zoneinfo
â IANA time zone support¶
Added in version 3.9.
Source code: Lib/zoneinfo
The zoneinfo
module provides a concrete time zone implementation to support the IANA time zone database as originally specified in PEP 615. By default, zoneinfo
uses the systemâs time zone data if available; if no system time zone data is available, the library will fall back to using the first-party tzdata package available on PyPI.
See also
datetime
Provides the time
and datetime
types with which the ZoneInfo
class is designed to be used.
First-party package maintained by the CPython core developers to supply time zone data via PyPI.
ZoneInfo
¶
ZoneInfo
is a concrete implementation of the datetime.tzinfo
abstract base class, and is intended to be attached to tzinfo
, either via the constructor, the datetime.replace
method or datetime.astimezone
:
>>> from zoneinfo import ZoneInfo >>> from datetime import datetime, timedelta >>> dt = datetime(2020, 10, 31, 12, tzinfo=ZoneInfo("America/Los_Angeles")) >>> print(dt) 2020-10-31 12:00:00-07:00 >>> dt.tzname() 'PDT'
Datetimes constructed in this way are compatible with datetime arithmetic and handle daylight saving time transitions with no further intervention:
>>> dt_add = dt + timedelta(days=1) >>> print(dt_add) 2020-11-01 12:00:00-08:00 >>> dt_add.tzname() 'PST'
These time zones also support the fold
attribute introduced in PEP 495. During offset transitions which induce ambiguous times (such as a daylight saving time to standard time transition), the offset from before the transition is used when fold=0
, and the offset after the transition is used when fold=1
, for example:
>>> dt = datetime(2020, 11, 1, 1, tzinfo=ZoneInfo("America/Los_Angeles")) >>> print(dt) 2020-11-01 01:00:00-07:00 >>> print(dt.replace(fold=1)) 2020-11-01 01:00:00-08:00
When converting from another time zone, the fold will be set to the correct value:
>>> from datetime import timezone >>> LOS_ANGELES = ZoneInfo("America/Los_Angeles") >>> dt_utc = datetime(2020, 11, 1, 8, tzinfo=timezone.utc) >>> # Before the PDT -> PST transition >>> print(dt_utc.astimezone(LOS_ANGELES)) 2020-11-01 01:00:00-07:00 >>> # After the PDT -> PST transition >>> print((dt_utc + timedelta(hours=1)).astimezone(LOS_ANGELES)) 2020-11-01 01:00:00-08:00Data sources¶
The zoneinfo
module does not directly provide time zone data, and instead pulls time zone information from the system time zone database or the first-party PyPI package tzdata, if available. Some systems, including notably Windows systems, do not have an IANA database available, and so for projects targeting cross-platform compatibility that require time zone data, it is recommended to declare a dependency on tzdata. If neither system data nor tzdata are available, all calls to ZoneInfo
will raise ZoneInfoNotFoundError
.
When ZoneInfo(key)
is called, the constructor first searches the directories specified in TZPATH
for a file matching key
, and on failure looks for a match in the tzdata package. This behavior can be configured in three ways:
The default TZPATH
when not otherwise specified can be configured at compile time.
TZPATH
can be configured using an environment variable.
At runtime, the search path can be manipulated using the reset_tzpath()
function.
The default TZPATH
includes several common deployment locations for the time zone database (except on Windows, where there are no âwell-knownâ locations for time zone data). On POSIX systems, downstream distributors and those building Python from source who know where their system time zone data is deployed may change the default time zone path by specifying the compile-time option TZPATH
(or, more likely, the configure flag --with-tzpath
), which should be a string delimited by os.pathsep
.
On all platforms, the configured value is available as the TZPATH
key in sysconfig.get_config_var()
.
When initializing TZPATH
(either at import time or whenever reset_tzpath()
is called with no arguments), the zoneinfo
module will use the environment variable PYTHONTZPATH
, if it exists, to set the search path.
This is an os.pathsep
-separated string containing the time zone search path to use. It must consist of only absolute rather than relative paths. Relative components specified in PYTHONTZPATH
will not be used, but otherwise the behavior when a relative path is specified is implementation-defined; CPython will raise InvalidTZPathWarning
, but other implementations are free to silently ignore the erroneous component or raise an exception.
To set the system to ignore the system data and use the tzdata package instead, set PYTHONTZPATH=""
.
The TZ search path can also be configured at runtime using the reset_tzpath()
function. This is generally not an advisable operation, though it is reasonable to use it in test functions that require the use of a specific time zone path (or require disabling access to the system time zones).
ZoneInfo
class¶
A concrete datetime.tzinfo
subclass that represents an IANA time zone specified by the string key
. Calls to the primary constructor will always return objects that compare identically; put another way, barring cache invalidation via ZoneInfo.clear_cache()
, for all values of key
, the following assertion will always be true:
a = ZoneInfo(key) b = ZoneInfo(key) assert a is b
key
must be in the form of a relative, normalized POSIX path, with no up-level references. The constructor will raise ValueError
if a non-conforming key is passed.
If no file matching key
is found, the constructor will raise ZoneInfoNotFoundError
.
The ZoneInfo
class has two alternate constructors:
Constructs a ZoneInfo
object from a file-like object returning bytes (e.g. a file opened in binary mode or an io.BytesIO
object). Unlike the primary constructor, this always constructs a new object.
The key
parameter sets the name of the zone for the purposes of __str__()
and __repr__()
.
Objects created via this constructor cannot be pickled (see pickling).
An alternate constructor that bypasses the constructorâs cache. It is identical to the primary constructor, but returns a new object on each call. This is most likely to be useful for testing or demonstration purposes, but it can also be used to create a system with a different cache invalidation strategy.
Objects created via this constructor will also bypass the cache of a deserializing process when unpickled.
Caution
Using this constructor may change the semantics of your datetimes in surprising ways, only use it if you know that you need to.
The following class methods are also available:
A method for invalidating the cache on the ZoneInfo
class. If no arguments are passed, all caches are invalidated and the next call to the primary constructor for each key will return a new instance.
If an iterable of key names is passed to the only_keys
parameter, only the specified keys will be removed from the cache. Keys passed to only_keys
but not found in the cache are ignored.
Warning
Invoking this function may change the semantics of datetimes using ZoneInfo
in surprising ways; this modifies module state and thus may have wide-ranging effects. Only use it if you know that you need to.
The class has one attribute:
This is a read-only attribute that returns the value of key
passed to the constructor, which should be a lookup key in the IANA time zone database (e.g. America/New_York
, Europe/Paris
or Asia/Tokyo
).
For zones constructed from file without specifying a key
parameter, this will be set to None
.
Note
Although it is a somewhat common practice to expose these to end users, these values are designed to be primary keys for representing the relevant zones and not necessarily user-facing elements. Projects like CLDR (the Unicode Common Locale Data Repository) can be used to get more user-friendly strings from these keys.
The string representation returned when calling str
on a ZoneInfo
object defaults to using the ZoneInfo.key
attribute (see the note on usage in the attribute documentation):
>>> zone = ZoneInfo("Pacific/Kwajalein") >>> str(zone) 'Pacific/Kwajalein' >>> dt = datetime(2020, 4, 1, 3, 15, tzinfo=zone) >>> f"{dt.isoformat()} [{dt.tzinfo}]" '2020-04-01T03:15:00+12:00 [Pacific/Kwajalein]'
For objects constructed from a file without specifying a key
parameter, str
falls back to calling repr()
. ZoneInfo
âs repr
is implementation-defined and not necessarily stable between versions, but it is guaranteed not to be a valid ZoneInfo
key.
Rather than serializing all transition data, ZoneInfo
objects are serialized by key, and ZoneInfo
objects constructed from files (even those with a value for key
specified) cannot be pickled.
The behavior of a ZoneInfo
file depends on how it was constructed:
ZoneInfo(key)
: When constructed with the primary constructor, a ZoneInfo
object is serialized by key, and when deserialized, the deserializing process uses the primary and thus it is expected that these are expected to be the same object as other references to the same time zone. For example, if europe_berlin_pkl
is a string containing a pickle constructed from ZoneInfo("Europe/Berlin")
, one would expect the following behavior:
>>> a = ZoneInfo("Europe/Berlin") >>> b = pickle.loads(europe_berlin_pkl) >>> a is b True
ZoneInfo.no_cache(key)
: When constructed from the cache-bypassing constructor, the ZoneInfo
object is also serialized by key, but when deserialized, the deserializing process uses the cache bypassing constructor. If europe_berlin_pkl_nc
is a string containing a pickle constructed from ZoneInfo.no_cache("Europe/Berlin")
, one would expect the following behavior:
>>> a = ZoneInfo("Europe/Berlin") >>> b = pickle.loads(europe_berlin_pkl_nc) >>> a is b False
ZoneInfo.from_file(fobj, /, key=None)
: When constructed from a file, the ZoneInfo
object raises an exception on pickling. If an end user wants to pickle a ZoneInfo
constructed from a file, it is recommended that they use a wrapper type or a custom serialization function: either serializing by key or storing the contents of the file object and serializing that.
This method of serialization requires that the time zone data for the required key be available on both the serializing and deserializing side, similar to the way that references to classes and functions are expected to exist in both the serializing and deserializing environments. It also means that no guarantees are made about the consistency of results when unpickling a ZoneInfo
pickled in an environment with a different version of the time zone data.
Get a set containing all the valid keys for IANA time zones available anywhere on the time zone path. This is recalculated on every call to the function.
This function only includes canonical zone names and does not include âspecialâ zones such as those under the posix/
and right/
directories, or the posixrules
zone.
Caution
This function may open a large number of files, as the best way to determine if a file on the time zone path is a valid time zone is to read the âmagic stringâ at the beginning.
Note
These values are not designed to be exposed to end-users; for user facing elements, applications should use something like CLDR (the Unicode Common Locale Data Repository) to get more user-friendly strings. See also the cautionary note on ZoneInfo.key
.
Sets or resets the time zone search path (TZPATH
) for the module. When called with no arguments, TZPATH
is set to the default value.
Calling reset_tzpath
will not invalidate the ZoneInfo
cache, and so calls to the primary ZoneInfo
constructor will only use the new TZPATH
in the case of a cache miss.
The to
parameter must be a sequence of strings or os.PathLike
and not a string, all of which must be absolute paths. ValueError
will be raised if something other than an absolute path is passed.
A read-only sequence representing the time zone search path â when constructing a ZoneInfo
from a key, the key is joined to each entry in the TZPATH
, and the first file found is used.
TZPATH
may contain only absolute paths, never relative paths, regardless of how it is configured.
The object that zoneinfo.TZPATH
points to may change in response to a call to reset_tzpath()
, so it is recommended to use zoneinfo.TZPATH
rather than importing TZPATH
from zoneinfo
or assigning a long-lived variable to zoneinfo.TZPATH
.
For more information on configuring the time zone search path, see Configuring the data sources.
Raised when construction of a ZoneInfo
object fails because the specified key could not be found on the system. This is a subclass of KeyError
.
Raised when PYTHONTZPATH
contains an invalid component that will be filtered out, such as a relative path.
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