django-datetime-utc provides DateTimeUTCField, a naive datetime model field. In PostgreSQL this translates to the field timestamp without time zone. All timestamps are saved in UTC.
The problem with using Django's DateTimeField is unless the default timezone on your (PostgreSQL) database server is set to UTC it doesn't matter which TZ settings you select in Django, PostgreSQL will save all timestamps in local time with an offset.
- Supports the default
DateTimeFieldoptions such asauto_now_addandauto_now - Saves all timestamps in UTC
- Values automatically converted to local time (specified by
TIME_ZONEin your projectsettings.py) in forms and templates
From PyPi:
pip install django-datetime-utcIn settings.py add datetimeutc to the list of installed apps, set your local time zone and ensure time zone support is enabled:
TIME_ZONE = 'Europe/London'
USE_TZ = True
INSTALLED_APPS = (
#...
'datetimeutc',
)In models.py:
from django.db import models
from datetimeutc.fields import DateTimeUTCField
class Journey(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=100)
departure_time = DateTimeUTCField(null=True)
arrival_time = DateTimeUTCField(null=True)
record_created = DateTimeUTCField(auto_now_add=True)If your code creates datetime objects, they should always be TZ aware so they are automatically converted correctly to UTC (if necessary) before being saved to the database.
Using the Journey model above as an example, to set departure_time correctly you would:
import datetime
from zoneinfo import ZoneInfo
departure_time = datetime.datetime.now(datetime.UTC)
# or user defined (naive) datetime objects
departure_time = user_datetime.replace(tzinfo=ZoneInfo(settings.TIME_ZONE))
Journey.objects.create(name='Flight to LA', departure_time=departure_time)