#4492: tzdata-2019b
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 Reporter:  bdubbs  |       Owner:  lfs-book
     Type:  task    |      Status:  new
 Priority:  normal  |   Milestone:  9.0
Component:  Book    |     Version:  SVN
 Severity:  normal  |  Resolution:
 Keywords:          |
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Comment (by bdubbs):

 News for the tz database

 Release 2019b - 2019-07-01 00:09:53 -0700

   Briefly:
     Brazil no longer observes DST.
     'zic -b slim' outputs smaller TZif files; please try it out.
     Palestine's 2019 spring-forward transition was on 03-29, not 03-30.

   Changes to future timestamps

     Brazil has canceled DST and will stay on standard time indefinitely.
     (Thanks to Steffen Thorsen, Marcus Diniz, and Daniel Soares de
     Oliveira.)

     Predictions for Morocco now go through 2087 instead of 2037, to
     work around a problem on newlib when using TZif files output by
     zic 2019a or earlier.  (Problem reported by David Gauchard.)

   Changes to past and future timestamps

     Palestine's 2019 spring transition was 03-29 at 00:00, not 03-30
     at 01:00.  (Thanks to Sharef Mustafa and Even Scharning.)  Guess
     future transitions to be March's last Friday at 00:00.

   Changes to past timestamps

     Hong Kong's 1941-06-15 spring-forward transition was at 03:00, not
     03:30.  Its 1945 transition from JST to HKT was on 11-18 at 02:00,
     not 09-15 at 00:00.  In 1946 its spring-forward transition was on
     04-21 at 00:00, not the previous day at 03:30.  From 1946 through
     1952 its fall-back transitions occurred at 04:30, not at 03:30.
     In 1947 its fall-back transition was on 11-30, not 12-30.
     (Thanks to P Chan.)

   Changes to past time zone abbreviations

     Italy's 1866 transition to Rome Mean Time was on December 12, not
     September 22.  This affects only the time zone abbreviation for
     Europe/Rome between those dates.  (Thanks to Stephen Trainor and
     Luigi Rosa.)

   Changes affecting metadata only

     Add info about the Crimea situation in zone1970.tab and zone.tab.
     (Problem reported by Serhii Demediuk.)
   Changes to code

     zic's new -b option supports a way to control data bloat and to
     test for year-2038 bugs in software that reads TZif files.
     'zic -b fat' and 'zic -b slim' generate larger and smaller output;
     for example, changing from fat to slim shrinks the Europe/London
     file from 3648 to 1599 bytes, saving about 56%.  Fat and slim
     files represent the same set of timestamps and use the same TZif
     format as documented in tzfile(5) and in Internet RFC 8536.
     Fat format attempts to work around bugs or incompatibilities in
     older software, notably software that mishandles 64-bit TZif data
     or uses obsolete TZ strings like "EET-2EEST" that lack DST rules.
     Slim format is more efficient and does not work around 64-bit bugs
     or obsolete TZ strings.  Currently zic defaults to fat format
     unless you compile with -DZIC_BLOAT_DEFAULT=\"slim\"; this
     out-of-the-box default is intended to change in future releases
     as the buggy software often mishandles timestamps anyway.

     zic no longer treats a set of rules ending in 2037 specially.
     Previously, zic assumed that such a ruleset meant that future
     timestamps could not be predicted, and therefore omitted a
     POSIX-like TZ string in the TZif output.  The old behavior is no
     longer needed for current tzdata, and caused problems with newlib
     when used with older tzdata (reported by David Gauchard).

     zic no longer generates some artifact transitions.  For example,
     Europe/London no longer has a no-op transition in January 1996.

   Changes to build procedure

     tzdata.zi now assumes zic 2017c or later.  This shrinks tzdata.zi
     by a percent or so.

   Changes to documentation and commentary

     The Makefile now documents the POSIXRULES macro as being obsolete,
     and similarly, zic's -p POSIXRULES option is now documented as
     being obsolete.  Although the POSIXRULES feature still exists and
     works as before, in practice it is rarely used for its intended
     purpose, and it does not work either in the default reference
     implementation (for timestamps after 2037) or in common
     implementations such as GNU/Linux (for contemporary timestamps).
     Since POSIXRULES was designed primarily as a temporary transition
     facility for System V platforms that died off decades ago, it is
     being decommissioned rather than institutionalized.

     New info on Bonin Islands and Marcus (thanks to Wakaba and Phake
 Nick).

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