How do I store an UTC ISO8601 date in a MySQL database?

烈酒焚心 提交于 2019-12-03 04:38:16

I think that keeping your date-time values in field of type DATETIME would be kind of natural way.

From my own experience with my current PHP application, only read / write operations concerning this information may be problematic.

One of possible solutions (assuming that you use DATETIME data type) for properly performing the whole process could be the following approach:

Reading DATETIME values for PHP use

  1. Acquire DATETIME fields from your database converting them in the query to string representation in the form of '2011-10-02T23:25:42Z' by using DATE_FORMAT MySQL function with '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%sZ' formatting string (docs on DATE_FORMAT)
  2. Read fetched column value in this specific format and convert it in PHP from string to real date-time representation valid for PHP (such as DateTime class objects and DateTime::createFromFormat static method given 'Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z' formatting string (T and Z are escaped to avoid treating them as formatting directives) (docs for the method).
  3. Use converted values as real date-time values with all the logic applicable, like real date comparisons (not text-comparisons), etc.

Writing PHP date-time to MySQL database

  1. Convert i.e. PHP DateTime class object to our ISO 8601 in UTC format string representation using DateTime class object's format method with the same as before 'Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z' formatting string (documentation).
  2. Perform INSERT / UPDATE operation on database information using such prepared string as a parameter for MySQL function STR_TO_DATE (with '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%sZ' formatting string) which converts it to real database DATETIME value (docs on STR_TO_DATE).

Example code in PHP

Below please find a draft example of such approach using PDO objects:

$db = new PDO('mysql:host=localhost;dbname=my_db;charset=utf8', 'username', 'password');
$db->setAttribute(PDO::ATTR_ERRMODE, PDO::ERRMODE_EXCEPTION);

try {
    // run the query aquring 1 example row with DATETIME data 
    // converted with MySQL DATE_FORMAT function to its string representation 
    // in the chosen format (in our case: ISO 8601 / UTC)
    $stmt = $db->query("SELECT DATE_FORMAT(dt_column, '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%sZ') AS formatted_dt_col"
                        ." FROM your_table LIMIT 1"); 

    if($stmt !== FALSE) {
        $row = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);

        // convert the acquired string representation from DB 
        // (i.e. '2011-10-02T23:25:42Z' )
        // to PHP DateTime object which has all the logic of date-time manipulation:    
        $dateTimeObject = DateTime::createFromFormat('Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z', $row['formatted_dt_col']);

        // the following should print i.e. 2011-10-02T23:25:42Z
        echo $dateTimeObject->format('Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z');  

        // now let's write PHP DateTime class object '$dateTimeObject' 
        // back to the database
        $stmtInsertDT = $db->prepare("INSERT INTO your_table(dt_column) " 
                             . " VALUES ( STR_TO_DATE(:par_formatted_dt_column, '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%sZ') )");

        $dtAsTextForInsert = $dateTimeObject->format('Y-m-d\TH:i:s\Z');

        // convert '$dateTimeObject' to its ISO 8601 / UTC text represantation
        // in order to be able to put in in the query using PDO text parameter
        $stmtInsertDT->bindParam(':par_formatted_dt_column', $dtAsTextForInsert, PDO::PARAM_STR);

        $stmtInsertDT->execute();

        // So the real insert query being perform would be i.e.:
        /*
           INSERT INTO your_table(dt_column) 
           VALUES ( STR_TO_DATE('2011-10-02T23:25:42Z', '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%sZ') )
        */
    }
}
catch(\PDOException $pexc) {
 // serve PDOException
}
catch(\Exception $exc) {
// in case of no-PDOException, serve general exception
}

This approach helped me a lot in operating date-time values between PHP and MySQL database.

I hope it might occur helpful for you also.

You can use DateTime data type for storing the date and time.

Use CAST function to cast such strings into mysql DateTime type.

Here is an example:

CAST("2011-10-02T23:25:42Z" AS DATETIME)

This will give you 2011-10-02 23:25:42.

Hope this will help you.

You can easily convert the date using strtotime function of php :

date_default_timezone_set('UTC');
$date = '2011-10-02T23:25:42Z';//(aka ISO 8601 in UTC)
$time = strtotime($date); //time is now equals to the timestamp
$converted = date('l, F jS Y \a\t g:ia', $time); //convert to date if you prefer, credit to Marc B for the parameters

Now you would simply insert your date in MySQL using timestamp or datetime depending on which one fit the most your needs. Here the most important things you should know about both types.


Timestamp

  • Range of '1970-01-01 00:00:01' UTC to '2038-01-09 03:14:07' UTC
  • Affected by the time-zone setting.
  • 4 bytes storage
  • allow on update current_timestamp on columns for all versions.
  • Index is way faster
  • NULL is not a possible default value
  • Values are converted from the current time zone to UTC for storage, and converted back from UTC to the current time-zone for retrieval.

Datetime

  • Range of '1000-01-01 00:00:00' to '9999-12-31 23:59:59'
  • Constant (time-zone won't affect)
  • 8 bytes storage
  • allow update on columns only as of version 5.6.5

Which is best for comparison (eg. getting records between two dates/times) and ordering the results from queries? What about if the database is very large?

According to the previous points I stated, then you should use timestamp for a very large database as the storage is smaller, and the index faster which will give you better performance for comparison. However, you MUST MAKE SURE your date will fit the limits of the timestamp I previously mentioned, else you have no choice and must use datetime.

Documentation for strtotime : http://php.net/manual/en/function.strtotime.php

And please, for the sake of SO's answerer who keep repeating every day to not use the mysql* DEPRECATED functions, please use PDO or mysqli* when you will do your inserts.

http://php.net/manual/en/book.pdo.php

http://php.net/manual/en/book.mysqli.php

You can not store date in raw UTC ISO8601 format (with 2011-10-02T23:25:42Z representation) and save all SQL DATETIME functionality.

But you should know, that MySQL ( regarding to http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/datetime.html ) always store time/date in UTC. Also you can modify timezone for your connection http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.5/en/time-zone-support.html

So, if you execute in PHP

date_default_timezone_set('UTC');

and in MySQL

SET time_zone = +00:00

sure PHP and MySQL would use UTC.

After that you can convert all database strings to DateTime without caring about timezone mismatch.

To convert any PHP DateTime (without carrying about its internal timezone) to MySQL datetime string you should set DateTime object timezone to UTC.

$datetime->setTimezone(new DateTimeZone('UTC'))->format('Y-m-d H:i:s');

Using your datetime on my system which is PDT:

SELECT CONVERT_TZ(str_to_date('2011-10-02T23:25:42Z','%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%sZ'),'+00:00','SYSTEM') from dual;

2011-10-02 16:25:42

If your datetime has a fractional microsecond; include the .%f before the Z as follows:

SELECT CONVERT_TZ(str_to_date('2011-10-02T23:25:42.123456Z','%Y-%m-%dT%H:%i:%s.%fZ'),'+00:00','SYSTEM') from dual;

2011-10-02 16:25:42.123456
Gfox

Here are the points why it is better to use datetime.

  1. With datetime you will be able to do date manipulations on mysql side - such as subtracting day,month
  2. You will be able to sort data.
  3. If DB is huge - varchar takes more place on HDD
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!