I have a spring/jdbc/oracle 10g application. The Oracle server database timezone is set to GMT + 2 JVM timezone is GMT + 2 (even though it doesn't matter in my case).
I have a stored procedure that performs some date operations. The problem is that session timezone is different(GMT) than database timezone even though I do not set session timezone explicit in my code/configuration.
As far as I know the s开发者_如何学Goession timezone is by default equal to database timezone. Any idea why is the session timezone different than database timezone or how can I configure it in spring configuration (org.apache.commons.dbcp.BasicDataSource) ?
Thank you.
The correct way is to use DelegatingDataSource
, retrieve OracleConnection
object from the original data source and call OracleConnection.setSessionTimeZone()
with the appropriate parameter.
C3P0 code looks like:
private Object[] timeZoneArgs = new Object[] { "Europe/Berlin" };
@Override
public Connection getConnection() throws SQLException {
Connection conn = super.getConnection();
try {
final Method setSessionTimeZoneMethod = OracleConnection.class.getMethod("setSessionTimeZone", String.class);
final C3P0ProxyConnection castCon = (C3P0ProxyConnection) conn;
castCon.rawConnectionOperation(setSessionTimeZoneMethod, C3P0ProxyConnection.RAW_CONNECTION, timeZoneArgs);
return conn;
} catch (Exception e) {
log.error("setSessionTimeZone failed " + e.getMessage());
return conn;
}
}
I solved this problem by upgrading Oracle's JDBC drivers from v10.2.0.1.0 to v11.2.0.3. No changes to my java code were required.
Source: Spring forums.
In spring configuration, add below VM options before running the application:
-Duser.timezone=EDT
Also make sure your pom has latest jdbc driver
<dependency>
<groupId>com.oracle</groupId>
<artifactId>ojdbc8</artifactId>
<version>12.2.0.1</version>
</dependency>
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