. */ namespace Doctrine\DBAL\Types; use Doctrine\DBAL\Platforms\AbstractPlatform; /** * DateTime type saving additional timezone information. * * Caution: Databases are not necessarily experts at storing timezone related * data of dates. First, of all the supported vendors only PostgreSQL and Oracle * support storing Timezone data. But those two don't save the actual timezone * attached to a DateTime instance (for example "Europe/Berlin" or "America/Montreal") * but the current offset of them related to UTC. That means depending on daylight saving times * or not you may get different offsets. * * This datatype makes only sense to use, if your application works with an offset, not * with an actual timezone that uses transitions. Otherwise your DateTime instance * attached with a timezone such as Europe/Berlin gets saved into the database with * the offset and re-created from persistence with only the offset, not the original timezone * attached. * * @license http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-license.php LGPL * @link www.doctrine-project.com * @since 1.0 * @author Benjamin Eberlei * @author Guilherme Blanco * @author Jonathan Wage * @author Roman Borschel */ class DateTimeTzType extends Type { public function getName() { return Type::DATETIMETZ; } public function getSQLDeclaration(array $fieldDeclaration, AbstractPlatform $platform) { return $platform->getDateTimeTzTypeDeclarationSQL($fieldDeclaration); } public function convertToDatabaseValue($value, AbstractPlatform $platform) { return ($value !== null) ? $value->format($platform->getDateTimeTzFormatString()) : null; } public function convertToPHPValue($value, AbstractPlatform $platform) { if ($value === null || $value instanceof \DateTime) { return $value; } $val = \DateTime::createFromFormat($platform->getDateTimeTzFormatString(), $value); if ( ! $val) { throw ConversionException::conversionFailedFormat($value, $this->getName(), $platform->getDateTimeTzFormatString()); } return $val; } }