// Copyright 2010 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. package time import "errors" // These are predefined layouts for use in Time.Format and Time.Parse. // The reference time used in the layouts is the specific time: // Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006 // which is Unix time 1136239445. Since MST is GMT-0700, // the reference time can be thought of as // 01/02 03:04:05PM '06 -0700 // To define your own format, write down what the reference time would look // like formatted your way; see the values of constants like ANSIC, // StampMicro or Kitchen for examples. The model is to demonstrate what the // reference time looks like so that the Format and Parse methods can apply // the same transformation to a general time value. // // Within the format string, an underscore _ represents a space that may be // replaced by a digit if the following number (a day) has two digits; for // compatibility with fixed-width Unix time formats. // // A decimal point followed by one or more zeros represents a fractional // second, printed to the given number of decimal places. A decimal point // followed by one or more nines represents a fractional second, printed to // the given number of decimal places, with trailing zeros removed. // When parsing (only), the input may contain a fractional second // field immediately after the seconds field, even if the layout does not // signify its presence. In that case a decimal point followed by a maximal // series of digits is parsed as a fractional second. // // Numeric time zone offsets format as follows: // -0700 ±hhmm // -07:00 ±hh:mm // -07 ±hh // Replacing the sign in the format with a Z triggers // the ISO 8601 behavior of printing Z instead of an // offset for the UTC zone. Thus: // Z0700 Z or ±hhmm // Z07:00 Z or ±hh:mm // Z07 Z or ±hh // // The recognized day of week formats are "Mon" and "Monday". // The recognized month formats are "Jan" and "January". // // Text in the format string that is not recognized as part of the reference // time is echoed verbatim during Format and expected to appear verbatim // in the input to Parse. // // The executable example for time.Format demonstrates the working // of the layout string in detail and is a good reference. // // Note that the RFC822, RFC850, and RFC1123 formats should be applied // only to local times. Applying them to UTC times will use "UTC" as the // time zone abbreviation, while strictly speaking those RFCs require the // use of "GMT" in that case. // In general RFC1123Z should be used instead of RFC1123 for servers // that insist on that format, and RFC3339 should be preferred for new protocols. // RFC822, RFC822Z, RFC1123, and RFC1123Z are useful for formatting; // when used with time.Parse they do not accept all the time formats // permitted by the RFCs. const ( ANSIC = "Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 2006" UnixDate = "Mon Jan _2 15:04:05 MST 2006" RubyDate = "Mon Jan 02 15:04:05 -0700 2006" RFC822 = "02 Jan 06 15:04 MST" RFC822Z = "02 Jan 06 15:04 -0700" // RFC822 with numeric zone RFC850 = "Monday, 02-Jan-06 15:04:05 MST" RFC1123 = "Mon, 02 Jan 2006 15:04:05 MST" RFC1123Z = "Mon, 02 Jan 2006 15:04:05 -0700" // RFC1123 with numeric zone RFC3339 = "2006-01-02T15:04:05Z07:00" RFC3339Nano = "2006-01-02T15:04:05.999999999Z07:00" Kitchen = "3:04PM" // Handy time stamps. Stamp = "Jan _2 15:04:05" StampMilli = "Jan _2 15:04:05.000" StampMicro = "Jan _2 15:04:05.000000" StampNano = "Jan _2 15:04:05.000000000" ) const ( _ = iota stdLongMonth = iota + stdNeedDate // "January" stdMonth // "Jan" stdNumMonth // "1" stdZeroMonth // "01" stdLongWeekDay // "Monday" stdWeekDay // "Mon" stdDay // "2" stdUnderDay // "_2" stdZeroDay // "02" stdHour = iota + stdNeedClock // "15" stdHour12 // "3" stdZeroHour12 // "03" stdMinute // "4" stdZeroMinute // "04" stdSecond // "5" stdZeroSecond // "05" stdLongYear = iota + stdNeedDate // "2006" stdYear // "06" stdPM = iota + stdNeedClock // "PM" stdpm // "pm" stdTZ = iota // "MST" stdISO8601TZ // "Z0700" // prints Z for UTC stdISO8601SecondsTZ // "Z070000" stdISO8601ShortTZ // "Z07" stdISO8601ColonTZ // "Z07:00" // prints Z for UTC stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ // "Z07:00:00" stdNumTZ // "-0700" // always numeric stdNumSecondsTz // "-070000" stdNumShortTZ // "-07" // always numeric stdNumColonTZ // "-07:00" // always numeric stdNumColonSecondsTZ // "-07:00:00" stdFracSecond0 // ".0", ".00", ... , trailing zeros included stdFracSecond9 // ".9", ".99", ..., trailing zeros omitted stdNeedDate = 1 << 8 // need month, day, year stdNeedClock = 2 << 8 // need hour, minute, second stdArgShift = 16 // extra argument in high bits, above low stdArgShift stdMask = 1<= i+3 && layout[i:i+3] == "Jan" { if len(layout) >= i+7 && layout[i:i+7] == "January" { return layout[0:i], stdLongMonth, layout[i+7:] } if !startsWithLowerCase(layout[i+3:]) { return layout[0:i], stdMonth, layout[i+3:] } } case 'M': // Monday, Mon, MST if len(layout) >= i+3 { if layout[i:i+3] == "Mon" { if len(layout) >= i+6 && layout[i:i+6] == "Monday" { return layout[0:i], stdLongWeekDay, layout[i+6:] } if !startsWithLowerCase(layout[i+3:]) { return layout[0:i], stdWeekDay, layout[i+3:] } } if layout[i:i+3] == "MST" { return layout[0:i], stdTZ, layout[i+3:] } } case '0': // 01, 02, 03, 04, 05, 06 if len(layout) >= i+2 && '1' <= layout[i+1] && layout[i+1] <= '6' { return layout[0:i], std0x[layout[i+1]-'1'], layout[i+2:] } case '1': // 15, 1 if len(layout) >= i+2 && layout[i+1] == '5' { return layout[0:i], stdHour, layout[i+2:] } return layout[0:i], stdNumMonth, layout[i+1:] case '2': // 2006, 2 if len(layout) >= i+4 && layout[i:i+4] == "2006" { return layout[0:i], stdLongYear, layout[i+4:] } return layout[0:i], stdDay, layout[i+1:] case '_': // _2, _2006 if len(layout) >= i+2 && layout[i+1] == '2' { //_2006 is really a literal _, followed by stdLongYear if len(layout) >= i+5 && layout[i+1:i+5] == "2006" { return layout[0 : i+1], stdLongYear, layout[i+5:] } return layout[0:i], stdUnderDay, layout[i+2:] } case '3': return layout[0:i], stdHour12, layout[i+1:] case '4': return layout[0:i], stdMinute, layout[i+1:] case '5': return layout[0:i], stdSecond, layout[i+1:] case 'P': // PM if len(layout) >= i+2 && layout[i+1] == 'M' { return layout[0:i], stdPM, layout[i+2:] } case 'p': // pm if len(layout) >= i+2 && layout[i+1] == 'm' { return layout[0:i], stdpm, layout[i+2:] } case '-': // -070000, -07:00:00, -0700, -07:00, -07 if len(layout) >= i+7 && layout[i:i+7] == "-070000" { return layout[0:i], stdNumSecondsTz, layout[i+7:] } if len(layout) >= i+9 && layout[i:i+9] == "-07:00:00" { return layout[0:i], stdNumColonSecondsTZ, layout[i+9:] } if len(layout) >= i+5 && layout[i:i+5] == "-0700" { return layout[0:i], stdNumTZ, layout[i+5:] } if len(layout) >= i+6 && layout[i:i+6] == "-07:00" { return layout[0:i], stdNumColonTZ, layout[i+6:] } if len(layout) >= i+3 && layout[i:i+3] == "-07" { return layout[0:i], stdNumShortTZ, layout[i+3:] } case 'Z': // Z070000, Z07:00:00, Z0700, Z07:00, if len(layout) >= i+7 && layout[i:i+7] == "Z070000" { return layout[0:i], stdISO8601SecondsTZ, layout[i+7:] } if len(layout) >= i+9 && layout[i:i+9] == "Z07:00:00" { return layout[0:i], stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ, layout[i+9:] } if len(layout) >= i+5 && layout[i:i+5] == "Z0700" { return layout[0:i], stdISO8601TZ, layout[i+5:] } if len(layout) >= i+6 && layout[i:i+6] == "Z07:00" { return layout[0:i], stdISO8601ColonTZ, layout[i+6:] } if len(layout) >= i+3 && layout[i:i+3] == "Z07" { return layout[0:i], stdISO8601ShortTZ, layout[i+3:] } case '.': // .000 or .999 - repeated digits for fractional seconds. if i+1 < len(layout) && (layout[i+1] == '0' || layout[i+1] == '9') { ch := layout[i+1] j := i + 1 for j < len(layout) && layout[j] == ch { j++ } // String of digits must end here - only fractional second is all digits. if !isDigit(layout, j) { std := stdFracSecond0 if layout[i+1] == '9' { std = stdFracSecond9 } std |= (j - (i + 1)) << stdArgShift return layout[0:i], std, layout[j:] } } } } return layout, 0, "" } var longDayNames = []string{ "Sunday", "Monday", "Tuesday", "Wednesday", "Thursday", "Friday", "Saturday", } var shortDayNames = []string{ "Sun", "Mon", "Tue", "Wed", "Thu", "Fri", "Sat", } var shortMonthNames = []string{ "---", "Jan", "Feb", "Mar", "Apr", "May", "Jun", "Jul", "Aug", "Sep", "Oct", "Nov", "Dec", } var longMonthNames = []string{ "---", "January", "February", "March", "April", "May", "June", "July", "August", "September", "October", "November", "December", } // match reports whether s1 and s2 match ignoring case. // It is assumed s1 and s2 are the same length. func match(s1, s2 string) bool { for i := 0; i < len(s1); i++ { c1 := s1[i] c2 := s2[i] if c1 != c2 { // Switch to lower-case; 'a'-'A' is known to be a single bit. c1 |= 'a' - 'A' c2 |= 'a' - 'A' if c1 != c2 || c1 < 'a' || c1 > 'z' { return false } } } return true } func lookup(tab []string, val string) (int, string, error) { for i, v := range tab { if len(val) >= len(v) && match(val[0:len(v)], v) { return i, val[len(v):], nil } } return -1, val, errBad } // appendInt appends the decimal form of x to b and returns the result. // If the decimal form (excluding sign) is shorter than width, the result is padded with leading 0's. // Duplicates functionality in strconv, but avoids dependency. func appendInt(b []byte, x int, width int) []byte { u := uint(x) if x < 0 { b = append(b, '-') u = uint(-x) } // Assemble decimal in reverse order. var buf [20]byte i := len(buf) for u >= 10 { i-- q := u / 10 buf[i] = byte('0' + u - q*10) u = q } i-- buf[i] = byte('0' + u) // Add 0-padding. for w := len(buf) - i; w < width; w++ { b = append(b, '0') } return append(b, buf[i:]...) } // Never printed, just needs to be non-nil for return by atoi. var atoiError = errors.New("time: invalid number") // Duplicates functionality in strconv, but avoids dependency. func atoi(s string) (x int, err error) { neg := false if s != "" && (s[0] == '-' || s[0] == '+') { neg = s[0] == '-' s = s[1:] } q, rem, err := leadingInt(s) x = int(q) if err != nil || rem != "" { return 0, atoiError } if neg { x = -x } return x, nil } // formatNano appends a fractional second, as nanoseconds, to b // and returns the result. func formatNano(b []byte, nanosec uint, n int, trim bool) []byte { u := nanosec var buf [9]byte for start := len(buf); start > 0; { start-- buf[start] = byte(u%10 + '0') u /= 10 } if n > 9 { n = 9 } if trim { for n > 0 && buf[n-1] == '0' { n-- } if n == 0 { return b } } b = append(b, '.') return append(b, buf[:n]...) } // String returns the time formatted using the format string // "2006-01-02 15:04:05.999999999 -0700 MST" func (t Time) String() string { return t.Format("2006-01-02 15:04:05.999999999 -0700 MST") } // Format returns a textual representation of the time value formatted // according to layout, which defines the format by showing how the reference // time, defined to be // Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 -0700 MST 2006 // would be displayed if it were the value; it serves as an example of the // desired output. The same display rules will then be applied to the time // value. // // A fractional second is represented by adding a period and zeros // to the end of the seconds section of layout string, as in "15:04:05.000" // to format a time stamp with millisecond precision. // // Predefined layouts ANSIC, UnixDate, RFC3339 and others describe standard // and convenient representations of the reference time. For more information // about the formats and the definition of the reference time, see the // documentation for ANSIC and the other constants defined by this package. func (t Time) Format(layout string) string { const bufSize = 64 var b []byte max := len(layout) + 10 if max < bufSize { var buf [bufSize]byte b = buf[:0] } else { b = make([]byte, 0, max) } b = t.AppendFormat(b, layout) return string(b) } // AppendFormat is like Format but appends the textual // representation to b and returns the extended buffer. func (t Time) AppendFormat(b []byte, layout string) []byte { var ( name, offset, abs = t.locabs() year int = -1 month Month day int hour int = -1 min int sec int ) // Each iteration generates one std value. for layout != "" { prefix, std, suffix := nextStdChunk(layout) if prefix != "" { b = append(b, prefix...) } if std == 0 { break } layout = suffix // Compute year, month, day if needed. if year < 0 && std&stdNeedDate != 0 { year, month, day, _ = absDate(abs, true) } // Compute hour, minute, second if needed. if hour < 0 && std&stdNeedClock != 0 { hour, min, sec = absClock(abs) } switch std & stdMask { case stdYear: y := year if y < 0 { y = -y } b = appendInt(b, y%100, 2) case stdLongYear: b = appendInt(b, year, 4) case stdMonth: b = append(b, month.String()[:3]...) case stdLongMonth: m := month.String() b = append(b, m...) case stdNumMonth: b = appendInt(b, int(month), 0) case stdZeroMonth: b = appendInt(b, int(month), 2) case stdWeekDay: b = append(b, absWeekday(abs).String()[:3]...) case stdLongWeekDay: s := absWeekday(abs).String() b = append(b, s...) case stdDay: b = appendInt(b, day, 0) case stdUnderDay: if day < 10 { b = append(b, ' ') } b = appendInt(b, day, 0) case stdZeroDay: b = appendInt(b, day, 2) case stdHour: b = appendInt(b, hour, 2) case stdHour12: // Noon is 12PM, midnight is 12AM. hr := hour % 12 if hr == 0 { hr = 12 } b = appendInt(b, hr, 0) case stdZeroHour12: // Noon is 12PM, midnight is 12AM. hr := hour % 12 if hr == 0 { hr = 12 } b = appendInt(b, hr, 2) case stdMinute: b = appendInt(b, min, 0) case stdZeroMinute: b = appendInt(b, min, 2) case stdSecond: b = appendInt(b, sec, 0) case stdZeroSecond: b = appendInt(b, sec, 2) case stdPM: if hour >= 12 { b = append(b, "PM"...) } else { b = append(b, "AM"...) } case stdpm: if hour >= 12 { b = append(b, "pm"...) } else { b = append(b, "am"...) } case stdISO8601TZ, stdISO8601ColonTZ, stdISO8601SecondsTZ, stdISO8601ShortTZ, stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ, stdNumTZ, stdNumColonTZ, stdNumSecondsTz, stdNumShortTZ, stdNumColonSecondsTZ: // Ugly special case. We cheat and take the "Z" variants // to mean "the time zone as formatted for ISO 8601". if offset == 0 && (std == stdISO8601TZ || std == stdISO8601ColonTZ || std == stdISO8601SecondsTZ || std == stdISO8601ShortTZ || std == stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ) { b = append(b, 'Z') break } zone := offset / 60 // convert to minutes absoffset := offset if zone < 0 { b = append(b, '-') zone = -zone absoffset = -absoffset } else { b = append(b, '+') } b = appendInt(b, zone/60, 2) if std == stdISO8601ColonTZ || std == stdNumColonTZ || std == stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ || std == stdNumColonSecondsTZ { b = append(b, ':') } if std != stdNumShortTZ && std != stdISO8601ShortTZ { b = appendInt(b, zone%60, 2) } // append seconds if appropriate if std == stdISO8601SecondsTZ || std == stdNumSecondsTz || std == stdNumColonSecondsTZ || std == stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ { if std == stdNumColonSecondsTZ || std == stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ { b = append(b, ':') } b = appendInt(b, absoffset%60, 2) } case stdTZ: if name != "" { b = append(b, name...) break } // No time zone known for this time, but we must print one. // Use the -0700 format. zone := offset / 60 // convert to minutes if zone < 0 { b = append(b, '-') zone = -zone } else { b = append(b, '+') } b = appendInt(b, zone/60, 2) b = appendInt(b, zone%60, 2) case stdFracSecond0, stdFracSecond9: b = formatNano(b, uint(t.Nanosecond()), std>>stdArgShift, std&stdMask == stdFracSecond9) } } return b } var errBad = errors.New("bad value for field") // placeholder not passed to user // ParseError describes a problem parsing a time string. type ParseError struct { Layout string Value string LayoutElem string ValueElem string Message string } func quote(s string) string { return "\"" + s + "\"" } // Error returns the string representation of a ParseError. func (e *ParseError) Error() string { if e.Message == "" { return "parsing time " + quote(e.Value) + " as " + quote(e.Layout) + ": cannot parse " + quote(e.ValueElem) + " as " + quote(e.LayoutElem) } return "parsing time " + quote(e.Value) + e.Message } // isDigit reports whether s[i] is in range and is a decimal digit. func isDigit(s string, i int) bool { if len(s) <= i { return false } c := s[i] return '0' <= c && c <= '9' } // getnum parses s[0:1] or s[0:2] (fixed forces the latter) // as a decimal integer and returns the integer and the // remainder of the string. func getnum(s string, fixed bool) (int, string, error) { if !isDigit(s, 0) { return 0, s, errBad } if !isDigit(s, 1) { if fixed { return 0, s, errBad } return int(s[0] - '0'), s[1:], nil } return int(s[0]-'0')*10 + int(s[1]-'0'), s[2:], nil } func cutspace(s string) string { for len(s) > 0 && s[0] == ' ' { s = s[1:] } return s } // skip removes the given prefix from value, // treating runs of space characters as equivalent. func skip(value, prefix string) (string, error) { for len(prefix) > 0 { if prefix[0] == ' ' { if len(value) > 0 && value[0] != ' ' { return value, errBad } prefix = cutspace(prefix) value = cutspace(value) continue } if len(value) == 0 || value[0] != prefix[0] { return value, errBad } prefix = prefix[1:] value = value[1:] } return value, nil } // Parse parses a formatted string and returns the time value it represents. // The layout defines the format by showing how the reference time, // defined to be // Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 -0700 MST 2006 // would be interpreted if it were the value; it serves as an example of // the input format. The same interpretation will then be made to the // input string. // // Predefined layouts ANSIC, UnixDate, RFC3339 and others describe standard // and convenient representations of the reference time. For more information // about the formats and the definition of the reference time, see the // documentation for ANSIC and the other constants defined by this package. // Also, the executable example for time.Format demonstrates the working // of the layout string in detail and is a good reference. // // Elements omitted from the value are assumed to be zero or, when // zero is impossible, one, so parsing "3:04pm" returns the time // corresponding to Jan 1, year 0, 15:04:00 UTC (note that because the year is // 0, this time is before the zero Time). // Years must be in the range 0000..9999. The day of the week is checked // for syntax but it is otherwise ignored. // // In the absence of a time zone indicator, Parse returns a time in UTC. // // When parsing a time with a zone offset like -0700, if the offset corresponds // to a time zone used by the current location (Local), then Parse uses that // location and zone in the returned time. Otherwise it records the time as // being in a fabricated location with time fixed at the given zone offset. // // No checking is done that the day of the month is within the month's // valid dates; any one- or two-digit value is accepted. For example // February 31 and even February 99 are valid dates, specifying dates // in March and May. This behavior is consistent with time.Date. // // When parsing a time with a zone abbreviation like MST, if the zone abbreviation // has a defined offset in the current location, then that offset is used. // The zone abbreviation "UTC" is recognized as UTC regardless of location. // If the zone abbreviation is unknown, Parse records the time as being // in a fabricated location with the given zone abbreviation and a zero offset. // This choice means that such a time can be parsed and reformatted with the // same layout losslessly, but the exact instant used in the representation will // differ by the actual zone offset. To avoid such problems, prefer time layouts // that use a numeric zone offset, or use ParseInLocation. func Parse(layout, value string) (Time, error) { return parse(layout, value, UTC, Local) } // ParseInLocation is like Parse but differs in two important ways. // First, in the absence of time zone information, Parse interprets a time as UTC; // ParseInLocation interprets the time as in the given location. // Second, when given a zone offset or abbreviation, Parse tries to match it // against the Local location; ParseInLocation uses the given location. func ParseInLocation(layout, value string, loc *Location) (Time, error) { return parse(layout, value, loc, loc) } func parse(layout, value string, defaultLocation, local *Location) (Time, error) { alayout, avalue := layout, value rangeErrString := "" // set if a value is out of range amSet := false // do we need to subtract 12 from the hour for midnight? pmSet := false // do we need to add 12 to the hour? // Time being constructed. var ( year int month int = 1 // January day int = 1 hour int min int sec int nsec int z *Location zoneOffset int = -1 zoneName string ) // Each iteration processes one std value. for { var err error prefix, std, suffix := nextStdChunk(layout) stdstr := layout[len(prefix) : len(layout)-len(suffix)] value, err = skip(value, prefix) if err != nil { return Time{}, &ParseError{alayout, avalue, prefix, value, ""} } if std == 0 { if len(value) != 0 { return Time{}, &ParseError{alayout, avalue, "", value, ": extra text: " + value} } break } layout = suffix var p string switch std & stdMask { case stdYear: if len(value) < 2 { err = errBad break } p, value = value[0:2], value[2:] year, err = atoi(p) if year >= 69 { // Unix time starts Dec 31 1969 in some time zones year += 1900 } else { year += 2000 } case stdLongYear: if len(value) < 4 || !isDigit(value, 0) { err = errBad break } p, value = value[0:4], value[4:] year, err = atoi(p) case stdMonth: month, value, err = lookup(shortMonthNames, value) case stdLongMonth: month, value, err = lookup(longMonthNames, value) case stdNumMonth, stdZeroMonth: month, value, err = getnum(value, std == stdZeroMonth) if month <= 0 || 12 < month { rangeErrString = "month" } case stdWeekDay: // Ignore weekday except for error checking. _, value, err = lookup(shortDayNames, value) case stdLongWeekDay: _, value, err = lookup(longDayNames, value) case stdDay, stdUnderDay, stdZeroDay: if std == stdUnderDay && len(value) > 0 && value[0] == ' ' { value = value[1:] } day, value, err = getnum(value, std == stdZeroDay) if day < 0 { // Note that we allow any one- or two-digit day here. rangeErrString = "day" } case stdHour: hour, value, err = getnum(value, false) if hour < 0 || 24 <= hour { rangeErrString = "hour" } case stdHour12, stdZeroHour12: hour, value, err = getnum(value, std == stdZeroHour12) if hour < 0 || 12 < hour { rangeErrString = "hour" } case stdMinute, stdZeroMinute: min, value, err = getnum(value, std == stdZeroMinute) if min < 0 || 60 <= min { rangeErrString = "minute" } case stdSecond, stdZeroSecond: sec, value, err = getnum(value, std == stdZeroSecond) if sec < 0 || 60 <= sec { rangeErrString = "second" break } // Special case: do we have a fractional second but no // fractional second in the format? if len(value) >= 2 && value[0] == '.' && isDigit(value, 1) { _, std, _ = nextStdChunk(layout) std &= stdMask if std == stdFracSecond0 || std == stdFracSecond9 { // Fractional second in the layout; proceed normally break } // No fractional second in the layout but we have one in the input. n := 2 for ; n < len(value) && isDigit(value, n); n++ { } nsec, rangeErrString, err = parseNanoseconds(value, n) value = value[n:] } case stdPM: if len(value) < 2 { err = errBad break } p, value = value[0:2], value[2:] switch p { case "PM": pmSet = true case "AM": amSet = true default: err = errBad } case stdpm: if len(value) < 2 { err = errBad break } p, value = value[0:2], value[2:] switch p { case "pm": pmSet = true case "am": amSet = true default: err = errBad } case stdISO8601TZ, stdISO8601ColonTZ, stdISO8601SecondsTZ, stdISO8601ShortTZ, stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ, stdNumTZ, stdNumShortTZ, stdNumColonTZ, stdNumSecondsTz, stdNumColonSecondsTZ: if (std == stdISO8601TZ || std == stdISO8601ShortTZ || std == stdISO8601ColonTZ) && len(value) >= 1 && value[0] == 'Z' { value = value[1:] z = UTC break } var sign, hour, min, seconds string if std == stdISO8601ColonTZ || std == stdNumColonTZ { if len(value) < 6 { err = errBad break } if value[3] != ':' { err = errBad break } sign, hour, min, seconds, value = value[0:1], value[1:3], value[4:6], "00", value[6:] } else if std == stdNumShortTZ || std == stdISO8601ShortTZ { if len(value) < 3 { err = errBad break } sign, hour, min, seconds, value = value[0:1], value[1:3], "00", "00", value[3:] } else if std == stdISO8601ColonSecondsTZ || std == stdNumColonSecondsTZ { if len(value) < 9 { err = errBad break } if value[3] != ':' || value[6] != ':' { err = errBad break } sign, hour, min, seconds, value = value[0:1], value[1:3], value[4:6], value[7:9], value[9:] } else if std == stdISO8601SecondsTZ || std == stdNumSecondsTz { if len(value) < 7 { err = errBad break } sign, hour, min, seconds, value = value[0:1], value[1:3], value[3:5], value[5:7], value[7:] } else { if len(value) < 5 { err = errBad break } sign, hour, min, seconds, value = value[0:1], value[1:3], value[3:5], "00", value[5:] } var hr, mm, ss int hr, err = atoi(hour) if err == nil { mm, err = atoi(min) } if err == nil { ss, err = atoi(seconds) } zoneOffset = (hr*60+mm)*60 + ss // offset is in seconds switch sign[0] { case '+': case '-': zoneOffset = -zoneOffset default: err = errBad } case stdTZ: // Does it look like a time zone? if len(value) >= 3 && value[0:3] == "UTC" { z = UTC value = value[3:] break } n, ok := parseTimeZone(value) if !ok { err = errBad break } zoneName, value = value[:n], value[n:] case stdFracSecond0: // stdFracSecond0 requires the exact number of digits as specified in // the layout. ndigit := 1 + (std >> stdArgShift) if len(value) < ndigit { err = errBad break } nsec, rangeErrString, err = parseNanoseconds(value, ndigit) value = value[ndigit:] case stdFracSecond9: if len(value) < 2 || value[0] != '.' || value[1] < '0' || '9' < value[1] { // Fractional second omitted. break } // Take any number of digits, even more than asked for, // because it is what the stdSecond case would do. i := 0 for i < 9 && i+1 < len(value) && '0' <= value[i+1] && value[i+1] <= '9' { i++ } nsec, rangeErrString, err = parseNanoseconds(value, 1+i) value = value[1+i:] } if rangeErrString != "" { return Time{}, &ParseError{alayout, avalue, stdstr, value, ": " + rangeErrString + " out of range"} } if err != nil { return Time{}, &ParseError{alayout, avalue, stdstr, value, ""} } } if pmSet && hour < 12 { hour += 12 } else if amSet && hour == 12 { hour = 0 } // Validate the day of the month. if day < 1 || day > daysIn(Month(month), year) { return Time{}, &ParseError{alayout, avalue, "", value, ": day out of range"} } if z != nil { return Date(year, Month(month), day, hour, min, sec, nsec, z), nil } if zoneOffset != -1 { t := Date(year, Month(month), day, hour, min, sec, nsec, UTC) t.sec -= int64(zoneOffset) // Look for local zone with the given offset. // If that zone was in effect at the given time, use it. name, offset, _, _, _ := local.lookup(t.sec + internalToUnix) if offset == zoneOffset && (zoneName == "" || name == zoneName) { t.setLoc(local) return t, nil } // Otherwise create fake zone to record offset. t.setLoc(FixedZone(zoneName, zoneOffset)) return t, nil } if zoneName != "" { t := Date(year, Month(month), day, hour, min, sec, nsec, UTC) // Look for local zone with the given offset. // If that zone was in effect at the given time, use it. offset, _, ok := local.lookupName(zoneName, t.sec+internalToUnix) if ok { t.sec -= int64(offset) t.setLoc(local) return t, nil } // Otherwise, create fake zone with unknown offset. if len(zoneName) > 3 && zoneName[:3] == "GMT" { offset, _ = atoi(zoneName[3:]) // Guaranteed OK by parseGMT. offset *= 3600 } t.setLoc(FixedZone(zoneName, offset)) return t, nil } // Otherwise, fall back to default. return Date(year, Month(month), day, hour, min, sec, nsec, defaultLocation), nil } // parseTimeZone parses a time zone string and returns its length. Time zones // are human-generated and unpredictable. We can't do precise error checking. // On the other hand, for a correct parse there must be a time zone at the // beginning of the string, so it's almost always true that there's one // there. We look at the beginning of the string for a run of upper-case letters. // If there are more than 5, it's an error. // If there are 4 or 5 and the last is a T, it's a time zone. // If there are 3, it's a time zone. // Otherwise, other than special cases, it's not a time zone. // GMT is special because it can have an hour offset. func parseTimeZone(value string) (length int, ok bool) { if len(value) < 3 { return 0, false } // Special case 1: ChST and MeST are the only zones with a lower-case letter. if len(value) >= 4 && (value[:4] == "ChST" || value[:4] == "MeST") { return 4, true } // Special case 2: GMT may have an hour offset; treat it specially. if value[:3] == "GMT" { length = parseGMT(value) return length, true } // How many upper-case letters are there? Need at least three, at most five. var nUpper int for nUpper = 0; nUpper < 6; nUpper++ { if nUpper >= len(value) { break } if c := value[nUpper]; c < 'A' || 'Z' < c { break } } switch nUpper { case 0, 1, 2, 6: return 0, false case 5: // Must end in T to match. if value[4] == 'T' { return 5, true } case 4: // Must end in T, except one special case. if value[3] == 'T' || value[:4] == "WITA" { return 4, true } case 3: return 3, true } return 0, false } // parseGMT parses a GMT time zone. The input string is known to start "GMT". // The function checks whether that is followed by a sign and a number in the // range -14 through 12 excluding zero. func parseGMT(value string) int { value = value[3:] if len(value) == 0 { return 3 } sign := value[0] if sign != '-' && sign != '+' { return 3 } x, rem, err := leadingInt(value[1:]) if err != nil { return 3 } if sign == '-' { x = -x } if x == 0 || x < -14 || 12 < x { return 3 } return 3 + len(value) - len(rem) } func parseNanoseconds(value string, nbytes int) (ns int, rangeErrString string, err error) { if value[0] != '.' { err = errBad return } if ns, err = atoi(value[1:nbytes]); err != nil { return } if ns < 0 || 1e9 <= ns { rangeErrString = "fractional second" return } // We need nanoseconds, which means scaling by the number // of missing digits in the format, maximum length 10. If it's // longer than 10, we won't scale. scaleDigits := 10 - nbytes for i := 0; i < scaleDigits; i++ { ns *= 10 } return } var errLeadingInt = errors.New("time: bad [0-9]*") // never printed // leadingInt consumes the leading [0-9]* from s. func leadingInt(s string) (x int64, rem string, err error) { i := 0 for ; i < len(s); i++ { c := s[i] if c < '0' || c > '9' { break } if x > (1<<63-1)/10 { // overflow return 0, "", errLeadingInt } x = x*10 + int64(c) - '0' if x < 0 { // overflow return 0, "", errLeadingInt } } return x, s[i:], nil } // leadingFraction consumes the leading [0-9]* from s. // It is used only for fractions, so does not return an error on overflow, // it just stops accumulating precision. func leadingFraction(s string) (x int64, scale float64, rem string) { i := 0 scale = 1 overflow := false for ; i < len(s); i++ { c := s[i] if c < '0' || c > '9' { break } if overflow { continue } if x > (1<<63-1)/10 { // It's possible for overflow to give a positive number, so take care. overflow = true continue } y := x*10 + int64(c) - '0' if y < 0 { overflow = true continue } x = y scale *= 10 } return x, scale, s[i:] } var unitMap = map[string]int64{ "ns": int64(Nanosecond), "us": int64(Microsecond), "µs": int64(Microsecond), // U+00B5 = micro symbol "μs": int64(Microsecond), // U+03BC = Greek letter mu "ms": int64(Millisecond), "s": int64(Second), "m": int64(Minute), "h": int64(Hour), } // ParseDuration parses a duration string. // A duration string is a possibly signed sequence of // decimal numbers, each with optional fraction and a unit suffix, // such as "300ms", "-1.5h" or "2h45m". // Valid time units are "ns", "us" (or "µs"), "ms", "s", "m", "h". func ParseDuration(s string) (Duration, error) { // [-+]?([0-9]*(\.[0-9]*)?[a-z]+)+ orig := s var d int64 neg := false // Consume [-+]? if s != "" { c := s[0] if c == '-' || c == '+' { neg = c == '-' s = s[1:] } } // Special case: if all that is left is "0", this is zero. if s == "0" { return 0, nil } if s == "" { return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } for s != "" { var ( v, f int64 // integers before, after decimal point scale float64 = 1 // value = v + f/scale ) var err error // The next character must be [0-9.] if !(s[0] == '.' || '0' <= s[0] && s[0] <= '9') { return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } // Consume [0-9]* pl := len(s) v, s, err = leadingInt(s) if err != nil { return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } pre := pl != len(s) // whether we consumed anything before a period // Consume (\.[0-9]*)? post := false if s != "" && s[0] == '.' { s = s[1:] pl := len(s) f, scale, s = leadingFraction(s) post = pl != len(s) } if !pre && !post { // no digits (e.g. ".s" or "-.s") return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } // Consume unit. i := 0 for ; i < len(s); i++ { c := s[i] if c == '.' || '0' <= c && c <= '9' { break } } if i == 0 { return 0, errors.New("time: missing unit in duration " + orig) } u := s[:i] s = s[i:] unit, ok := unitMap[u] if !ok { return 0, errors.New("time: unknown unit " + u + " in duration " + orig) } if v > (1<<63-1)/unit { // overflow return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } v *= unit if f > 0 { // float64 is needed to be nanosecond accurate for fractions of hours. // v >= 0 && (f*unit/scale) <= 3.6e+12 (ns/h, h is the largest unit) v += int64(float64(f) * (float64(unit) / scale)) if v < 0 { // overflow return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } } d += v if d < 0 { // overflow return 0, errors.New("time: invalid duration " + orig) } } if neg { d = -d } return Duration(d), nil }