1 /*
2  *  Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one or more
3  *  contributor license agreements.  See the NOTICE file distributed with
4  *  this work for additional information regarding copyright ownership.
5  *  The ASF licenses this file to You under the Apache License, Version 2.0
6  *  (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with
7  *  the License.  You may obtain a copy of the License at
8  *
9  *     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
10  *
11  *  Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
12  *  distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
13  *  WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
14  *  See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
15  *  limitations under the License.
16  */
17 
18 package java.util;
19 
20 import java.io.IOException;
21 import java.io.Serializable;
22 import java.util.regex.Matcher;
23 import java.util.regex.Pattern;
24 import libcore.icu.TimeZoneNames;
25 import libcore.io.IoUtils;
26 import libcore.util.ZoneInfoDB;
27 
28 // TODO: repackage this class, used by frameworks/base.
29 import org.apache.harmony.luni.internal.util.TimezoneGetter;
30 
31 /**
32  * {@code TimeZone} represents a time zone, primarily used for configuring a {@link Calendar} or
33  * {@link java.text.SimpleDateFormat} instance.
34  *
35  * <p>Most applications will use {@link #getDefault} which returns a {@code TimeZone} based on
36  * the time zone where the program is running.
37  *
38  * <p>You can also get a specific {@code TimeZone} {@link #getTimeZone by Olson ID}.
39  *
40  * <p>It is highly unlikely you'll ever want to use anything but the factory methods yourself.
41  * Let classes like {@link Calendar} and {@link java.text.SimpleDateFormat} do the date
42  * computations for you.
43  *
44  * <p>If you do need to do date computations manually, there are two common cases to take into
45  * account:
46  * <ul>
47  * <li>Somewhere like California, where daylight time is used.
48  * The {@link #useDaylightTime} method will always return true, and {@link #inDaylightTime}
49  * must be used to determine whether or not daylight time applies to a given {@code Date}.
50  * The {@link #getRawOffset} method will return a raw offset of (in this case) -8 hours from UTC,
51  * which isn't usually very useful. More usefully, the {@link #getOffset} methods return the
52  * actual offset from UTC <i>for a given point in time</i>; this is the raw offset plus (if the
53  * point in time is {@link #inDaylightTime in daylight time}) the applicable
54  * {@link #getDSTSavings DST savings} (usually, but not necessarily, 1 hour).
55  * <li>Somewhere like Japan, where daylight time is not used.
56  * The {@link #useDaylightTime} and {@link #inDaylightTime} methods both always return false,
57  * and the raw and actual offsets will always be the same.
58  * </ul>
59  *
60  * <p>Note the type returned by the factory methods {@link #getDefault} and {@link #getTimeZone} is
61  * implementation dependent. This may introduce serialization incompatibility issues between
62  * different implementations, or different versions of Android.
63  *
64  * @see Calendar
65  * @see GregorianCalendar
66  * @see java.text.SimpleDateFormat
67  */
68 public abstract class TimeZone implements Serializable, Cloneable {
69     private static final long serialVersionUID = 3581463369166924961L;
70 
71     private static final Pattern CUSTOM_ZONE_ID_PATTERN = Pattern.compile("^GMT[-+](\\d{1,2})(:?(\\d\\d))?$");
72 
73     /**
74      * The short display name style, such as {@code PDT}. Requests for this
75      * style may yield GMT offsets like {@code GMT-08:00}.
76      */
77     public static final int SHORT = 0;
78 
79     /**
80      * The long display name style, such as {@code Pacific Daylight Time}.
81      * Requests for this style may yield GMT offsets like {@code GMT-08:00}.
82      */
83     public static final int LONG = 1;
84 
85     private static final TimeZone GMT = new SimpleTimeZone(0, "GMT");
86     private static final TimeZone UTC = new SimpleTimeZone(0, "UTC");
87 
88     private static TimeZone defaultTimeZone;
89 
90     private String ID;
91 
TimeZone()92     public TimeZone() {}
93 
94     /**
95      * Returns a new time zone with the same ID, raw offset, and daylight
96      * savings time rules as this time zone.
97      */
clone()98     @Override public Object clone() {
99         try {
100             return super.clone();
101         } catch (CloneNotSupportedException e) {
102             throw new AssertionError(e);
103         }
104     }
105 
106     /**
107      * Returns the system's installed time zone IDs. Any of these IDs can be
108      * passed to {@link #getTimeZone} to lookup the corresponding time zone
109      * instance.
110      */
getAvailableIDs()111     public static synchronized String[] getAvailableIDs() {
112         return ZoneInfoDB.getInstance().getAvailableIDs();
113     }
114 
115     /**
116      * Returns the IDs of the time zones whose offset from UTC is {@code
117      * offsetMillis}. Any of these IDs can be passed to {@link #getTimeZone} to
118      * lookup the corresponding time zone instance.
119      *
120      * @return a possibly-empty array.
121      */
getAvailableIDs(int offsetMillis)122     public static synchronized String[] getAvailableIDs(int offsetMillis) {
123         return ZoneInfoDB.getInstance().getAvailableIDs(offsetMillis);
124     }
125 
126     /**
127      * Returns the user's preferred time zone. This may have been overridden for
128      * this process with {@link #setDefault}.
129      *
130      * <p>Since the user's time zone changes dynamically, avoid caching this
131      * value. Instead, use this method to look it up for each use.
132      */
getDefault()133     public static synchronized TimeZone getDefault() {
134         if (defaultTimeZone == null) {
135             TimezoneGetter tzGetter = TimezoneGetter.getInstance();
136             String zoneName = (tzGetter != null) ? tzGetter.getId() : null;
137             if (zoneName != null) {
138                 zoneName = zoneName.trim();
139             }
140             if (zoneName == null || zoneName.isEmpty()) {
141                 try {
142                     // On the host, we can find the configured timezone here.
143                     zoneName = IoUtils.readFileAsString("/etc/timezone");
144                 } catch (IOException ex) {
145                     // "vogar --mode device" can end up here.
146                     // TODO: give libcore access to Android system properties and read "persist.sys.timezone".
147                     zoneName = "GMT";
148                 }
149             }
150             defaultTimeZone = TimeZone.getTimeZone(zoneName);
151         }
152         return (TimeZone) defaultTimeZone.clone();
153     }
154 
155     /**
156      * Equivalent to {@code getDisplayName(false, TimeZone.LONG, Locale.getDefault())}.
157      * <a href="../util/Locale.html#default_locale">Be wary of the default locale</a>.
158      */
getDisplayName()159     public final String getDisplayName() {
160         return getDisplayName(false, LONG, Locale.getDefault());
161     }
162 
163     /**
164      * Equivalent to {@code getDisplayName(false, TimeZone.LONG, locale)}.
165      */
getDisplayName(Locale locale)166     public final String getDisplayName(Locale locale) {
167         return getDisplayName(false, LONG, locale);
168     }
169 
170     /**
171      * Equivalent to {@code getDisplayName(daylightTime, style, Locale.getDefault())}.
172      * <a href="../util/Locale.html#default_locale">Be wary of the default locale</a>.
173      */
getDisplayName(boolean daylightTime, int style)174     public final String getDisplayName(boolean daylightTime, int style) {
175         return getDisplayName(daylightTime, style, Locale.getDefault());
176     }
177 
178     /**
179      * Returns the {@link #SHORT short} or {@link #LONG long} name of this time
180      * zone with either standard or daylight time, as written in {@code locale}.
181      * If the name is not available, the result is in the format
182      * {@code GMT[+-]hh:mm}.
183      *
184      * @param daylightTime true for daylight time, false for standard time.
185      * @param style either {@link TimeZone#LONG} or {@link TimeZone#SHORT}.
186      * @param locale the display locale.
187      */
getDisplayName(boolean daylightTime, int style, Locale locale)188     public String getDisplayName(boolean daylightTime, int style, Locale locale) {
189         if (style != SHORT && style != LONG) {
190             throw new IllegalArgumentException("Bad style: " + style);
191         }
192 
193         String[][] zoneStrings = TimeZoneNames.getZoneStrings(locale);
194         String result = TimeZoneNames.getDisplayName(zoneStrings, getID(), daylightTime, style);
195         if (result != null) {
196             return result;
197         }
198 
199         // If we get here, it's because icu4c has nothing for us. Most commonly, this is in the
200         // case of short names. For Pacific/Fiji, for example, icu4c has nothing better to offer
201         // than "GMT+12:00". Why do we re-do this work ourselves? Because we have up-to-date
202         // time zone transition data, which icu4c _doesn't_ use --- it uses its own baked-in copy,
203         // which only gets updated when we update icu4c. http://b/7955614 and http://b/8026776.
204 
205         // TODO: should we generate these once, in TimeZoneNames.getDisplayName? Revisit when we
206         // upgrade to icu4c 50 and rewrite the underlying native code. See also the
207         // "element[j] != null" check in SimpleDateFormat.parseTimeZone, and the extra work in
208         // DateFormatSymbols.getZoneStrings.
209         int offsetMillis = getRawOffset();
210         if (daylightTime) {
211             offsetMillis += getDSTSavings();
212         }
213         return createGmtOffsetString(true /* includeGmt */, true /* includeMinuteSeparator */,
214                 offsetMillis);
215     }
216 
217     /**
218      * Returns a string representation of an offset from UTC.
219      *
220      * <p>The format is "[GMT](+|-)HH[:]MM". The output is not localized.
221      *
222      * @param includeGmt true to include "GMT", false to exclude
223      * @param includeMinuteSeparator true to include the separator between hours and minutes, false
224      *     to exclude.
225      * @param offsetMillis the offset from UTC
226      *
227      * @hide used internally by SimpleDateFormat
228      */
createGmtOffsetString(boolean includeGmt, boolean includeMinuteSeparator, int offsetMillis)229     public static String createGmtOffsetString(boolean includeGmt,
230             boolean includeMinuteSeparator, int offsetMillis) {
231         int offsetMinutes = offsetMillis / 60000;
232         char sign = '+';
233         if (offsetMinutes < 0) {
234             sign = '-';
235             offsetMinutes = -offsetMinutes;
236         }
237         StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder(9);
238         if (includeGmt) {
239             builder.append("GMT");
240         }
241         builder.append(sign);
242         appendNumber(builder, 2, offsetMinutes / 60);
243         if (includeMinuteSeparator) {
244             builder.append(':');
245         }
246         appendNumber(builder, 2, offsetMinutes % 60);
247         return builder.toString();
248     }
249 
appendNumber(StringBuilder builder, int count, int value)250     private static void appendNumber(StringBuilder builder, int count, int value) {
251         String string = Integer.toString(value);
252         for (int i = 0; i < count - string.length(); i++) {
253             builder.append('0');
254         }
255         builder.append(string);
256     }
257 
258     /**
259      * Returns the ID of this {@code TimeZone}, such as
260      * {@code America/Los_Angeles}, {@code GMT-08:00} or {@code UTC}.
261      */
getID()262     public String getID() {
263         return ID;
264     }
265 
266     /**
267      * Returns the latest daylight savings in milliseconds for this time zone, relative
268      * to this time zone's regular UTC offset (as returned by {@link #getRawOffset}).
269      *
270      * <p>This class returns {@code 3600000} (1 hour) for time zones
271      * that use daylight savings time and {@code 0} for timezones that do not,
272      * leaving it to subclasses to override this method for other daylight savings
273      * offsets. (There are time zones, such as {@code Australia/Lord_Howe},
274      * that use other values.)
275      *
276      * <p>Note that this method doesn't tell you whether or not to <i>apply</i> the
277      * offset: you need to call {@code inDaylightTime} for the specific time
278      * you're interested in. If this method returns a non-zero offset, that only
279      * tells you that this {@code TimeZone} sometimes observes daylight savings.
280      *
281      * <p>Note also that this method doesn't necessarily return the value you need
282      * to apply to the time you're working with. This value can and does change over
283      * time for a given time zone.
284      *
285      * <p>It's highly unlikely that you should ever call this method. You
286      * probably want {@link #getOffset} instead, which tells you the offset
287      * for a specific point in time, and takes daylight savings into account for you.
288      */
getDSTSavings()289     public int getDSTSavings() {
290         return useDaylightTime() ? 3600000 : 0;
291     }
292 
293     /**
294      * Returns the offset in milliseconds from UTC for this time zone at {@code
295      * time}. The offset includes daylight savings time if the specified
296      * date is within the daylight savings time period.
297      *
298      * @param time the date in milliseconds since January 1, 1970 00:00:00 UTC
299      */
getOffset(long time)300     public int getOffset(long time) {
301         if (inDaylightTime(new Date(time))) {
302             return getRawOffset() + getDSTSavings();
303         }
304         return getRawOffset();
305     }
306 
307     /**
308      * Returns this time zone's offset in milliseconds from UTC at the specified
309      * date and time. The offset includes daylight savings time if the date
310      * and time is within the daylight savings time period.
311      *
312      * <p>This method is intended to be used by {@link Calendar} to compute
313      * {@link Calendar#DST_OFFSET} and {@link Calendar#ZONE_OFFSET}. Application
314      * code should have no reason to call this method directly. Each parameter
315      * is interpreted in the same way as the corresponding {@code Calendar}
316      * field. Refer to {@link Calendar} for specific definitions of this
317      * method's parameters.
318      */
getOffset(int era, int year, int month, int day, int dayOfWeek, int timeOfDayMillis)319     public abstract int getOffset(int era, int year, int month, int day,
320             int dayOfWeek, int timeOfDayMillis);
321 
322     /**
323      * Returns the offset in milliseconds from UTC of this time zone's standard
324      * time.
325      */
getRawOffset()326     public abstract int getRawOffset();
327 
328     /**
329      * Returns a {@code TimeZone} corresponding to the given {@code id}, or {@code GMT}
330      * for unknown ids.
331      *
332      * <p>An ID can be an Olson name of the form <i>Area</i>/<i>Location</i>, such
333      * as {@code America/Los_Angeles}. The {@link #getAvailableIDs} method returns
334      * the supported names.
335      *
336      * <p>This method can also create a custom {@code TimeZone} given an ID with the following
337      * syntax: {@code GMT[+|-]hh[[:]mm]}. For example, {@code "GMT+05:00"}, {@code "GMT+0500"},
338      * {@code "GMT+5:00"}, {@code "GMT+500"}, {@code "GMT+05"}, and {@code "GMT+5"} all return
339      * an object with a raw offset of +5 hours from UTC, and which does <i>not</i> use daylight
340      * savings. These are rarely useful, because they don't correspond to time zones actually
341      * in use by humans.
342      *
343      * <p>Other than the special cases "UTC" and "GMT" (which are synonymous in this context,
344      * both corresponding to UTC), Android does not support the deprecated three-letter time
345      * zone IDs used in Java 1.1.
346      */
getTimeZone(String id)347     public static synchronized TimeZone getTimeZone(String id) {
348         if (id == null) {
349             throw new NullPointerException("id == null");
350         }
351 
352         // Special cases? These can clone an existing instance.
353         if (id.length() == 3) {
354             if (id.equals("GMT")) {
355                 return (TimeZone) GMT.clone();
356             }
357             if (id.equals("UTC")) {
358                 return (TimeZone) UTC.clone();
359             }
360         }
361 
362         // In the database?
363         TimeZone zone = null;
364         try {
365             zone = ZoneInfoDB.getInstance().makeTimeZone(id);
366         } catch (IOException ignored) {
367         }
368 
369         // Custom time zone?
370         if (zone == null && id.length() > 3 && id.startsWith("GMT")) {
371             zone = getCustomTimeZone(id);
372         }
373 
374         // We never return null; on failure we return the equivalent of "GMT".
375         return (zone != null) ? zone : (TimeZone) GMT.clone();
376     }
377 
378     /**
379      * Returns a new SimpleTimeZone for an ID of the form "GMT[+|-]hh[[:]mm]", or null.
380      */
getCustomTimeZone(String id)381     private static TimeZone getCustomTimeZone(String id) {
382         Matcher m = CUSTOM_ZONE_ID_PATTERN.matcher(id);
383         if (!m.matches()) {
384             return null;
385         }
386 
387         int hour;
388         int minute = 0;
389         try {
390             hour = Integer.parseInt(m.group(1));
391             if (m.group(3) != null) {
392                 minute = Integer.parseInt(m.group(3));
393             }
394         } catch (NumberFormatException impossible) {
395             throw new AssertionError(impossible);
396         }
397 
398         if (hour < 0 || hour > 23 || minute < 0 || minute > 59) {
399             return null;
400         }
401 
402         char sign = id.charAt(3);
403         int raw = (hour * 3600000) + (minute * 60000);
404         if (sign == '-') {
405             raw = -raw;
406         }
407 
408         String cleanId = String.format("GMT%c%02d:%02d", sign, hour, minute);
409         return new SimpleTimeZone(raw, cleanId);
410     }
411 
412     /**
413      * Returns true if {@code timeZone} has the same rules as this time zone.
414      *
415      * <p>The base implementation returns true if both time zones have the same
416      * raw offset.
417      */
hasSameRules(TimeZone timeZone)418     public boolean hasSameRules(TimeZone timeZone) {
419         if (timeZone == null) {
420             return false;
421         }
422         return getRawOffset() == timeZone.getRawOffset();
423     }
424 
425     /**
426      * Returns true if {@code time} is in a daylight savings time period for
427      * this time zone.
428      */
inDaylightTime(Date time)429     public abstract boolean inDaylightTime(Date time);
430 
431     /**
432      * Overrides the default time zone for the current process only.
433      *
434      * <p><strong>Warning</strong>: avoid using this method to use a custom time
435      * zone in your process. This value may be cleared or overwritten at any
436      * time, which can cause unexpected behavior. Instead, manually supply a
437      * custom time zone as needed.
438      *
439      * @param timeZone a custom time zone, or {@code null} to set the default to
440      *     the user's preferred value.
441      */
setDefault(TimeZone timeZone)442     public static synchronized void setDefault(TimeZone timeZone) {
443         defaultTimeZone = timeZone != null ? (TimeZone) timeZone.clone() : null;
444     }
445 
446     /**
447      * Sets the ID of this {@code TimeZone}.
448      */
setID(String id)449     public void setID(String id) {
450         if (id == null) {
451             throw new NullPointerException("id == null");
452         }
453         ID = id;
454     }
455 
456     /**
457      * Sets the offset in milliseconds from UTC of this time zone's standard
458      * time.
459      */
setRawOffset(int offsetMillis)460     public abstract void setRawOffset(int offsetMillis);
461 
462     /**
463      * Returns true if this time zone has a future transition to or from
464      * daylight savings time.
465      *
466      * <p><strong>Warning:</strong> this returns false for time zones like
467      * {@code Asia/Kuala_Lumpur} that have previously used DST but do not
468      * currently. A hypothetical country that has never observed daylight
469      * savings before but plans to start next year would return true.
470      *
471      * <p><strong>Warning:</strong> this returns true for time zones that use
472      * DST, even when it is not active.
473      *
474      * <p>Use {@link #inDaylightTime} to find out whether daylight savings is
475      * in effect at a specific time.
476      *
477      * <p>Most applications should not use this method.
478      */
useDaylightTime()479     public abstract boolean useDaylightTime();
480 }
481