- updated to 1.35
see /usr/share/doc/packages/perl-Time-Local/Changes
1.35 2023-04-29
- This is the same as 1.34.
- The code now explicitly handles non-integer seconds values. This fixes the
confusing things that timelocal() does with non-integer seconds but does not
turn the seconds value into an integer. Based on a bug report from Dmitriy
Shamatrin. GH #18.
1.34 2023-03-25 (TRIAL RELEASE)
- Fix for test failures seen on 32-bit systems with older Perl versions.
1.33 2023-02-12 (TRIAL RELEASE)
- Fix for breakage on (some?) 32-bit platforms. If an integer calculation done
internally overflowed all calls to this module's subs could error with "Day
too big - 105412 > -2147483648". This fix reduces the range of acceptable
epochs but should make the module usable again on such systems.
1.32 2023-02-12 (TRIAL RELEASE)
- This is an alternative to the changes in the 1.31 release. Instead of
restoring "use integer", the code now explicitly handles non-integer seconds
values. This fixes the confusing things that timelocal() does with
non-integer seconds but does not turn the seconds value into an
integer. Based on a bug report from Dmitriy Shamatrin. GH #18.
1.31 2021-11-09 (TRIAL RELEASE)
- Restored the use of "use integer", which was removed in 2010 as part of the
change to support a 64-bit time_t in Perl, regardless of the platform. The
timelocal() sub does very confusing things with non-integer seconds because
internally it calls the system's localtime() function. And that localtime()
function may strip off the non-integer portion of the seconds value. This
leads to extremely confusing results because of the math that this module
does on the return value of localtime() internally.
With "use integer" back in effect the results are much more
predictable. Based on a bug report from Dmitriy Shamatrin. GH #18.
OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/request/show/1084392
OBS-URL: https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/devel:languages:perl/perl-Time-Local?expand=0&rev=5