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/*
* Copyright (c) 2007-present, Stephen Colebourne & Michael Nascimento Santos
*
* All rights reserved.
*
* Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
* modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:
*
* * Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice,
* this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
*
* * Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice,
* this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation
* and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
*
* * Neither the name of JSR-310 nor the names of its contributors
* may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
* without specific prior written permission.
*
* THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS
* "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT
* LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR
* A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR
* CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL,
* EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO,
* PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR
* PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF
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* SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
*/
package nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp;
import java.io.DataOutput;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.Serializable;
import java.util.Collections;
import java.util.HashMap;
import java.util.Locale;
import java.util.Map;
import java.util.Set;
import java.util.TimeZone;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.format.DateTimeFormatterBuilder;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.format.TextStyle;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.jdk8.DefaultInterfaceTemporalAccessor;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.jdk8.Jdk8Methods;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.temporal.TemporalAccessor;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.temporal.TemporalField;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.temporal.TemporalQueries;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.temporal.TemporalQuery;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.temporal.UnsupportedTemporalTypeException;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.zone.ZoneRules;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.zone.ZoneRulesException;
import nl.topicus.jdbc.shaded.org.threeten.bp.zone.ZoneRulesProvider;
/**
* A time-zone ID, such as {@code Europe/Paris}.
*
* A {@code ZoneId} is used to identify the rules used to convert between
* an {@link Instant} and a {@link LocalDateTime}.
* There are two distinct types of ID:
*
* - Fixed offsets - a fully resolved offset from UTC/Greenwich, that uses
* the same offset for all local date-times
*
- Geographical regions - an area where a specific set of rules for finding
* the offset from UTC/Greenwich apply
*
* Most fixed offsets are represented by {@link ZoneOffset}.
* Calling {@link #normalized()} on any {@code ZoneId} will ensure that a
* fixed offset ID will be represented as a {@code ZoneOffset}.
*
* The actual rules, describing when and how the offset changes, are defined by {@link ZoneRules}.
* This class is simply an ID used to obtain the underlying rules.
* This approach is taken because rules are defined by governments and change
* frequently, whereas the ID is stable.
*
* The distinction has other effects. Serializing the {@code ZoneId} will only send
* the ID, whereas serializing the rules sends the entire data set.
* Similarly, a comparison of two IDs only examines the ID, whereas
* a comparison of two rules examines the entire data set.
*
*
Time-zone IDs
* The ID is unique within the system.
* There are three types of ID.
*
* The simplest type of ID is that from {@code ZoneOffset}.
* This consists of 'Z' and IDs starting with '+' or '-'.
*
* The next type of ID are offset-style IDs with some form of prefix,
* such as 'GMT+2' or 'UTC+01:00'.
* The recognised prefixes are 'UTC', 'GMT' and 'UT'.
* The offset is the suffix and will be normalized during creation.
* These IDs can be normalized to a {@code ZoneOffset} using {@code normalized()}.
*
* The third type of ID are region-based IDs. A region-based ID must be of
* two or more characters, and not start with 'UTC', 'GMT', 'UT' '+' or '-'.
* Region-based IDs are defined by configuration, see {@link ZoneRulesProvider}.
* The configuration focuses on providing the lookup from the ID to the
* underlying {@code ZoneRules}.
*
* Time-zone rules are defined by governments and change frequently.
* There are a number of organizations, known here as groups, that monitor
* time-zone changes and collate them.
* The default group is the IANA Time Zone Database (TZDB).
* Other organizations include IATA (the airline industry body) and Microsoft.
*
* Each group defines its own format for the region ID it provides.
* The TZDB group defines IDs such as 'Europe/London' or 'America/New_York'.
* TZDB IDs take precedence over other groups.
*
* It is strongly recommended that the group name is included in all IDs supplied by
* groups other than TZDB to avoid conflicts. For example, IATA airline time-zone
* region IDs are typically the same as the three letter airport code.
* However, the airport of Utrecht has the code 'UTC', which is obviously a conflict.
* The recommended format for region IDs from groups other than TZDB is 'group~region'.
* Thus if IATA data were defined, Utrecht airport would be 'IATA~UTC'.
*
*
Serialization
* This class can be serialized and stores the string zone ID in the external form.
* The {@code ZoneOffset} subclass uses a dedicated format that only stores the
* offset from UTC/Greenwich.
*
* A {@code ZoneId} can be deserialized in a Java Runtime where the ID is unknown.
* For example, if a server-side Java Runtime has been updated with a new zone ID, but
* the client-side Java Runtime has not been updated. In this case, the {@code ZoneId}
* object will exist, and can be queried using {@code getId}, {@code equals},
* {@code hashCode}, {@code toString}, {@code getDisplayName} and {@code normalized}.
* However, any call to {@code getRules} will fail with {@code ZoneRulesException}.
* This approach is designed to allow a {@link ZonedDateTime} to be loaded and
* queried, but not modified, on a Java Runtime with incomplete time-zone information.
*
*
Specification for implementors
* This abstract class has two implementations, both of which are immutable and thread-safe.
* One implementation models region-based IDs, the other is {@code ZoneOffset} modelling
* offset-based IDs. This difference is visible in serialization.
*/
public abstract class ZoneId implements Serializable {
/**
* Simulate JDK 8 method reference ZoneId::from.
*/
public static final TemporalQuery FROM = new TemporalQuery() {
@Override
public ZoneId queryFrom(TemporalAccessor temporal) {
return ZoneId.from(temporal);
}
};
/**
* A map of zone overrides to enable the short time-zone names to be used.
*
* Use of short zone IDs has been deprecated in {@code java.util.TimeZone}.
* This map allows the IDs to continue to be used via the
* {@link #of(String, Map)} factory method.
*
* This map contains a mapping of the IDs that is in line with TZDB 2005r and
* later, where 'EST', 'MST' and 'HST' map to IDs which do not include daylight
* savings.
*
* This maps as follows:
*
* - EST - -05:00
* - HST - -10:00
* - MST - -07:00
* - ACT - Australia/Darwin
* - AET - Australia/Sydney
* - AGT - America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires
* - ART - Africa/Cairo
* - AST - America/Anchorage
* - BET - America/Sao_Paulo
* - BST - Asia/Dhaka
* - CAT - Africa/Harare
* - CNT - America/St_Johns
* - CST - America/Chicago
* - CTT - Asia/Shanghai
* - EAT - Africa/Addis_Ababa
* - ECT - Europe/Paris
* - IET - America/Indiana/Indianapolis
* - IST - Asia/Kolkata
* - JST - Asia/Tokyo
* - MIT - Pacific/Apia
* - NET - Asia/Yerevan
* - NST - Pacific/Auckland
* - PLT - Asia/Karachi
* - PNT - America/Phoenix
* - PRT - America/Puerto_Rico
* - PST - America/Los_Angeles
* - SST - Pacific/Guadalcanal
* - VST - Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh
*
* The map is unmodifiable.
*/
public static final Map SHORT_IDS;
static {
Map base = new HashMap();
base.put("ACT", "Australia/Darwin");
base.put("AET", "Australia/Sydney");
base.put("AGT", "America/Argentina/Buenos_Aires");
base.put("ART", "Africa/Cairo");
base.put("AST", "America/Anchorage");
base.put("BET", "America/Sao_Paulo");
base.put("BST", "Asia/Dhaka");
base.put("CAT", "Africa/Harare");
base.put("CNT", "America/St_Johns");
base.put("CST", "America/Chicago");
base.put("CTT", "Asia/Shanghai");
base.put("EAT", "Africa/Addis_Ababa");
base.put("ECT", "Europe/Paris");
base.put("IET", "America/Indiana/Indianapolis");
base.put("IST", "Asia/Kolkata");
base.put("JST", "Asia/Tokyo");
base.put("MIT", "Pacific/Apia");
base.put("NET", "Asia/Yerevan");
base.put("NST", "Pacific/Auckland");
base.put("PLT", "Asia/Karachi");
base.put("PNT", "America/Phoenix");
base.put("PRT", "America/Puerto_Rico");
base.put("PST", "America/Los_Angeles");
base.put("SST", "Pacific/Guadalcanal");
base.put("VST", "Asia/Ho_Chi_Minh");
base.put("EST", "-05:00");
base.put("MST", "-07:00");
base.put("HST", "-10:00");
SHORT_IDS = Collections.unmodifiableMap(base);
}
/**
* Serialization version.
*/
private static final long serialVersionUID = 8352817235686L;
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Gets the system default time-zone.
*
* This queries {@link TimeZone#getDefault()} to find the default time-zone
* and converts it to a {@code ZoneId}. If the system default time-zone is changed,
* then the result of this method will also change.
*
* @return the zone ID, not null
* @throws DateTimeException if the converted zone ID has an invalid format
* @throws ZoneRulesException if the converted zone region ID cannot be found
*/
public static ZoneId systemDefault() {
return ZoneId.of(TimeZone.getDefault().getID(), SHORT_IDS);
}
/**
* Gets the set of available zone IDs.
*
* This set includes the string form of all available region-based IDs.
* Offset-based zone IDs are not included in the returned set.
* The ID can be passed to {@link #of(String)} to create a {@code ZoneId}.
*
* The set of zone IDs can increase over time, although in a typical application
* the set of IDs is fixed. Each call to this method is thread-safe.
*
* @return a modifiable copy of the set of zone IDs, not null
*/
public static Set getAvailableZoneIds() {
return ZoneRulesProvider.getAvailableZoneIds();
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Obtains an instance of {@code ZoneId} using its ID using a map
* of aliases to supplement the standard zone IDs.
*
* Many users of time-zones use short abbreviations, such as PST for
* 'Pacific Standard Time' and PDT for 'Pacific Daylight Time'.
* These abbreviations are not unique, and so cannot be used as IDs.
* This method allows a map of string to time-zone to be setup and reused
* within an application.
*
* @param zoneId the time-zone ID, not null
* @param aliasMap a map of alias zone IDs (typically abbreviations) to real zone IDs, not null
* @return the zone ID, not null
* @throws DateTimeException if the zone ID has an invalid format
* @throws ZoneRulesException if the zone ID is a region ID that cannot be found
*/
public static ZoneId of(String zoneId, Map aliasMap) {
Jdk8Methods.requireNonNull(zoneId, "zoneId");
Jdk8Methods.requireNonNull(aliasMap, "aliasMap");
String id = aliasMap.get(zoneId);
id = (id != null ? id : zoneId);
return of(id);
}
/**
* Obtains an instance of {@code ZoneId} from an ID ensuring that the
* ID is valid and available for use.
*
* This method parses the ID producing a {@code ZoneId} or {@code ZoneOffset}.
* A {@code ZoneOffset} is returned if the ID is 'Z', or starts with '+' or '-'.
* The result will always be a valid ID for which {@link ZoneRules} can be obtained.
*
* Parsing matches the zone ID step by step as follows.
*
* - If the zone ID equals 'Z', the result is {@code ZoneOffset.UTC}.
*
- If the zone ID consists of a single letter, the zone ID is invalid
* and {@code DateTimeException} is thrown.
*
- If the zone ID starts with '+' or '-', the ID is parsed as a
* {@code ZoneOffset} using {@link ZoneOffset#of(String)}.
*
- If the zone ID equals 'GMT', 'UTC' or 'UT' then the result is a {@code ZoneId}
* with the same ID and rules equivalent to {@code ZoneOffset.UTC}.
*
- If the zone ID starts with 'UTC+', 'UTC-', 'GMT+', 'GMT-', 'UT+' or 'UT-'
* then the ID is a prefixed offset-based ID. The ID is split in two, with
* a two or three letter prefix and a suffix starting with the sign.
* The suffix is parsed as a {@link ZoneOffset#of(String) ZoneOffset}.
* The result will be a {@code ZoneId} with the specified UTC/GMT/UT prefix
* and the normalized offset ID as per {@link ZoneOffset#getId()}.
* The rules of the returned {@code ZoneId} will be equivalent to the
* parsed {@code ZoneOffset}.
*
- All other IDs are parsed as region-based zone IDs. Region IDs must
* match the regular expression
[A-Za-z][A-Za-z0-9~/._+-]+
* otherwise a {@code DateTimeException} is thrown. If the zone ID is not
* in the configured set of IDs, {@code ZoneRulesException} is thrown.
* The detailed format of the region ID depends on the group supplying the data.
* The default set of data is supplied by the IANA Time Zone Database (TZDB).
* This has region IDs of the form '{area}/{city}', such as 'Europe/Paris' or 'America/New_York'.
* This is compatible with most IDs from {@link java.util.TimeZone}.
*
*
* @param zoneId the time-zone ID, not null
* @return the zone ID, not null
* @throws DateTimeException if the zone ID has an invalid format
* @throws ZoneRulesException if the zone ID is a region ID that cannot be found
*/
public static ZoneId of(String zoneId) {
Jdk8Methods.requireNonNull(zoneId, "zoneId");
if (zoneId.equals("Z")) {
return ZoneOffset.UTC;
}
if (zoneId.length() == 1) {
throw new DateTimeException("Invalid zone: " + zoneId);
}
if (zoneId.startsWith("+") || zoneId.startsWith("-")) {
return ZoneOffset.of(zoneId);
}
if (zoneId.equals("UTC") || zoneId.equals("GMT") || zoneId.equals("UT")) {
return new ZoneRegion(zoneId, ZoneOffset.UTC.getRules());
}
if (zoneId.startsWith("UTC+") || zoneId.startsWith("GMT+") ||
zoneId.startsWith("UTC-") || zoneId.startsWith("GMT-")) {
ZoneOffset offset = ZoneOffset.of(zoneId.substring(3));
if (offset.getTotalSeconds() == 0) {
return new ZoneRegion(zoneId.substring(0, 3), offset.getRules());
}
return new ZoneRegion(zoneId.substring(0, 3) + offset.getId(), offset.getRules());
}
if (zoneId.startsWith("UT+") || zoneId.startsWith("UT-")) {
ZoneOffset offset = ZoneOffset.of(zoneId.substring(2));
if (offset.getTotalSeconds() == 0) {
return new ZoneRegion("UT", offset.getRules());
}
return new ZoneRegion("UT" + offset.getId(), offset.getRules());
}
return ZoneRegion.ofId(zoneId, true);
}
/**
* Obtains an instance of {@code ZoneId} wrapping an offset.
*
* If the prefix is "GMT", "UTC", or "UT" a {@code ZoneId}
* with the prefix and the non-zero offset is returned.
* If the prefix is empty {@code ""} the {@code ZoneOffset} is returned.
*
* @param prefix the time-zone ID, not null
* @param offset the offset, not null
* @return the zone ID, not null
* @throws IllegalArgumentException if the prefix is not one of
* "GMT", "UTC", or "UT", or ""
*/
public static ZoneId ofOffset(String prefix, ZoneOffset offset) {
Jdk8Methods.requireNonNull(prefix, "prefix");
Jdk8Methods.requireNonNull(offset, "offset");
if (prefix.length() == 0) {
return offset;
}
if (prefix.equals("GMT") || prefix.equals("UTC") || prefix.equals("UT")) {
if (offset.getTotalSeconds() == 0) {
return new ZoneRegion(prefix, offset.getRules());
}
return new ZoneRegion(prefix + offset.getId(), offset.getRules());
}
throw new IllegalArgumentException("Invalid prefix, must be GMT, UTC or UT: " + prefix);
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Obtains an instance of {@code ZoneId} from a temporal object.
*
* A {@code TemporalAccessor} represents some form of date and time information.
* This factory converts the arbitrary temporal object to an instance of {@code ZoneId}.
*
* The conversion will try to obtain the zone in a way that favours region-based
* zones over offset-based zones using {@link TemporalQueries#zone()}.
*
* This method matches the signature of the functional interface {@link TemporalQuery}
* allowing it to be used in queries via method reference, {@code ZoneId::from}.
*
* @param temporal the temporal object to convert, not null
* @return the zone ID, not null
* @throws DateTimeException if unable to convert to a {@code ZoneId}
*/
public static ZoneId from(TemporalAccessor temporal) {
ZoneId obj = temporal.query(TemporalQueries.zone());
if (obj == null) {
throw new DateTimeException("Unable to obtain ZoneId from TemporalAccessor: " +
temporal + ", type " + temporal.getClass().getName());
}
return obj;
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Constructor only accessible within the package.
*/
ZoneId() {
if (getClass() != ZoneOffset.class && getClass() != ZoneRegion.class) {
throw new AssertionError("Invalid subclass");
}
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Gets the unique time-zone ID.
*
* This ID uniquely defines this object.
* The format of an offset based ID is defined by {@link ZoneOffset#getId()}.
*
* @return the time-zone unique ID, not null
*/
public abstract String getId();
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Gets the time-zone rules for this ID allowing calculations to be performed.
*
* The rules provide the functionality associated with a time-zone,
* such as finding the offset for a given instant or local date-time.
*
* A time-zone can be invalid if it is deserialized in a Java Runtime which
* does not have the same rules loaded as the Java Runtime that stored it.
* In this case, calling this method will throw a {@code ZoneRulesException}.
*
* The rules are supplied by {@link ZoneRulesProvider}. An advanced provider may
* support dynamic updates to the rules without restarting the Java Runtime.
* If so, then the result of this method may change over time.
* Each individual call will be still remain thread-safe.
*
* {@link ZoneOffset} will always return a set of rules where the offset never changes.
*
* @return the rules, not null
* @throws ZoneRulesException if no rules are available for this ID
*/
public abstract ZoneRules getRules();
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Gets the textual representation of the zone, such as 'British Time' or
* '+02:00'.
*
* This returns the textual name used to identify the time-zone ID,
* suitable for presentation to the user.
* The parameters control the style of the returned text and the locale.
*
* If no textual mapping is found then the {@link #getId() full ID} is returned.
*
* @param style the length of the text required, not null
* @param locale the locale to use, not null
* @return the text value of the zone, not null
*/
public String getDisplayName(TextStyle style, Locale locale) {
return new DateTimeFormatterBuilder().appendZoneText(style).toFormatter(locale).format(new DefaultInterfaceTemporalAccessor() {
@Override
public boolean isSupported(TemporalField field) {
return false;
}
@Override
public long getLong(TemporalField field) {
throw new UnsupportedTemporalTypeException("Unsupported field: " + field);
}
@SuppressWarnings("unchecked")
@Override
public R query(TemporalQuery query) {
if (query == TemporalQueries.zoneId()) {
return (R) ZoneId.this;
}
return super.query(query);
}
});
}
/**
* Normalizes the time-zone ID, returning a {@code ZoneOffset} where possible.
*
* The returns a normalized {@code ZoneId} that can be used in place of this ID.
* The result will have {@code ZoneRules} equivalent to those returned by this object,
* however the ID returned by {@code getId()} may be different.
*
* The normalization checks if the rules of this {@code ZoneId} have a fixed offset.
* If they do, then the {@code ZoneOffset} equal to that offset is returned.
* Otherwise {@code this} is returned.
*
* @return the time-zone unique ID, not null
*/
public ZoneId normalized() {
try {
ZoneRules rules = getRules();
if (rules.isFixedOffset()) {
return rules.getOffset(Instant.EPOCH);
}
} catch (ZoneRulesException ex) {
// ignore invalid objects
}
return this;
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Checks if this time-zone ID is equal to another time-zone ID.
*
* The comparison is based on the ID.
*
* @param obj the object to check, null returns false
* @return true if this is equal to the other time-zone ID
*/
@Override
public boolean equals(Object obj) {
if (this == obj) {
return true;
}
if (obj instanceof ZoneId) {
ZoneId other = (ZoneId) obj;
return getId().equals(other.getId());
}
return false;
}
/**
* A hash code for this time-zone ID.
*
* @return a suitable hash code
*/
@Override
public int hashCode() {
return getId().hashCode();
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
/**
* Outputs this zone as a {@code String}, using the ID.
*
* @return a string representation of this time-zone ID, not null
*/
@Override
public String toString() {
return getId();
}
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------
abstract void write(DataOutput out) throws IOException;
}