DateTime::TimeZone::Local (3)
Leading comments
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NAME
DateTime::TimeZone::Local - Determine the local system's time zoneVERSION
version 1.95SYNOPSIS
my $tz = DateTime::TimeZone->new( name => 'local' ); my $tz = DateTime::TimeZone::Local->TimeZone();
DESCRIPTION
This module provides an interface for determining the local system's time zone. Most of the functionality for doing this is in OS-specific subclasses.USAGE
This class provides the following methods:DateTime::TimeZone::Local->TimeZone()
This attempts to load an appropriate subclass and asks it to find the local time zone. This method is called by when you pass ``local'' as the time zone name to "DateTime:TimeZone->new()".If your
OS
is not explicitly handled, you can create a module with a
name of the form "DateTime::TimeZone::Local::$^O". If it exists, it
will be used instead of falling back to the Unix subclass.
If no OS-specific module exists, we fall back to using the Unix subclass.
See DateTime::TimeZone::Local::Unix, DateTime::TimeZone::Local::Win32, and DateTime::TimeZone::Local::VMS for OS-specific details.
SUBCLASSING
If you want to make a new OS-specific subclass, there are several methods provided by this module you should know about.$class->Methods()
This method should be provided by your class. It should provide a list of methods that will be called to try to determine the local time zone.Each of these methods is expected to return a new "DateTime::TimeZone" object if it determines the time zone.
$class->FromEnv()
This method tries to find a valid time zone in an %ENV value. It calls "$class->EnvVars()" to determine which keys to look at.To use this from a subclass, simply return ``FromEnv'' as one of the items from "$class->Methods()".
$class->EnvVars()
This method should be provided by your subclass. It should return a list of env vars to be checked by "$class->FromEnv()".$class->_IsValidName($name)
Given a possible time zone name, this returns a boolean indicating whether or not the name looks valid. It always return false for ``local'' in order to avoid infinite loops.EXAMPLE SUBCLASS
Here is a simple example subclass:
package DateTime::TimeZone::SomeOS; use strict; use warnings; use base 'DateTime::TimeZone::Local'; sub Methods { qw( FromEnv FromEther ) } sub EnvVars { qw( TZ ZONE ) } sub FromEther { my $class = shift; ... }
AUTHOR
Dave Rolsky <autarch@urth.org>COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Dave Rolsky.This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.