Renuka Are your clients all in the same time zone? Solr should support clients in several timezones, and UTC conversion to local is best done in the client in my mind. Thanks -- Rick
On November 16, 2017 6:54:47 AM EST, Renuka Srishti <renuka.srisht...@gmail.com> wrote: >Thanks for your response Shawn. I know it deals with UTC only, but it >will >be great if we can change the date timeZone in solr response. As I am >using >Solr CSV feature and it will be helpful if the date field in the CSV >result >can convert into client TimeZone. Please suggest if you have any >alternate >for this. > >Thanks >Renuka Srishti > >On Wed, Nov 15, 2017 at 6:16 PM, Shawn Heisey <apa...@elyograg.org> >wrote: > >> On 11/15/2017 5:34 AM, Renuka Srishti wrote: >> >>> I am working on CSV export using Apache Solr. I have written all the >>> required query and set wt as CSV. I am getting my results as I >want,but >>> the >>> problem is TimeZone. >>> >>> Solr stores date value in UTC, but my client timeZone is different. >Is >>> there any way to convert date timeZone from UTC to clientTimeZone >direclty >>> in the Solr response? >>> >> >> Not that I know of. UTC is the only storage/transfer method that >works in >> all situations. Converting dates to the local timezone is a task for >the >> client, when it displays the date to a user. >> >> Typically, you would consume the response from Solr into object types >for >> the language your application is written in. A date value in the >response >> should end up in a date object. Date objects in most programming >languages >> have the ability to display in specific timezones. >> >> Thanks, >> Shawn >> >> -- Sorry for being brief. Alternate email is rickleir at yahoo dot com