RFR: 8098547: (tz) Support tzdata2015e
Attila Szegedi
attila.szegedi at oracle.com
Thu Jun 25 12:49:13 UTC 2015
Yeah, basically instantiating a JavaScript native Date object with (70, 0, -10) and confirming it ends up being 10 days before epoch…
This test failure happened tonight with jdk9, see <http://sthci.se.oracle.com/job/nashorn/ <http://sthci.se.oracle.com/job/nashorn/>>, so I presumed it has to be related (no changes to nashorn itself were made). It’s just suddenly the timezone is named “CEST” instead of “CET”.
> On Jun 25, 2015, at 1:02 PM, Seán Coffey <sean.coffey at oracle.com> wrote:
>
> That looks like a strange failure Attila. The timezone in use for that testcase is Europe/Vienna.
> 2015e tzdata changes haven't been pushed to jdk9-dev forest yet.
>
> Where the 1969 date coming from ? Is there some rollover calculation happening ?
>
> Regards,
> Sean.
>
> On 25/06/2015 09:05, Attila Szegedi wrote:
>> FWIW, he do have one new test failure in Nashorn now, it seems related. Can you confirm it is caused by your changes?
>>
>> [testng] Test test/script/basic/NASHORN-627.js failed at line 1 -
>> [testng] expected: 'Sun Dec 21 1969 00:00:00 GMT+0100 (CET) -954000000 1969-12-20T23:00:00.000Z'
>> [testng] found: 'Sun Dec 21 1969 00:00:00 GMT+0100 (CEST) -954000000 1969-12-20T23:00:00.000Z'
>>
>> Attila.
>>
>>> On Jun 24, 2015, at 1:05 PM, Aleksej Efimov <aleksej.efimov at oracle.com> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> Please, review the latest tzdata (2015e) [1] integration to JDK9: http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~aefimov/tzdata/2015e/9/0
>>> Testing shows no TZ related failures on all platforms.
>>>
>>> With Best Regards,
>>> Aleksej
>>>
>>> [1] https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8098547
>
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