@Stargateur Nope! If a shop is open 09:00 to 17:00 and the TZ changes, the opening hours -- locally -- are still the same, it's the UTC time that changes. Hence, depending on the application, it may be best to store the (local time + location) as the source of truth. From there, you can compute the UTC time. It... doesn't work as well for anything cross-TZ. Then everything's just a mess.
@Stargateur Sure, but that's exactly the problem. If I have an appointment at 09:00 AM Monday morning, it's at 09:00 AM local time, if somehow I get informed that Summer Time doesn't take into effect this year (it's scheduled for tonight, by the way), my appointment will still be at 09:00 AM local time, but it'll change from 07:00 UTC to 08:00 UTC. Local time may be the authoritative time, depending on usecases.
@MatthieuM. AFAIK that false, UTC never change that the principe of UTC, sure your local time could change from UTC+1 to UTC+2 but that doesn't change the UTC that you would register into a database, 13 UTC is always 13 UTC, but localtime could change from UTC+1 to UTC+2
then if your app get configured to go from UTC+1 to UTC+2 than you would just need to use the utc from database and add +2 instead of 1
if you register your time in local time you would have trouble to go from UTC+1 to UTC+2
No, you're wrong. If the appointment is at 09:00 AM Paris time on Monday, then it's (currently) at 07:00 UTC. However, if Summer Time doesn't take effect this week-end, then the appointment is still at 09:00 AM Paris time on Monday, but now at 08:00 UTC.
the only reason I see to register localtime in a database instead of raw UTC would be to "remember" what was the localtime at the moment of you put it in the database
Sure, Paris Time was supposed to be UTC+2 on Monday, and suddenly became UTC+1 because someone decided to cancel DST this year. Sure UTC didn't change.
Doesn't matter, my appointment is at 09:00 AM Paris Time, which used to be 07:00 UTC, and now is 08:00 UTC.
I... made the painful mistake to use UTC for a scheduler in the past, and learned first-hand that there's always someone mucking with timezones somewhere in the world, and that future events scheduled locally are best recorded with local time :)
In my case, it was flight times -- they're always scheduled in local time, even for international flights. Trying to record them in UTC worked pretty well in general, but some countries opt in/out of DST at the last minute, so every year, during Spring and Autumn, we needed to re-adjust a portion of the scheduled events with DB scripts :(