Well, I've just solved the problem : I don't use anymore the TZ variable. And now there is no more problem. Though, I had to modify my programs to force the Timezone at each request.
If you have another workaround, just tell... Emmanuel Guyot "Emmanuel Guyot" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a �crit dans le message de news: 9r11np$mk9$[EMAIL PROTECTED] > I have some columns with timestamp data type wich includes the time zone. > I access these columns using JDBC which handle the time zone automaticly. > Writing and reading data work fine. > > Though when I dump the base and restore it, the date are 2 hours later. Is > seems to me that the timezone is lost somewhere. > > Here are technical information : > - I've launched my base (7.1.3 with cygwin) while TZ=GMT-2. > - To dump I use : pg_dump.exe -c -F c -Z 9 myDB > - To restore I use : zcat file.gz | pg_restore -v -c -F c -d myDB > > For both dump and restore TZ is GMT-2. > > Thanks for your hints... > > Emmanuel Guyot > > > ---------------------------(end of broadcast)--------------------------- TIP 3: if posting/reading through Usenet, please send an appropriate subscribe-nomail command to [EMAIL PROTECTED] so that your message can get through to the mailing list cleanly
