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[src/netbsd-1-4]: src/share/zoneinfo Pull up revision 1.1.1.9:



details:   https://anonhg.NetBSD.org/src/rev/5b915cda4b89
branches:  netbsd-1-4
changeset: 469297:5b915cda4b89
user:      he <he%NetBSD.org@localhost>
date:      Sat Aug 28 22:38:53 1999 +0000

description:
Pull up revision 1.1.1.9:
  Update to tzdata1999e.  (kleink)

diffstat:

 share/zoneinfo/asia        |  19 ++++++---
 share/zoneinfo/australasia |  82 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++----------
 2 files changed, 76 insertions(+), 25 deletions(-)

diffs (230 lines):

diff -r 413744668165 -r 5b915cda4b89 share/zoneinfo/asia
--- a/share/zoneinfo/asia       Sat Aug 28 22:37:27 1999 +0000
+++ b/share/zoneinfo/asia       Sat Aug 28 22:38:53 1999 +0000
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
 # I found in the UCLA library.
 #
 # A reliable and entertaining source about time zones is
-# Derek Howse, Greenwich time and longitude, Antique Collectors Club (1997).
+# Derek Howse, Greenwich time and longitude, Philip Wilson Publishers (1997).
 #
 # I invented the abbreviations marked `*' in the following table;
 # the rest are from earlier versions of this file, or from other sources.
@@ -648,6 +648,11 @@
 # Since 1938, all Japanese possessions have been like Asia/Tokyo.
 
 # Jordan
+# From Steffen Thorsen (1999-05-08):
+# Jordan do not have DST this year.  It also seems that they are not going
+# to use it the next years either.  "We do not need it" was the answer I got
+# from the Jordan National Information Centre (http://www.nic.gov.jo).
+#
 # Rule NAME    FROM    TO      TYPE    IN      ON      AT      SAVE    LETTER/S
 Rule    Jordan 1973    only    -       Jun     6       0:00    1:00    S
 Rule    Jordan 1973    1975    -       Oct     1       0:00    0       -
@@ -666,9 +671,9 @@
 Rule    Jordan 1991    only    -       Sep     27      0:00    0       -
 Rule    Jordan 1992    only    -       Apr     10      0:00    1:00    S
 Rule    Jordan 1992    1993    -       Oct     Fri>=1  0:00    0       -
-Rule    Jordan 1993    max     -       Apr     Fri>=1  0:00    1:00    S
+Rule    Jordan 1993    1998    -       Apr     Fri>=1  0:00    1:00    S
 Rule    Jordan 1994    only    -       Sep     Fri>=15 0:00    0       -
-Rule    Jordan 1995    max     -       Sep     Fri>=15 0:00s   0       -
+Rule    Jordan 1995    1998    -       Sep     Fri>=15 0:00s   0       -
 # Zone NAME            GMTOFF  RULES   FORMAT  [UNTIL]
 Zone   Asia/Amman      2:23:44 -       LMT     1931
                        2:00    Jordan  EE%sT
@@ -948,7 +953,7 @@
 # no information
 
 # Philippines
-# Howse writes that until 1844 the Philippines kept American date.
+# Howse writes (p 153) that until 1844 the Philippines kept American date.
 # The rest of this data is from Shanks.
 # Rule NAME    FROM    TO      TYPE    IN      ON      AT      SAVE    LETTER/S
 Rule   Phil    1936    only    -       Nov     1       0:00    1:00    S
@@ -992,9 +997,9 @@
 
 # Sri Lanka
 # From Paul Eggert (1996-09-03):
-# <a href="http://www.virtual-pc.com/lankaweb/news/items/240596-2.html";>
-# Sri Lanka advances clock by an hour to avoid blackout (1996-05-24)
-# </a>
+# "Sri Lanka advances clock by an hour to avoid blackout"
+# (www.virtual-pc.com/lankaweb/news/items/240596-2.html, 1996-05-24,
+# no longer available as of 1999-08-17)
 # reported ``the country's standard time will be put forward by one hour at
 # midnight Friday (1830 GMT) `in the light of the present power crisis'.''
 # Transitions before 1996 are from Shanks (1995).
diff -r 413744668165 -r 5b915cda4b89 share/zoneinfo/australasia
--- a/share/zoneinfo/australasia        Sat Aug 28 22:37:27 1999 +0000
+++ b/share/zoneinfo/australasia        Sat Aug 28 22:38:53 1999 +0000
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-# @(#)australasia      7.46
+# @(#)australasia      7.48
 # This file also includes Pacific islands.
 
 # Notes are at the end of this file
@@ -68,13 +68,15 @@
 # Rule NAME    FROM    TO      TYPE    IN      ON      AT      SAVE    LETTER/S
 Rule   AS      1971    1985    -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 Rule   AS      1986    only    -       Oct     19      2:00s   1:00    -
-Rule   AS      1987    max     -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
+Rule   AS      1987    1999    -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 Rule   AS      1972    only    -       Feb     27      2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AS      1973    1985    -       Mar     Sun>=1  2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AS      1986    1989    -       Mar     Sun>=15 2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AS      1990    1994    even    Mar     Sun>=18 2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AS      1990    1994    odd     Mar     Sun>=1  2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AS      1995    max     -       Mar     lastSun 2:00s   0       -
+Rule   AS      2000    only    -       Aug     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
+Rule   AS      2001    max     -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 # Zone NAME            GMTOFF  RULES   FORMAT  [UNTIL]
 Zone Australia/Adelaide        9:14:20 -       LMT     1895 Feb
                        9:00    -       CST     1899 May
@@ -113,7 +115,7 @@
 Rule   AV      1987    1999    -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 Rule   AV      1991    1994    -       Mar     Sun>=1  2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AV      1995    max     -       Mar     lastSun 2:00s   0       -
-Rule   AV      2000    only    -       Aug     26      2:00s   1:00    -
+Rule   AV      2000    only    -       Aug     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 Rule   AV      2001    max     -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 # Zone NAME            GMTOFF  RULES   FORMAT  [UNTIL]
 Zone Australia/Melbourne 9:39:52 -     LMT     1895 Feb
@@ -133,7 +135,7 @@
 Rule   AN      1987    1999    -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 Rule   AN      1990    1995    -       Mar     Sun>=1  2:00s   0       -
 Rule   AN      1996    max     -       Mar     lastSun 2:00s   0       -
-Rule   AN      2000    only    -       Aug     26      2:00s   1:00    -
+Rule   AN      2000    only    -       Aug     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 Rule   AN      2001    max     -       Oct     lastSun 2:00s   1:00    -
 # Zone NAME            GMTOFF  RULES   FORMAT  [UNTIL]
 Zone Australia/Sydney  10:04:52 -      LMT     1895 Feb
@@ -388,7 +390,7 @@
 # Tonga
 # Zone NAME            GMTOFF  RULES   FORMAT  [UNTIL]
 Zone Pacific/Tongatapu 12:19:20 -      LMT     1901
-                       12:20   -       TOT     1968 Oct # Tonga Time
+                       12:20   -       TOT     1941 # Tonga Time
                        13:00   -       TOT
 
 # Tuvalu
@@ -473,7 +475,7 @@
 # I found in the UCLA library.
 #
 # A reliable and entertaining source about time zones is
-# Derek Howse, Greenwich time and longitude, Antique Collectors Club (1997).
+# Derek Howse, Greenwich time and longitude, Philip Wilson Publishers (1997).
 #
 # I invented the abbreviations marked `*' in the following table;
 # the rest are from earlier versions of this file, or from other sources.
@@ -541,7 +543,7 @@
 # Standard Time Act 1987 (updated 1995-04-04)
 # </a>
 # ACT
-# <a href="http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/act/consol_act/consol_act/stasta1972279/index.html";>
+# <a href="http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/act/consol_act/stasta1972279/index.html";>
 # Standard Time and Summer Time Act 1972
 # </a>
 # SA
@@ -806,15 +808,23 @@
 # Prem Bob Carr announced NSW will fall into line with other E states
 # and SA and continue daylight savings to the last Sun in Mar.
 
-# From Eric Ulevik <eau%ozemail.com.au@localhost> (1997-06-12):
-# The NSW state government in Australia is talking about bringing the start
-# of daylight savings time forward in the year 2000 to cater for the Olympics.
-# This is going to take some time to be negotiated, because the plan is to do
-# this in multiple states due to soccer games (which are not just in Sydney).
+# From Eric Ulevik <eau%ozemail.com.au@localhost> (1999-05-26):
+# DST will start in NSW on the last Sunday of August, rather than the usual
+# October in 2000.  Victoria and South Australia are expected to adopt this
+# change, Queensland is unlikely.  [See: Matthew Moore,
+# <a href="http://www.smh.com.au/news/9905/26/pageone/pageone4.html";>
+# Two months more daylight saving
+# </a>
+# Sydney Morning Herald (1999-05-26).]
+
+# Also see the following official NSW source:
+# <a href="http://dir.gis.nsw.gov.au/cgi-bin/genobject/document/other/daylightsaving/tigGmZ";>
+# Daylight Saving in New South Wales.
+# </a>
 
 # IATA SSIM (1998-09) says that the spring 2000 change for Australian
 # Capital Territory, New South Wales except Lord Howe Island and Broken
-# Hill, and Victoria will be August 26, presumably due to the Sydney Olympics.
+# Hill, and Victoria will be August 27, presumably due to the Sydney Olympics.
 
 # Yancowinna
 
@@ -897,9 +907,9 @@
 
 # Fiji
 
-# Howse writes that in 1879 the British governor of Fiji
-# enacted an ordinance standardizing the islands on +12:00.
-# Perhaps it didn't take.  We go with Shanks's more precise date in 1915.
+# Howse writes (p 153) that in 1879 the British governor of Fiji
+# enacted an ordinance standardizing the islands on Antipodean Time
+# instead of the American system (which was one day behind).
 
 # From Rives McDow (1998-10-08):
 # Fiji will introduce DST effective 0200 local time, 1998-11-01
@@ -934,7 +944,7 @@
 
 # N Mariana Is, Guam
 
-# Howse writes ``The Spaniards, on the other hand, reached the
+# Howse writes (p 153) ``The Spaniards, on the other hand, reached the
 # Philippines and the Ladrones from America,'' and implies that the Ladrones
 # (now called the Marianas) kept American date for quite some time.
 # Ignore this for now, as we have no hard data.  See also Asia/Manila.
@@ -950,7 +960,8 @@
 
 # Samoa
 
-# Howse writes that in 1879 the King of Samoa decided to change
+# Howse writes (p 153, citing p 10 of the 1883-11-18 New York Herald)
+# that in 1879 the King of Samoa decided to change
 # ``the date in his kingdom from the Antipodean to the American system,
 # ordaining -- by a masterpiece of diplomatic flattery -- that
 # the Fourth of July should be celebrated twice in that year.''
@@ -961,3 +972,38 @@
 # Today's _Wall Street Journal_ (p 1) reports that ``Tonga has been plotting
 # to sneak ahead of [New Zealanders] by introducing daylight-saving time.''
 # Since Kiribati has moved the Date Line it's not clear what Tonga will do.
+
+# Don Mundell writes in the 1997-02-20 Tonga Chronicle
+# <a href="http://www.tongatapu.net.to/tonga/homeland/timebegins.htm";>
+# How Tonga became `The Land where Time Begins'
+# </a>:
+
+# Until 1941 Tonga maintained a standard time 50 minutes ahead of NZST
+# 12 hours and 20 minutes ahead of GMT.  When New Zealand adjusted its
+# standard time in 1940s, Tonga had the choice of subtracting from its
+# local time to come on the same standard time as New Zealand or of
+# advancing its time to maintain the differential of 13 degrees
+# (approximately 50 minutes ahead of New Zealand time).
+#
+# Because His Majesty King Taufa'ahau Tupou IV, then Crown Prince
+# Tungi, preferred to ensure Tonga's title as the land where time
+# begins, the Legislative Assembly approved the latter change.
+#
+# But some of the older, more conservative members from the outer
+# islands objected. "If at midnight on Dec. 31, we move ahead 40
+# minutes, as your Royal Highness wishes, what becomes of th 40
+# minutes we have lost?"
+#
+# The Crown Prince, presented an unanswerable argument: "Remember that
+# on the World Day of Prayer, you would be the first people on Earth
+# to say your prayers in the morning."
+
+# From Paul Eggert (1999-08-12):
+# Shanks says the transition was on 1968-10-01; go with Mundell.
+
+# From Eric Ulevik (1999-05-03):
+# Tonga's director of tourism, who is also secretary of the National Millenium
+# Committee, has a plan to get Tonga back in front.
+# He has proposed a one-off move to tropical daylight saving for Tonga from
+# October to March, which has won approval in principle from the Tongan
+# Government.



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