The as.POSIX* functions convert an object to one of the two
  classes used to represent date/times (calendar dates plus time to the
  nearest second).  They can convert a wide variety of objects,
  including objects of the other class and of classes "Date",
  "date" (from package date),
  "chron" and "dates" (from package
  chron) to these classes.  Dates without times are
  treated as being at midnight UTC.
They can also convert character strings of the formats
  "2001-02-03" and "2001/02/03" optionally followed by
  white space and a time in the format "14:52" or
  "14:52:03".  (Formats such as "01/02/03" are ambiguous
  but can be converted via a format specification by
  strptime.)  Fractional seconds are allowed.
  Alternatively, format can be specified for character vectors or
  factors: if it is not specified and no standard format works for
  all non-NA inputs an error is thrown.
If format is specified, remember that some of the format
  specifications are locale-specific, and you may need to set the
  LC_TIME category appropriately via
  Sys.setlocale.  This most often affects the use of
  %b, %B (month names) and %p (AM/PM).
Logical NAs can be converted to either of the classes, but no
  other logical vectors can be.
If you are given a numeric time as the number of seconds since an
  epoch, see the examples.
Character input is first converted to class "POSIXlt" by
  strptime: numeric input is first converted to
  "POSIXct".  Any conversion that needs to go between the two
  date-time classes requires a time zone: conversion from
  "POSIXlt" to "POSIXct" will validate times in the
  selected time zone.  One issue is what happens at transitions
  to and from DST, for example in the UK
as.POSIXct(strptime("2011-03-27 01:30:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"))
as.POSIXct(strptime("2010-10-31 01:30:00", "%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S"))
are respectively invalid (the clocks went forward at 1:00 GMT to 2:00
  BST) and ambiguous (the clocks went back at 2:00 BST to 1:00 GMT).  What
  happens in such cases is OS-specific: one should expect the first to
  be NA, but the second could be interpreted as either BST or
  GMT (and common OSes give both possible values).  Note too (see
  strftime) that OS facilities may not format invalid
  times correctly.