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Posted to dev@sqoop.apache.org by "yuxiaoyong (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2019/03/07 08:06:00 UTC
[jira] [Comment Edited] (SQOOP-423) Sqoop import of timestamps to
Avro from Postgres - Timezone Issue
[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SQOOP-423?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16786487#comment-16786487 ]
yuxiaoyong edited comment on SQOOP-423 at 3/7/19 8:05 AM:
----------------------------------------------------------
We have encountered the same issue, the TIMESTAMP values are 8 hours ahead and our format is textfile !!
Instead of use
* --table TABLE_NAME ,
* -Dmapred.child.java.opts="-Duser.timezone=Asia/Shanghai"
* -Dmapreduce.map.java.opts=' -Duser.timezone=Asia/Shanghai'
we use --query " select * from tablename \$CONDITIONS " to avoid the automatically transformation from sqoop, and the TIMESTAMP keeps same as the MYSQL DB.
We don't known why it happens, because java.sql._Timestamp has nothing to do with TIMEZONE. Hope guys to fix this bug_
was (Author: aeoles):
We have encountered the same issue, the TIMESTAMP values are 8 hours ahead and our format is textfile !!
Instead of use --table TABLE_NAME ,we use --query " " to avoid the automatically transformation from sqoop, and the TIMESTAMP keeps same as the MYSQL DB.
We don't known why it happens, because java.sql._Timestamp has nothing to do with TIMEZONE. Hope guys to fix this bug_
> Sqoop import of timestamps to Avro from Postgres - Timezone Issue
> -----------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: SQOOP-423
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SQOOP-423
> Project: Sqoop
> Issue Type: Bug
> Affects Versions: 1.3.0
> Reporter: Lynn Goh
> Priority: Major
>
> I am running sqoop-1.3.0-cdh3u2 on a Mac and when I sqoop import from a postgres table with columns of type 'timestamp without time zone', they are converted to longs in the time zone of my local operating system, even after I have started Hadoop up with TZ=GMT or passed in HADOOP_OPTS="-Duser.timezone=GMT". My ultimate goal is to sqoop import into long representations that are in GMT timezone rather than my operating system's timezone.
> Postgres example:
> {code}
> acamp_id | start_time | end_time
> ----------+---------------------+---------------------
> 1 | 2008-01-01 00:00:00 | 2011-12-16 00:00:00
> {code}
> After import, you can see the values are 8 hours ahead, even with TZ=GMT and user.timezone set properly (this is the json representation of the parsed imported avro file):
> {code}
> {"acamp_id": 1, "end_time": 1324022400000, "start_time": 1199174400000}
> {code}
> date utility invocation:
> {code}
> lynngoh@unknown:~$ date -u -r 1199174400
> Tue Jan 1 08:00:00 UTC 2008
> {code}
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