Temporal values are stored in
        TIMESTAMP columns as UTC values,
        and values inserted into and retrieved from
        TIMESTAMP columns are converted
        between the session time zone and UTC. (This is the same type of
        conversion performed by the
        CONVERT_TZ() function. If the
        session time zone is UTC, there is effectively no time zone
        conversion.)
      
Due to conventions for local time zone changes such as Daylight Saving Time (DST), conversions between UTC and non-UTC time zones are not one-to-one in both directions. UTC values that are distinct may not be distinct in another time zone. The following example shows distinct UTC values that become identical in a non-UTC time zone:
mysql> CREATE TABLE tstable (ts TIMESTAMP);
mysql> SET time_zone = 'UTC'; -- insert UTC values
mysql> INSERT INTO tstable VALUES
       ('2018-10-28 00:30:00'),
       ('2018-10-28 01:30:00');
mysql> SELECT ts FROM tstable;
+---------------------+
| ts                  |
+---------------------+
| 2018-10-28 00:30:00 |
| 2018-10-28 01:30:00 |
+---------------------+
mysql> SET time_zone = 'MET'; -- retrieve non-UTC values
mysql> SELECT ts FROM tstable;
+---------------------+
| ts                  |
+---------------------+
| 2018-10-28 02:30:00 |
| 2018-10-28 02:30:00 |
+---------------------+
          To use named time zones such as 'MET' or
          'Europe/Amsterdam', the time zone tables
          must be properly set up. For instructions, see
          Section 7.1.15, “MySQL Server Time Zone Support”.
        You can see that the two distinct UTC values are the same when
        converted to the 'MET' time zone. This
        phenomenon can lead to different results for a given
        TIMESTAMP column query, depending
        on whether the optimizer uses an index to execute the query.
      
        Suppose that a query selects values from the table shown earlier
        using a WHERE clause to search the
        ts column for a single specific value such as
        a user-provided timestamp literal:
      
SELECT ts FROM tstable
WHERE ts = 'literal';Suppose further that the query executes under these conditions:
- The session time zone is not UTC and has a DST shift. For example: - SET time_zone = 'MET';
- Unique UTC values stored in the - TIMESTAMPcolumn are not unique in the session time zone due to DST shifts. (The example shown earlier illustrates how this can occur.)
- The query specifies a search value that is within the hour of entry into DST in the session time zone. 
        Under those conditions, the comparison in the
        WHERE clause occurs in different ways for
        nonindexed and indexed lookups and leads to different results:
- If there is no index or the optimizer cannot use it, comparisons occur in the session time zone. The optimizer performs a table scan in which it retrieves each - tscolumn value, converts it from UTC to the session time zone, and compares it to the search value (also interpreted in the session time zone):- mysql> SELECT ts FROM tstable WHERE ts = '2018-10-28 02:30:00'; +---------------------+ | ts | +---------------------+ | 2018-10-28 02:30:00 | | 2018-10-28 02:30:00 | +---------------------+- Because the stored - tsvalues are converted to the session time zone, it is possible for the query to return two timestamp values that are distinct as UTC values but equal in the session time zone: One value that occurs before the DST shift when clocks are changed, and one value that was occurs after the DST shift.
- If there is a usable index, comparisons occur in UTC. The optimizer performs an index scan, first converting the search value from the session time zone to UTC, then comparing the result to the UTC index entries: - mysql> ALTER TABLE tstable ADD INDEX (ts); mysql> SELECT ts FROM tstable WHERE ts = '2018-10-28 02:30:00'; +---------------------+ | ts | +---------------------+ | 2018-10-28 02:30:00 | +---------------------+- In this case, the (converted) search value is matched only to index entries, and because the index entries for the distinct stored UTC values are also distinct, the search value can match only one of them. 
Due to different optimizer operation for nonindexed and indexed lookups, the query produces different results in each case. The result from the nonindexed lookup returns all values that match in the session time zone. The indexed lookup cannot do so:
- It is performed within the storage engine, which knows only about UTC values. 
- For the two distinct session time zone values that map to the same UTC value, the indexed lookup matches only the corresponding UTC index entry and returns only a single row. 
        In the preceding discussion, the data set stored in
        tstable happens to consist of distinct UTC
        values. In such cases, all index-using queries of the form shown
        match at most one index entry.
      
        If the index is not UNIQUE, it is possible
        for the table (and the index) to store multiple instances of a
        given UTC value. For example, the ts column
        might contain multiple instances of the UTC value
        '2018-10-28 00:30:00'. In this case, the
        index-using query would return each of them (converted to the
        MET value '2018-10-28 02:30:00' in the result
        set). It remains true that index-using queries match the
        converted search value to a single value in the UTC index
        entries, rather than matching multiple UTC values that convert
        to the search value in the session time zone.
      
        If it is important to return all ts values
        that match in the session time zone, the workaround is to
        suppress use of the index with an IGNORE
        INDEX hint:
      
mysql> SELECT ts FROM tstable
       IGNORE INDEX (ts)
       WHERE ts = '2018-10-28 02:30:00';
+---------------------+
| ts                  |
+---------------------+
| 2018-10-28 02:30:00 |
| 2018-10-28 02:30:00 |
+---------------------+
        The same lack of one-to-one mapping for time zone conversions in
        both directions occurs in other contexts as well, such as
        conversions performed with the
        FROM_UNIXTIME() and
        UNIX_TIMESTAMP() functions. See
        Section 14.7, “Date and Time Functions”.