[
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DRILL-6242?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16460282#comment-16460282
]
ASF GitHub Bot commented on DRILL-6242:
---------------------------------------
Github user jiang-wu commented on a diff in the pull request:
https://github.com/apache/drill/pull/1247#discussion_r185358343
--- Diff:
exec/vector/src/main/java/org/apache/drill/exec/expr/fn/impl/DateUtility.java
---
@@ -639,29 +648,95 @@ public static String getTimeZone(int index) {
return timezoneList[index];
}
+ /**
--- End diff --
The "parseLocalDate", "parseLocalTime", "parseLocalDateTime" are used by
various junit tests. These parsers are strict in that if the input string
doesn't have all the specified fields, it will fail to parse.
> Output format for nested date, time, timestamp values in an object hierarchy
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: DRILL-6242
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/DRILL-6242
> Project: Apache Drill
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: Execution - Data Types
> Affects Versions: 1.12.0
> Reporter: Jiang Wu
> Assignee: Jiang Wu
> Priority: Major
> Fix For: 1.14.0
>
>
> Some storages (mapr db, mongo db, etc.) have hierarchical objects that
> contain nested fields of date, time, timestamp types. When a query returns
> these objects, the output format for the nested date, time, timestamp, are
> showing the internal object (org.joda.time.DateTime), rather than the logical
> data value.
> For example. Suppose in MongoDB, we have a single object that looks like
> this:
> {code:java}
> > db.test.findOne();
> {
> "_id" : ObjectId("5aa8487d470dd39a635a12f5"),
> "name" : "orange",
> "context" : {
> "date" : ISODate("2018-03-13T21:52:54.940Z"),
> "user" : "jack"
> }
> }
> {code}
> Then connect Drill to the above MongoDB storage, and run the following query
> within Drill:
> {code:java}
> > select t.context.`date`, t.context from test t;
> +--------+---------+
> | EXPR$0 | context |
> +--------+---------+
> | 2018-03-13 |
> {"date":{"dayOfYear":72,"year":2018,"dayOfMonth":13,"dayOfWeek":2,"era":1,"millisOfDay":78774940,"weekOfWeekyear":11,"weekyear":2018,"monthOfYear":3,"yearOfEra":2018,"yearOfCentury":18,"centuryOfEra":20,"millisOfSecond":940,"secondOfMinute":54,"secondOfDay":78774,"minuteOfHour":52,"minuteOfDay":1312,"hourOfDay":21,"zone":{"fixed":true,"id":"UTC"},"millis":1520977974940,"chronology":{"zone":{"fixed":true,"id":"UTC"}},"afterNow":false,"beforeNow":true,"equalNow":false},"user":"jack"}
> |
> {code}
> We can see that from the above output, when the date field is retrieved as a
> top level column, Drill outputs a logical date value. But when the same
> field is within an object hierarchy, Drill outputs the internal object used
> to hold the date value.
> The expected output is the same display for whether the date field is shown
> as a top level column or when it is within an object hierarchy:
> {code:java}
> > select t.context.`date`, t.context from test t;
> +--------+---------+
> | EXPR$0 | context |
> +--------+---------+
> | 2018-03-13 | {"date":"2018-03-13","user":"jack"} |
> {code}
--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v7.6.3#76005)