Handling Server and User Time Zones"

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A runnable time and date sample is available [https://github.com/zkoss/zkbooks/tree/master/developersreference in github]. [https://github.com/zkoss/zkbooks/blob/master/developersreference/developersreference/src/main/java/org/zkoss/reference/developer/internationalization/DateboxTimezoneComposer.java Main composer class] and [https://github.com/zkoss/zkbooks/blob/master/developersreference/developersreference/src/main/webapp/internationalization/datebox-timezone.zul display zul page].
 
A runnable time and date sample is available [https://github.com/zkoss/zkbooks/tree/master/developersreference in github]. [https://github.com/zkoss/zkbooks/blob/master/developersreference/developersreference/src/main/java/org/zkoss/reference/developer/internationalization/DateboxTimezoneComposer.java Main composer class] and [https://github.com/zkoss/zkbooks/blob/master/developersreference/developersreference/src/main/webapp/internationalization/datebox-timezone.zul display zul page].
  
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Revision as of 07:34, 8 July 2022


Handling Server and User Time Zones


Overview

Time is a complicated concept in a web application that serves users across multiple time zones, and especially serves users in a different time zone than the server itself.

Time and frame of reference

One important point to define when referring to a position in time is "to which point of reference is this time relative?".

In a face-to-face conversation, you could say "I'll see you tomorrow at 10 o'clock in the morning". Since you are both in the same time zone, the assumption would be that you are referring to time relative to your local time zone.

However, if you are calling a person a few time zones away from you, you would need to make the distinction clear. "I'll call you tomorrow at 10 o'clock my time", "I'll call you at 10 o'clock your time" or even I'll call you at 10 o'clock GMT+0" are usable sentences since they point to a frame of reference for time.

Decision of ZK server time zone

A ZK application can have multiple time zones, depending on the server configuration and the user's computer configuration.

The Server time zone is defined using the Decision Sequence of Time Zone shown in the Internationalization/Time Zone documentation page.

In the absence of configuration on ZK's server-side, the server will receive its time zone from JVM. The JVM time zone itself may be configured in multiple ways. For example, the server may be started with a Java command-line argument: -Duser.timezone="Asia/Taipei"

Use of server's time zone

When a client-side date or time value is sent to the ZK server, it is sent as a "moment in global time", which is then automatically converted to the server's local time zone. For example, if a user selected Jan 1st 2022, with a time of 08:00 at GMT+4, the server will receive the matching point in time in its own time zone. If the server is on GMT+0 time zone, for example, it will receive Jan 1st 2022, with a time of 04:00 at GMT+0

Universal time conversion.png

In this case, the displayed times of "GMT+0 00:00", "GMT+4 04:00" and "GMT+8 08:00" all represent the same point in time. They all convert to the same "GMT+0 00:00".

This is necessary if multiple users located in multiple time zones are interacting on the same timeline. For a chat tool, you need to display the time of each message relative to their position on the global shared timeline. Even if that value is converted back to a localized time in the user time zone for display, these timestamps should exist in the same frame of reference from the server's point of view.

Use of client's time zone

Conversely, you may need to use a ZK component that provides a Date and time selection to retrieve a point in time in the user's own local time zone. This could be done to fill a date on a form or to prefill a time limit in a report. In these cases, the important information is the date and time expressed relative to the end-user.

Default time of the day selection in ZK Datebox

The Datebox has the ability to provide date selection with or without time-of-day.

Depending on how the Datebox is set up, it can cater to a number of use cases.

This table shows which position in time-of-day (Hours, minutes, seconds) will be sent to the server as part of the Date selection.

//does not contain time information
userInputDatebox.setFormat("yyyy-MM-dd");
//contains time information
userInputDatebox.setFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss");

//time information was set by server as the time of day and timezone of the date object passed to the component
java.util.Date existingDateObject = ...;
userInputDatebox.setValue(existingDateObject);

//time information was not set by the server
userInputDatebox.setValue(null); //default if nothing else was set as value.

These choices combine as follow:

Date set on component by the server Datebox empty before user selection
Format contains time Send a date at the selected time of day in the user's time zone, on the selected day Send a date at the current time of day in the user's time zone on the selected day
Format doesn't contains time Send a date at the time of day of the server's initial date, on the selected day Send a date at midnight in the user's time zone on the selected day

Common issue with client time

Based on the table in the previous section, some Date parsing issues may occur if the Datebox was empty before the user's selection. Since an empty Datebox will send back a point in time at midnight in the user's time zone if the user's time zone and the server's time zone are different, the resulting moment in time at the server may be a match "in universal time", but on another day than the selection done "in the user's time zone" due to time zone differences.

A user in GMT-8 may have selected "GMT-8 January 31st at 23:00". If the server time zone is set to GMT+0, the date will be converted to the identical point in time in GMT+0, which is "GMT+0 February 1st at 07:00". If you are using this time to extract a "day of the week", you will retrieve the value a day late.

Inversely, if a user on GMT+8 selects "GMT+8 February 1st at 00:00", the server on GMT+0 will resolve this point in time to "GMT+0 January 31st at 16:00" If you are using this time to extra a "day of the week", you will retrieve a value a day early.

Solutions for client time

There are two ways to resolve the difference between client time zone and server time zone.

Converting server time to client time

Sometimes, it is necessary to display a moment in time to the user. This can be done by showing the full Date and Time information, including the time zone, or by converting the moment in time into a "local display string" matching the user's locale and time zone information.

ZK itself doesn't perform time calculations. As a Java framework, ZK will delegate the task of manipulating time to the relevant Java APIs.

ZK can retrieve the client's locale and time zone information from the clientInfoEvent.

A common option is to use Java DateFormat to parse and display time in a locale-sensitive manner. For most use cases, SimpleDateFormat is a good option to transform a date object formatted as server time into the user's own time zone.

SimpleDateFormat userSimpleDateFormat = new SimpleDateFormat("yyyy-MM-dd HH:mm:ss"); //creates a SimpleDateFormat formatter
userSimpleDateFormat.setTimeZone(TimeZone.getTimeZone(clientZoneId)); //Select the time zone in which the Date object should be displayed
String formattedTimeInUserTimezone = userSimpleDateFormat.format(userInputDatebox.getValue()); //retrieve and parse a Date object

The resulting string is a representation of the User selected point in time, converted to server Date, and expressed back into the user's own time zone.

Retrieving a LocalDateTime object from user input

Since 9.0.0

Starting in ZK 9, ZK Components extendingDateTimeFormatInputElement (Datebox, Timebox and Timepicker) provide the option to retrieve the user input value as:

Important note: These values should not be considered reliable options to compare two points in time. Of these 4 options, only ZonedDateTime can be semi-reliably converted to a point in time in the server's frame of reference for time. Even so, it would still be possible for errors to happen due to changes in time zone settings, DST, historical changes in time, etc.

These are colloquial expressions of a time in relation to the user's own time exclusively.

They are a convenient way to retrieve a date expressed relative to the user. Any operation that requires date and time conversion should use the previous option and convert server time to client time instead.

Runnable samples

A runnable time and date sample is available in github. Main composer class and display zul page.




Last Update : 2022/07/08

Copyright © Potix Corporation. This article is licensed under GNU Free Documentation License.