown or bad format (PT1.1S)' in -:1
Stack trace:
#0 -(1): DateInterval->__construct('PT1.1S')
#1 {main}
  thrown in - on line 1


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 [2011-10-12 16:09 UTC] dagguh at gmail dot com
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iso8601#Durations

This decimal fraction may be specified with either a comma or a full stop, as in 
"P0,5Y" or "P0.5Y".

Remember to accept both comma and a full stop.
 [2012-04-02 10:47 UTC] jdp2234 at hotmail dot com
http://joshp.me/dateinterval-milliseconds/
Quick class to get around it, while the bug still exists...
class DateIntervalFractions extends DateInterval {
	public $milliseconds;
	public function __construct($interval_spec) {
		$this->milliseconds = 0;
		$matches = array();
		preg_match_all("#([0-9]*[.,]?[0-9]*)
[S]#",$interval_spec,$matches);
		foreach ($matches[0] as $result)
		{
			$original = $result;
			list($seconds,$milliseconds) = 
explode(".",substr($result,0,-1));
			$this->milliseconds = $milliseconds / 
pow(10,strlen($milliseconds) - 3);

                        // Replace the milliseconds back to seconds,
                        // and let the original constructor do the rest.
			$interval_spec = str_replace($original,$seconds . 
"S",$interval_spec);
		}
		parent::__construct($interval_spec);
	}
}
 [2017-12-05 22:46 UTC] sloanlance+php dot net at gmail dot com
I'm surprised this bug has persisted since 2011-01-24.  This seems to have been implemented incorrectly from the beginning.  ISO 8601 has mentioned support for fractional parts since at least 2004.

That is, it supports a decimal fraction to the smallest time value in a representation.

For example, the following representations are valid ISO 8601 intervals, but will cause the DateInterval constructor to throw exceptions:

P0.5Y
P2.3D
P1DT1.5H
PT585.829S

I appreciate the attempted workaround by "jdp2234 at hotmail dot com", but it appears to only support milliseconds.  It doesn't seem to address fractions in other parts of interval representations.
 [2019-01-10 19:15 UTC] mdwyer at michaelmdwyer dot com
This appears to still be an issue with PHP 7.2, despite them adding a microseconds field to DateInterval.  My current workaround is:

        $fractional = new DateInterval('PT0S');
        $fractional->f = ".{$microseconds}";
        $fractional->invert = $seconds < 0;

        return (new DateTime("@{$seconds}"))->add($fractional);
 [2020-02-27 19:12 UTC] googleguy@php.net
-Status: Open +Status: Verified -Assigned To: +Assigned To: derick
 [2020-02-27 19:12 UTC] googleguy@php.net
This may be considered more of a feature request than a bug, however, I'm assigning to Derrick and pinging them here.

When I looked at "Appendix A. ISO 8601 Collected ABNF" of RFC3339, I only see the definition of Seconds Duration as DIGIT, not fraction:

Durations:

   dur-second        = 1*DIGIT "S"
   dur-minute        = 1*DIGIT "M" [dur-second]
   dur-hour          = 1*DIGIT "H" [dur-minute]
   dur-time          = "T" (dur-hour / dur-minute / dur-second)
   dur-day           = 1*DIGIT "D"
   dur-week          = 1*DIGIT "W"
   dur-month         = 1*DIGIT "M" [dur-day]
   dur-year          = 1*DIGIT "Y" [dur-month]
   dur-date          = (dur-day / dur-month / dur-year) [dur-time]


Additionally, section 5.3 of the RFC may seem to indicate that this not required by the specification:

---

5.3. Rarely Used Options

   A format which includes rarely used options is likely to cause
   interoperability problems.  This is because rarely used options are
   less likely to be used in alpha or beta testing, so bugs in parsing
   are less likely to be discovered.  Rarely used options should be made
   mandatory or omitted for the sake of interoperability whenever
   possible.

   The format defined below includes only one rarely used option:
   fractions of a second.  It is expected that this will be used only by
   applications which require strict ordering of date/time stamps or
   which have an unusual precision requirement.

---

However, I'll leave this to Derick to decide. It does seem to be a highly sought after feature and it would make sense to add it in the interval spec.

Derick, any thoughts on this?
 [2020-02-28 00:56 UTC] googleguy@php.net
-Status: Verified +Status: Open
 [2020-02-28 00:56 UTC] googleguy@php.net
-Status: Assigned +Status: Open
 [2020-02-28 00:58 UTC] googleguy@php.net
-Status: Assigned +Status: Not a bug
 [2020-02-28 00:58 UTC] googleguy@php.net
Thank you for taking the time to write to us, but this is not
a bug. Please double-check the documentation available at
http://www.php.net/manual/ and the instructions on how to report
a bug at http://bugs.php.net/how-to-report.php

Closing.

This feature won't be implemented in php at the current time.
 [2020-03-28 22:56 UTC] pegasus at vaultwiki dot org
According to the RFC cited as the reason for closing this report:
"This information is based on the 1988 version of ISO 8601.  There may
   be some changes in the 2000 revision."

However, when discussing the basis for the accepted formats for DateInterval, the PHP documentation (https://www.php.net/manual/en/dateinterval.construct.php) links not to the cited RFC but to the Wikipedia page for ISO 8601, which reflects more recent versions of the ISO that were written after 1988. If PHP devs insist this is not a bug, then the documentation should be updated to point to the RFC, and not to a page that discusses features of the ISO that PHP has not implemented.
 [2020-03-29 04:31 UTC] pegasus at vaultwiki dot org
For reference, here is a more recent version of ISO 8601 that I've found (from 2000). http://xml.coverpages.org/ISO-FDIS-8601.pdf
The relevant section is 5.5.3. It states:
"If necessary for a particular application the lowest order component may have a decimal fraction. The decimal
fraction shall be divided from the integer part by the decimal sign specified in ISO 31-0: i.e. the comma [,] or
full stop [.]. Of these, the comma is the preferred sign. The decimal fraction shall at least have one digit. If the
magnitude of the number is less than unity, the decimal sign shall be preceded by a zero (see ISO 31-0)."
 [2021-04-19 18:33 UTC] jens dot hassler at gmail dot com
Actually, as stated before, the standard allows fractions in the lowest part of the interval. Today I stumbled upon this when implementing an API to Polar watches. They actually send duration strings like "PT13724.627S", which seems to be ok by the RFC, but results in a "unknown or bad format" error in PHP.

I really think this is a bug and not a feature request.
 [2022-03-17 09:46 UTC] bugs dot php dot net at famnet dot at
As this is not considered a bug, at least the documentation should get updated. The documentation states, that the format is based on ISO 8601 including a link to Wikipedia, where it is stated, that fractions are allowed. Make it clear that this followes the rules of RFC 3339 or, at least, add a note to the documentation that fractions are not allowed.

Independet of the formal things, in my opinion this should be considered a bug. Citing RFC 3339 is, in my opinion, not expedient because the RFC itself says "when representing and using date and time in Internet protocols". Didn't know that PHP is an "internet protocol", and even PHP itself, despite often used for websites, describes itself as "PHP is a widely-used open source general-purpose scripting language". If it is a general-purpise scripting language, it should also allow fractions as mentioned in the ISO norm.
 
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