shell bypass 403
package Time::Piece::MySQL;
use strict;
use vars qw($VERSION);
$VERSION = '0.06';
use Time::Piece;
sub import { shift; @_ = ('Time::Piece', @_); goto &Time::Piece::import }
package Time::Piece;
use Time::Seconds;
BEGIN
{
# I don't know what this dst bug is, but the code was here...
my $has_dst_bug =
Time::Piece->strptime( '20000601120000', '%Y %m %d %H %M %S' )->hour != 12;
sub HAS_DST_BUG () { $has_dst_bug }
}
sub mysql_date
{
my $self = shift;
my $old_sep = $self->date_separator('-');
my $ymd = $self->ymd;
$self->date_separator($old_sep);
return $ymd;
}
sub mysql_time
{
my $self = shift;
my $old_sep = $self->time_separator(':');
my $hms = $self->hms;
$self->time_separator($old_sep);
return $hms;
}
sub mysql_datetime
{
my $self = shift;
return join ' ', $self->mysql_date, $self->mysql_time;
}
# '1000-01-01 00:00:00' to '9999-12-31 23:59:59'
sub from_mysql_date {
my ($class, $dt) = @_;
return unless $dt and $dt ge '1970' and $dt lt '2038';
my $time = eval {$class->strptime($dt, '%Y-%m-%d')};
return $time;
}
sub from_mysql_datetime {
my ($class, $dt) = @_;
return unless $dt and $dt ge '1970' and $dt lt '2038';
my $time = eval {$class->strptime($dt, '%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S')};
$time -= ONE_HOUR if HAS_DST_BUG && $time->isdst;
return $time;
}
sub mysql_timestamp {
my $self = shift;
return $self->strftime('%Y%m%d%H%M%S');
}
sub from_mysql_timestamp {
# From MySQL version 4.1, timestamps are returned as datetime strings
my ($class, $timestamp) = @_;
my $length = length $timestamp;
return from_mysql_datetime(@_) if $length == 19;
# most timestamps have 2-digit years, except 8 and 14 char ones
if ( $length != 14 && $length != 8 ) {
$timestamp = (substr($timestamp, 0, 2) < 70 ? "20" : "19")
. $timestamp;
}
# now we need to extend this to 14 chars to make sure we get
# consistent cross-platform results
$timestamp .= substr("19700101000000", length $timestamp);
my $time = eval {$class->strptime( $timestamp, '%Y %m %d %H %M %S')};
return $time;
}
1;
__END__
=head1 NAME
Time::Piece::MySQL - Adds MySQL-specific methods to Time::Piece
=head1 SYNOPSIS
use Time::Piece::MySQL;
my $time = localtime;
print $time->mysql_datetime;
print $time->mysql_date;
print $time->mysql_time;
my $time = Time::Piece->from_mysql_datetime( $mysql_datetime );
my $time = Time::Piece->from_mysql_date( $mysql_date );
my $time = Time::Piece->from_mysql_timestamp( $mysql_timestamp );
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Using this module instead of, or in addition to, C<Time::Piece> adds a
few MySQL-specific date-time methods to C<Time::Piece> objects.
=head1 OBJECT METHODS
=head2 mysql_date / mysql_time / mysql_datetime / mysql_timestamp
Returns the date and/or time in a format suitable for use by MySQL.
=head1 CONSTRUCTORS
=head2 from_mysql_date / from_mysql_datetime / from_mysql_timestamp
Given a date, datetime, or timestamp value as returned from MySQL, these
constructors return a new Time::Piece object. If the value is NULL, they
will retrun undef.
=head2 CAVEAT
C<Time::Piece> itself only works with times in the Unix epoch, this module has
the same limitation. However, MySQL itself handles date and datetime columns
from '1000-01-01' to '9999-12-31'. Feeding in times outside of the Unix epoch
to any of the constructors has unpredictable results.
Also, MySQL doesn't validate dates (because your application should); it only
checks that dates are in the right format. So, your database might include
dates like 2004-00-00 or 2001-02-31. Passing invalid dates to any of the
constructors is a bad idea: on my system the former type (with zeros) returns
undef (previous version used to die) while the latter returns a date in the
following month.
=head1 AUTHOR
Original author: Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>
Current maintainer: Marty Pauley <marty+perl@kasei.com>
=head1 COPYRIGHT
(c) 2002 Dave Rolsky
(c) 2004 Marty Pauley
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as Perl itself.
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<Time::Piece>
=cut